Sign up for free Newsletters

Once a month get new photos and expert tips.

Sign Up

Paid in Sunsets

ranger_snake.jpg"We're just here to educate, engage ... and survive!" says Karma Graham, District Interpretive Specialist with California State Parks.

Paramount Ranch is abuzz with rangers sporting their classic uniforms, complete with hats and sequoia cone belts. Some serve as interpreters and educators, others manage logistics, security, and crowd control. Everyone is busy ensuring that all goes well in a two-day event that represents the culmination of one full year of hard planning.

And what do they most want to accomplish during the BioBlitz? NPS Chief Ranger Evan Jones says it's about "reaching kids. To keep the concept of the National Park alive, the younger generation needs to inherit the vision."

In California, the youth population is on the rise, not declining as in some parts of the country. "So reaching out to kids is the most important thing," agrees Ranger Amy Lee. "We're interpreting the language of nature. Once you start learning about something, then you can really begin to appreciate it. What was once just a sparkly rock is now a microcosm of geological history."

Photograph by Phil Crosby, Volunteer/California Department of Parks and Recreation

POSTED BY EMILY LANDIS/BIOBLITZ TEAM, 1:30 PM PDT

 

Add a Comment

 

I accept the Community at National Geographic terms of service.

About This Blog

Photo: Child holding praying mantis

To celebrate biodiversity and America’s parks, National Geographic is sponsoring and helping to host one BioBlitz each year through 2016, the centennial of the U.S. National Park Service. Join us in person if you can, or experience the events online and share your thoughts on our living chronicle, the BioBlitz blog.

Subscribe to This Blog

Get the RSS feed for this blog—and don't miss a single word.

RSS     What is RSS?