Reminiscences
By David Isle
3/12/02
Dr. Oswald
helped me on many occasions and made several field trips with me to the Mendocino
National Forest.
One of the most enjoyable fieldtrips with Dr. Oswald was when he
joined Rhonda and me on 3 May 1997, the day before the 1997 Lassen Chapter
CNPS Wildflower Show in Chico. We
drove out through the east end of the Fork Fire, down Spanish Ridge to cross
Spanish Creek and Cache Creek at Hough Springs and then out around Indian
Valley Reservoir and back to Stonyford. Along
the way we
stopped to note and collect post-wildfire flowers for the wildflower
show in Chico. Dr. Oswald then returned
to Chico and made neat identification labels for us to use with the specimens
and we brought them to the Show and put them in a small display along with
a map of the Fork Fire showing where the specimens had been collected.
During the Wildflower Show Rhonda and I stayed by the display and answered
questions. Rhonda and I met some really neat people during
that event and it was a good experience.
Just a short distance away at the Wildflower Show, Dr. Oswald and
Lowell Ahart staffed a table where they identified plant specimens that the
public brought in to be identified. They
were the experts and it was a luxury to have them available to help with taxonomic
questions.
Dr. Oswald was a good friend, a valuable advisor, and a priceless
resource for northern California botanists, for me, and for this Forest. I have a few nice slides of him that now are
even more treasured. I especially
like the one that caught him on 3 July 1997 standing in the heavy shade of
Oregon ash trees and peering
through his hand lens at a sample of water howellia. It is almost a profile silhouette shot, because
of the heavy shade (and my lack of photographic compensation for it).
I also took a (more brightly illuminated) photo of him collecting a
specimen of water howellia for the Chico State Herbarium.
From the look on his face you might be able to tell that he was not
really sure whether I was capturing him for evidence or for fun!
Another photo of Dr. Oswald that I took up on Pinto Ridge captured
one of his “happy moment” smiles, as he posed with Janel Johnson, my summer
botanist, who had just spent the field season in 2000 inventorying and monitoring
water howellia. That morning we had
looked at some aquatic plant specimens together in the Supervisor's Office
in Willows and we had given Dr. Oswald some northern adder's-tongue (Ophioglossum
pusillum) specimens to deliver to the Chico State University Herbarium.
Then we all drove with Janel over to the Eel River Ranger Station.
It was 20 September 2000 and Janel’s last field day that season, so
we took her back by way of Pinto Ridge and then over the four wheel drive
road that runs from Telephone Camp down to the Smith Camp Road by way of Cold
Spring. We made several floral check
stops along the way and thoroughly enjoyed ourselves.
As I reminisce further back I recall another trip to Plaskett
Meadows and Keller Lake with Dr. Oswald on 6 July 1994, when he introduced me
to Ranger's Buttons (Sphenosciadium capitellatum) and the four-sepaled
obtuse stellaria (Stellaria obtusa) hiding under a patch of mountain
alder. At Keller Lake he loved the
floating sphagnum bog-lake and searched for hidden botanical treasures during
our brief experience together on the floating mat of Sphagnum.
He called his printed keys and descriptions in Selected Plants of
Northern California “his brain” and carried it in his field satchel where
ever he went. Often he would pause
to pull it out and refer to it rather than give his best recollection when
identifying specimens in the field.
Another one of those “typical” Dr. Oswald moments that I treasure
occurred on 3 July 1997, while we were driving together to one of the best
water howellia sites on the Forest. I
mentioned to him that there was a shoreline shrub growing at this site that
I was not able to identify. Dr. Oswald
had never been to this site before, but he instantly responded “Oh, you mean
Oemleria!” Now I must explain that I had never seen this
plant on the Mendocino National Forest before, and I had not even described
it to him yet, and still he knew that it must be oso berry (Oemleria cerasiformis)!
Needless to say I was flabbergasted and duly impressed because he was
absolutely right!! When we arrived at that site and confirmed
his identification I had him stand in front of the oso berry bush, so I could
take a photo of him with it. But when
I paused a bit too long, getting my exposure just right, he quickly disappeared
in search of more botanical treasures. To
this day kick myself for not taking that “perfect picture” a little faster.
Just after that, while we were peering down at a patch of water howellia,
a western pond turtle surfaced in the middle of the thick patch of water howellia,
and we turned and looked at each other in surprise! I still had my camera around my neck, but again
I missed the opportunity to photograph a Sensitive turtle in the middle of
a Federally Listed Threatened aquatic plant, because when it saw us it quickly
resubmerged!
Two winters ago, Rhonda and I met Dr. Oswald at the Sacramento
National Wildlife Refuge to do some bird watching. He brought his beautiful telescope and we made a bird and plant
list as we drove the loop around the refuge.
At the final stop he showed us an owl in a cottonwood snag right next to
the road. He had seen the owl on his
previous trips there and always checked to see if it was still there. Back at the parking lot, just before we
departed, we took a “group photo” and then Dr. Oswald presented me with a CD-ROM copy of his “Selected Plants of Northern California.” This honor was truly the icing on a perfect
day together!