12 December 2013

Toronto's Winter Owls!

Winter Owls are around us, even in the big city, and there are reasons why they are hard to see (and hear). I explain in my latest post for Bunch:

http://bunchfamily.ca/winter-owls-wild-city/

Photo: Tianna Burke




26 November 2013

Engaging Young Scientists: Neuroscience for Kids!

The next time your kid whines "WHY do I have to go to bed?" (or you need to stop yourself from pulling an all nighter) -- answer with science!

I write about a cool new initative to engage kids in science (and peer review) over at Bunch:
http://bunchfamily.ca/engaging-next-wave-of-young-scientists/


13 November 2013

Fall Reveals the Squirrels' World

Love 'em or hate 'em squirrels are all around our wild city and fall gives us the opportunity to learn more about their world. I wrote a bit about it for Bunch.

http://bunchfamily.ca/fall-reveals-squirrels-world/







Photo: G. H. HOLT

23 October 2013

Salmon in Scarborough: Back to Highland Creek

This piece, posted as part of my Wild City series, tells about salmon in Scarborough's Highland Creek, and is also a tribute to my dad.

http://bunchfamily.ca/highland-creek-salmon-run/


04 October 2013

Just Breathe at the Riverdale Ponds

How often do you think about your breathing? How about your child's breathing?

Recently I thought about breathing quite a lot.

Read more at my latest Bunch post:
http://bunchfamily.ca/riverdale-ponds/

Photo: Debbie Buehler

23 September 2013

Farewell Summer Dragonflies and Damselflies

I say farewell to this year's dragonflies and damselflies, and give out a few fun facts about these prehistoric creatures - like the fact that the secret of baby dragonfly hunting is butt propulsion!

Read the whole post here:
http://bunchfamily.ca/dragonflies-and-damselflies/















Photo: Ken Sproule

09 September 2013

Feeling Nature Deficit? There is a program for that - K.I.W.I.

Feeling boxed in? Glued to a screen? Are your kids boxed in too? Check out this program that helps get Kids In The Woods! 
http://bunchfamily.ca/kids-in-the-woods-rouge-park/
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Photo: K.I.W.I. Kids in the Woods

28 August 2013

Escape to the Lower Don: Crothers Woods

Need a bit more vacation? Discover the Lower Don Valley and hike Crothers Woods. I've written about out recent trip for Bunch.
http://bunchfamily.ca/escape-to-the-lower-don-crothers-woods/














The Toronto skyline as seen from Crothers Woods.

19 August 2013

Miracle on Leslie Street: The Spit

Ever feel like you need a mental health break?

I've just written about one of my favorite escapes in Toronto.




08 August 2013

Laser PRK, Parenting, and seeing my toes in the shower for the first time in years!

The P in PRK is for Patience - and for me it is also for Parenting. 

I write about my experience with laser PRK surgery here: http://bunchfamily.ca/p-is-for-patience/

26 June 2013

Women’s contribution to science goes unheard

There shouldn't be symposium speaker line ups that look like this one from 1934, in 2013, but for many complicated reasons, there sill are.











The 9th Aircraft Engineering Research Conference, 1934. NASA

I posted for The Conversation UK on a recent article in the Journal of Evolutionary Biology. In a nutshell we showed that high quality science led by female academics is under-represented in comparison to that of their male counterparts and that this may have to do with men accepting more speaking invitations than women.

Why is this the case? We don't know, but it is important to discuss it.
http://theconversation.com/womens-contribution-to-science-goes-unheard-15532. 

Also check out the excellent comment stream on Athene Donald's blog
http://occamstypewriter.org/athenedonald/2013/06/24/all-male-invited-speakers-its-complicated/

The bigger picture is important: If this dearth of female voices in conferences harms women’s advancement within academia, then society as a whole is also losing some of its best scientists.

05 June 2013

Swift Scientists

New post on Bunch about how the kids and I discovered chimney swifts.

http://bunchfamily.ca/chimney-swift-watching-with-kids/



16 May 2013

Wild City at Bunch

I have been posting over at the parenting blog Bunch. The column is a mix of parenting memoir and ecological essay with the goal of inspiring people to get out and enjoy nature in the big city.

This link will take you to the most recent post as well as blog archives.
http://bunchfamily.ca/category/wild-city/











 


Yellow Warbler at Tommy Thompson Park.

19 April 2013

Earth Day and Spring!

This spring's update is posted on a Toronto parenting blog. My hope is to inspire others to engage in Earth Day actions.

http://bunchfamily.ca/watching-little-things-grow/

13 March 2013

New couch and other musings


While looking at the calendar it occurred to me that it has been a long time since I have posted anything. The winter has been good to us with snow to play in and ice to skate on. The big news is that, after many years, we finally decided to replace our more than 30-year-old couch. That old couch held many memories and has been in my family since I was less than 5 years old, but the padding was literally pulverized and the upholstery was so old we couldn’t sew it together anymore, so we had to let it go.  We bought a lovely chocolate colored replacement (not easily stained) and we are enjoying it.
                                         Our new couch

Life remains just on the edge of “too busy”, but I think we are getting better at noticing when we fall off the edge and are correcting the problem before too much exhaustion or grumpiness sets in.  I am proud of this progress, and it is important when one is working a mentally challenging full-time job, sharing the organizing and cooking and unending cleaning involved in raising two kids, and still doing collaborative data analysis and writing in the evenings. All of these aspects of my life are important to me, and balancing it all has become an exercise in mindfulness.

As I work, especially at night, I ask myself “How are you feeling?” “Are you resorting to unhealthy habits to keep yourself awake (e.g. snacking, coffee), or are you cruising along with enough fuel in the energy tank?” I try my best to stop when there is not enough fuel in the tank.
Another trick I use is to pause frequently and take note of all the times when I am literally happily humming along in whatever I am doing, be it editing and writing at work, running around with the kids, or analyzing or writing something at home. It helps me to remember that most of the time I am very happy in my life.

The kids continue to grow. The “little one” officially moved into a big boy bed (no more baby) and he has retained the ability to use his puppy dog eyes to get me to do whatever he wants. The “big one” asks and answers questions, thinks things through aloud, and even attempts humor. Often his attempts at a joke are more amusing than the punch line, but I love that he is trying. He is also getting very good at recognizing sarcasm. I don’t want anyone to think that I shower my kids with sarcasm, but it is one of my main methods of humor. Therefore, it makes me proud when he says “Mommy that was sarcasm, right?” and I can answer, “You got it!”

Life rolls along, we grow a litter older every day, and a little wiser too I hope.

12 January 2013

San Francisco


What impressed me most about San Francisco was the abundance of natural beauty in a city of about a million people (over 7 million in the greater San Jose-San Francisco-Oakland area). 

I was in San Francisco for a conference, and was fortunate to meet with friends a day before the conference began. Together we enjoyed a marvelous trip to beautiful natural areas in Marin County just across the Golden Gate Bridge from the city.

Golden Gate Bridge

The drive across the iconic bridge offered stunning views of the Bay (including Alcatraz), the city, and the surrounding hills. Amazingly, right by the highway, along the salt marches of Richardson Bay, were small flocks of avocets and other shorebirds.

Our first stop was Muir Woods National Monument, one of the world’s last stands of old-growth redwood forest. There we hiked through Cathedral Grove and along the Bootjack trail and Redwood creek. The trees in the valley were enormous! Their size rivals the Sitka Spruce and Douglas Fir I have seen in Vancouver and on the Olympic Peninsula. The woods were lovely and as we hiked we saw ravens, ruby-crowned kinglets, winter wrens, dark-eyed juncos and, impressively, a varied thrush (of course we saw that in the parking lot on the way out). 

Towering Redwoods

Next stop was the top of Hawk Hill in the Golden Gate National Recreation area. There we were rewarded with stunning views of the Golden Gate Bridge and the city gleaming white behind it. All around us as we walked were very tame white crowned sparrows, juncos, ruby crowned kinglets and harriers soaring overhead. From Hawk Hill we drove around Bonita Cove towards the Point Bonita lighthouse. To my delight, along the short path to the lighthouse we saw harbor seals, gray pelicans, black oystercatchers, many gulls, double-crested cormorants and even loons. The waves of the Pacific crashed against the rocks as the sun began sinking into the horizon. It was awe-inspiring.

View over the Pacific near Bonita Cove

In the evening, we headed back across the Golden Gate Bridge and to the west end of the city where we parked near Ocean Beach to view the ruins of the Sutro baths. Though the building housing the baths burned down in 1966, the foundations and a small lagoon remain. Within the lagoon we saw a river otter! Wildlife just appears at every turn in this city!

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Throughout the rest of my stay, sight-seeing was squeezed into a busy conference schedule. I walked much of the city and have posted some photos below.  

Sunset in the Golden Gate Park


Grove of trees in the Golden Gate Park, like something straight out of Tolkien’s Shire.


China Town

 
Murals on the Woman’s Building in the Mission District