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What A Summer!

Happy December! A few announcements.  I have a new website, anneyen.com. Please check it out!  Second of all, this particular blog will expand from covering my mushroom adventures to adventures in the field. And to start, I wanted to do a quick recap of the summer, which was incredible in terms of field work.

For three field seasons (ranging from 3 to 6 months), I’ve worked as a Biological Field Technician for the National Park Service at Gateway National Recreation Area, a coastal National Park located in Queens, Brooklyn and Staten Island, NY and Sandy Hook, NJ. One of the projects I worked on was herpetological monitoring, the monitoring of amphibians and reptiles in the park, specifically Floyd Bennett Field and Jamaica Bay Wildlife Refuge. We used methods such as coverboards, anuran sound calls, and incidental encounters. This past summer produced the most snake activity I’ve experienced in my three field seasons there. We turned up eastern garter snakes the most, with nearly every check, and eastern milk snakes a close second. Fowler’s toads appeared commonly in the North Forty of Floyd Bennett Field, even on the hottest of days. And every now and then we were treated to the sight of a eastern box turtle, diamondback terrapins and woodcocks (not a herp, I know). Great summer at Gateway NRA!

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…for not knowing where to go!  But I am a lucky person as it is, regardless.

morels come true

morels come true

It’s Time

morels on the brain bag, color pencil and marker by Anne Yen

morels on the brain bag, color pencil and marker by Anne Yen

is it true or false, watercolor by Anne Yen

is it true or false, watercolor by Anne Yen

Russula, watercolor by Anne Yen

Russula, watercolor by Anne Yen

I love Russulas.  There’s something so solid about them, something so sure.  I love the colors of their caps, in all shades of warms and cools, atop a stout stem.  There’s a certain lack of ambivalence about them that makes them so assuredly Russulas when you find them in the forest duff.  Just don’t ask me to tell them apart by species.  And as I learned last night at a New York Mycological Society talk by Noah Siegel, co-president of the Monadnock Mushroomers Unlimited in New Hampshire, some mushrooms (I forget which) we never considered as Russula, are indeed, thanks to DNA sequencing.  According to the talk and recent science news in the media, DNA sequencing is rearranging relations of all kinds of taxa, resulting in renaming and rethinking of where things are on the evolutionary tree.  Much confusion and head-scratching among the scientific community results.  So maybe this post should be called, Not So Sure the Russula.

Regardless, Russulas are a fun way to indulge and experiment with rich colors when painting.  And I will still be excited to find them in the urban forest.

Morchella Mania

they’re coming…

Morchella Mania in ink, by Anne Yen

Morchella Mania in ink, by Anne Yen

So it was really hot last summer.  Like really really hot.  This did not bode well for finding mushrooms in NYC or even upstate NY during the summer of 2010.  It was a time to lay low and drink a lot of ice water laced with a dollop of honey and a squeeze of lemon slice under the ceiling fan running on high.  And repeat such scenario for the next few weeks, months even. When the rains of October began and brought some relief, mushrooms started popping up in surprising places.  Most of these mushroom finds are posted on my profile at Project Noah’s website: http://www.projectnoah.org/users/anne+yen.  In keeping up with that and other social networks, my documentation on this blog dropped.  I hadn’t posted since July 2010.

Now I’m back, wondering what to use this blog for. I started it to document mushrooms I was finding and photographing in Seattle, Tokyo and NYC.  But then I started to document those on other photo sites, like the aforementioned Project Noah.  So what then?  I want to keep it mushroom themed and because there is a dearth of mushroom art blogs and I really love illustrating mushrooms, howzabout I devote it to that?  Mushroom art and ephemera, whatever ephemera means.  Besides, I’ve been working on some things lately…

Slippery Jack

Slippery Jack, watercolor by Anne Yen

With this recent series of paintings, what if mushrooms were characters of movies due to arrive soon to your part of town?  To a forest or park near you?  This one was inspired by the Slippery Jack, or Suillus luteus, found in November in the sand dunes under some pines in front of the office at Floyd Bennett Field in Brooklyn, part of Gateway National Recreation Area.

It's Too Hot Around Here

It's Too Hot Around Here

It’s much too hot here on the East Coast.  It hasn’t rained in weeks it seems.  It’s too hot to do anything outside, it’s too hot to do anything inside.  Between jobs, I’ve spent the last few 100+ degree days painting and reading, cooling off with honey-lemon ice water, fresh watermelon, fresh peaches, and ice coffee.  I’m reading this really interesting book right now called Shroom: A Cultural History of the Magic Mushroom.  I’m wishing for rain.  Thankfully it is the forecast in the upcoming week.  Stay cool wherever you may be.

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