Monday, July 16, 2007

More From the Alaska Botanical Gardens

On the same outing to Campbell Creek Friday, we stopped at the Alaska Botanical Garden which I blogged about before.



The peonies are... I'll let them speak for themselves.






























The Himalayan blue poppies, what can I say? Nice counterbalance to politics and trials. The peony pix can be enlarged with a click.

Besides the Cow Parsnip



There was also lots of monk's hood. Look carefully for the bee.




We made it up to the rock that marks the transition from trees to mostly tundra. Looking back down you can see the whole Anchorage bowl and if you squint, the waters of Cook Inlet. (Again the pictures can be enlarged by clicking on them.)







Looking up you can see into the clouds.

Sunday, July 15, 2007

Cow Parsnip - Heracleum

We hiked up the Wolverine Peak trail today. It was clearly Cow Parsnip Day. Everywhere we were surrounded by the large white flowers of the cow parsnip plant. The pictures below were all taken today in Anchorage. You can click on any of them to enlarge it. The information on Cow Parsnips come from the links.

Cow Parsnip
Heracleum maximum (Heracleum lanatum)
• Family: Carrot (Apiaceae)
• Habitat: moist meadows, thickets, streambanks
• Height: 4-9 feet
• Flower size: 1/4 to 1/2 inch across, in clusters 4-8 inches across
• Flower color: white
• Flowering time: June to August
• Origin: native
From Connecticut Botanical Society


Cow parsnip Heracleum lanatum has been used medicinally. The root for toothaches (placed directly to the area) or you can also use a tincture of the root or seeds, it is less irritating to the gums than cloves. The root and seeds are used as an antispasmodic to the intestinal tract. If used in a tea, make sure it is dried first, the tea is used for nausea of a persistent nature, when you have not yet vomited, as well as acid indigestion and heart burn according to Micheal Moore in Medicinal Plants of the Mountain West. The seeds tinctured are effective for stomach aches, the dose should be one or two drops. Do not use this plant during pregnancy or nursing.
From The Herbalist's Path Blog

Cow parsnip is a valuable forage species for livestock, deer, elk, moose, and bear. Moose in Montana and Yellowstone National Park eat cow parsnip. In low elevation riparian areas it is an important food for grizzly bear, especially in the spring. In Glacier National Park, cow parsnip comprised 15 percent of grizzly bear total diet volume, spring through fall, in 1967-1971 and 1982-1985.
From Little Flower's Medicine of North American Plants

This is the largest species of the carrot family in North America. The genus is named for Hercules, who is reputed to have used these plants for medicine. Early in each year, Native Americans peeled and ate the young sweet, aromatic leaf and flower stalks.
From eNature.com













This very tall plant has huge leaves and flat umbels of numerous tiny white flowers; stem is grooved, woolly, hollow, and stout.
Flowers: umbel to 12" (30 cm) wide, often in groups; each flower with 5 petals, those at margin of umbel larger, about 1/4" (6 mm) long, cleft in middle, often tinged with purple.
From eNature











People new to Alaska often confuse Cow Parsnip (left below) with Devil's Club (right below.) You can see from these two pictures, both have large leaves that initially seem similar.










The Devil's Club leaves have hooked thorns underneath.







































"The green stems of pushki [cow parsnip] are covered with fine hairs, which give them a slightly fuzzy or furry texture." From Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Refuge Notebook.


















The [Devil's Club] plant grows 5 to 8 feet (1.5 to 2.4 meters) tall and is covered with thorns up to an inch (2.5 centimeters) long."Even the leaves have little-bitty thorns," said Peggy Hunt, an agronomist at the Native Plant Nursery in Palmer, Alaska. "They go through your skin. You wear jeans, they still go through those jeans. And the thorns will fester. It's like getting a splinter. You really have to dig them out."
From National Geographic The National Geographic article goes on to talk about the medicinal aspects of Devil's Club.



For some people Cow Parsnip poses a danger of severe skin problems.

Known Hazards Many members of this genus, including this species[65], contain furanocoumarins. These have carcinogenic, mutagenic and phototoxic properties. The fresh foliage can cause dermatitis[21]. If the juice and hairs of the outer skin are left on the face and mouth, they can cause blisters[212]. This effect is especially prevalent for people with fair complexions[256].
From Plants for a Future

It is interesting to ask if this phototoxicity has any adaptive value for the members of the carrot family? Is this toxicity, for example, a chemical defense against some kind of plant-eating animal (herbivore)? First, we should note that bears and moose eat young pushki plants, apparently without suffering any kind of sunburn effects. Indeed, in the Lower-48 pushki is considered a valuable forage species for deer, elk, moose, and livestock. A study in Glacier National Park found that pushki comprised 15% of grizzly bear diet, spring through fall. All this suggests that mammals, other than humans, are not bothered by any phototoxicity effects of pushki.

Nevertheless, you don't see many insects eating pushki. A fascinating study of a close cousin, wild parsnip (Pastinaca sativa), found that the furanocoumarins were potent deterrents for most insects, but one insect has evolved the ability to break down the furanocoumarins and eat wild parsnip. This insect - a caterpillar called the "parsnip webworm" (Depressaria pastinacella) - also eats pushki. If we ever need a biocontrol agent for pushki, parsnip webworm would be a good place to start.
From Kenai National Wildlife Refuge, Refuge Notebook.


[Update  June 2010:  Here's a link to a the Juneau-Douglas Science fair and a video of David Mendivil who explains his project "How the Concentration of Light Activated Furanocoumarins Found in Cow Parsnip Affects the Mortality Rate of Mosquito Larvae."]

GRRRR! Youtube Quality destroys Salmon Video

Took Beth (who's visiting from Texas) to Campbell Creek as the rain mostly ended Friday afternoon. Salmon were making their way up the creek and they are red enough at this point that this one showed up pretty well in the video I took. But saving it in a format small enough for Youtube made this all but unviewable. But I've been playing with it for so long I'm going to put it up anyway in hopes that someone can suggest a better way to save it or a better video host than youtube. (I saved it from i-movie. The best quality was 332 MB - too big for youtube. The next best was 12mb - that's the one you see here. Pretty awful. Not only does the crystal clear water water look muddy, you can barely see the fish until near the end.)



Saturday, July 14, 2007

Ready to Impeach - House Resolution 333

My son is back in the T-shirt business. He designed a T-shirt when he was headed to Denmark to work several years ago. As an American in Europe, he wanted to make it clear that he hadn't voted for G W Bush. He had it made through CafePress and other people could buy it. Proceeds, if any, were going to Doctors without Borders. He sold a few T-shirts after a few months, but then some conservative blog blasted him as a traitor and sales suddenly took off. Cafepress grossed around $45,000 from that and Doctors without Borders got several thousand out of it too.

So now he's back in business. This time with this:

He and a friend are making 20 different T-shirts and each shirt covers a different set of states with the names and phone numbers of the members of Congress in those states. California and New York had to be divided into two because there were two many members of Congress to fit. You can find details at readytoimpeach.com.
The back of the T-shirt has the beginning of Dennis Kucinich's House Resolution to impeach Vice-President Cheney.

Friday, July 13, 2007

Flex Cars - Don't Need Your Own Car

I've known about Flexcar a while now, but Wednesday was the first time I rode in one.

An alternative to owning a car, you get a membership, and then when you need a car, you call in and reserve it. They have set parking places around Seattle (and other cities). You pay by the hour - I think it was $9/hour. Put your Flexcar card over the code reader and you're off.

A Few More Seattle Photos

A few more photos from Seattle. I'm back in a grey, rainy Anchorage now.

I-5 through downtown Seattle


Under the tree in the park on the left was a young woman practicing her poetry to a small group. Sounded like she was getting ready for a slam.


Statue of George Washington - well Seattle is in the state of Washington


Silver, Black, Blue


Seattle Alamo

Thursday, July 12, 2007

Cooler in Seattle

Here are a few pictures of yesterday and today in Seattle. They all get at least a little bigger if you click on them. Get on the plane for home in a few hours.














Tuesday, July 10, 2007

80s in Seattle




Flew to Seattle today to see my son before he leaves for the year in Singapore.


There were two seats empty next to me, so this young woman switched seats, and took them both, without even a good morning or do you mind?













Took the express bus into town and walked over to Joel`s place. It's very warm here, but the sky is also very blue.

Monday, July 09, 2007

Anderson Response

From ADN Politics blog:

"I'm devastated," Anderson said after the verdict was announced. He said he'd appeal.

"The prosecution has criminalized being a legislator over this past year. And I think I fell victim to that," he said.

Sentencing was scheduled for Oct. 2.

His family, including his wife, state Sen. Lesil McGuire, who was not accused of wrongdoing, were not present for the verdict. Anderson said they couldn't get to the downtown Anchorage courthouse in time after it was announced the jury had reached a verdict.

Steve Heimel's had some audio report with quotes from Anderson is this evening, but it's not yet up on the APRN site. But you can check and see if it's up. It says pretty much the same that Lisa Demer's ADN pieces above says.