[training] Environmental Writers Workshop – Burke Museum – April 21, 2012

Environmental Writers Workshop – Burke Museum – April 21, 2012

For the fourth year in a row, the Burke Museum brings together a trio of outstanding writers to present a one-day workshop on writing about the environment. Award-winning authors William Dietrich, Thor Hanson, and Judith Roche will lead classroom and field-based sessions, all taking place at the Burke Museum. They bring years of experience as writers, journalists, bloggers, and teachers. Each is an attentive observer who weaves together history, science, and field time into well-crafted, thought-provoking writing about the natural and cultural world.



We in the Pacific Northwest are fortunate to live not only in a place where nature abounds but also to live in place where place-based writers abound. Their writing brings in not only plants and animals, but also the human inhabitants, past and present, who dwell on the land. Whether it is exploring the wonderful world of feathers, considering the myriad ways of plants and animals of the the Pacific Northwest, or pondering the life of salmon in Seattle, these authors provoke us to reflect upon our own relationship to the natural world around us. Ultimately, they are forging a new way to look at nature and to develop deeper connections to place.

For the fourth year in a row, the Burke Museum brings together a trio of outstanding writers to present a one-day workshop on writing about the environment. Award-winning authors William Dietrich, Thor Hanson, and Judith Roche will lead classroom and field-based sessions, all taking place at the Burke Museum. They bring years of experience as writers, journalists, bloggers, and teachers. Each is an attentive observer who weaves together history, science, and field time into well-crafted, thought-provoking writing about the natural and cultural world.

Judith Roche is the author of three poetry collections, most recently, Wisdom of the Body, an American Book Award winner, which was also nominated for a Pushcart. She has written extensively about our native salmon and edited First Fish, First People, Salmon Tales of the North Pacific and has salmon poems installed at the Hiram M. Chittenden Locks in Seattle. She has been Distinguished Northwest Writer-in-Residence at Seattle University, has taught at Cornish College of the Arts, and currently teaches at Richard Hugo House.

Thor Hanson is a conservation biologist, Switzer Environmental Fellow, and member of the Human Ecosystems Study Group. His most recent book is Feathers: The Evolution of a Natural Miracle. His first book, The Impenetrable Forest: My Gorilla Years in Uganda, won the 2008 USA Book News Award for nature writing. Hanson lives with his wife and son on an island off the coast of Washington State. 

Bill Dietrich is a Washington state career journalist-turned novelist, who has covered the environment and science for the Seattle Times and other newspapers. He shared a Pulitzer for coverage of the Exxon Valdez oil spill and won a Pacific Northwest Booksellers Award for his book on the Northwest timber crisis, The Final Forest. His 10 novels have been translated into nearly 30 languages. He taught environmental journalism at Huxley College of the Environment at Western. nominated for

Cost is $100, which includes lunch. Scholarships are available for students. 
For more information, please email burked@uw.edu or call (206) 543-5591.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ 

David B. Williams 

Burke Museum Education Assistant


*job**internship* TWO opportunities with Mountains to Sound Greenway

*job**internship* TWO opportunities with Mountains to Sound Greenway


REMINDER – PoE Community Drinks Social in the heart of Ballard at the ’Urban Family Public House’ this Thursday, 1/26 from 7:30 ~ whenever! Come meet PoE students, alumni, and others. 21+


[event]: Capstone Information Session

Everything you wanted to know about the PoE Capstone*
*but were afraid to ask

PoE Commons (ACC 012)
Tuesday, Februrary 7
3:30 ~ 4:30 

Please join us for an information session all about the Environmental Studies Capstone experience. Intrepid capstone instructor P. Sean McDonald will be on hand to help answer all of your capstone related questions. Are you thinking about starting your capstone this spring? Did you start the major this year, and you want to find out what the capstone is all about? Are you interested in learning what goes into capstone projects abroad? Honors capstone projects?

All questions will be answered!


Announcing the winners of the PoE Cookie Cookoff!

1st Place: The Sassy Salty Chocolate Chip Cookie
by Tikvah Weiner (PoE Admin)

If you’re curious to see what the 1st place Sassy Salty Chocolate Chip Cookie is all about, be sure to check out the “read more” link below to find the recipe. 

2nd place: The Wookie Cookie and The Best Molasses Cookie Ever
by Joe Kobayashi (PoE Undergraduate Program Coordinator) and Giulia Anderson (PoE Undergrad – Junior), respectively (a tie!)

Congratulations to the bakers of these awesome cookies!

If you missed the Cookie Cook-off, do not fear! In honor of January 23rd National Pie Day PoE will be hosting a pie cookoff on Wednesday, February 8th from 12-1pm in the PoE Commons.

The rules are simple. Bring any kind of pie you like – sweet, savory, chicken pot pie, cream pie, vegetable pie (ever had sweet potato pie??), pie with streusel topping, betty crocker crisscrossed pie, ice cream pie, fruit pie – whatever you desire. Come up with a clever name for your pie and we will put it to the test.

The cookoff will only work if we have lots and lots of judges!! We need lots of people to sample the fare and vote. So don’t worry if you have don’t own a pie tin and have never turned on your oven. We need everyone there! If you’re new to baking there are some great pie recipes on this baking blog.

Click here to get the 1st Place recipe!

Sassy Salty Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
  • 3 ½ cups (17 ounces) all-purpose flour
  • 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 ¼ teaspoons baking soda
  • 1 ½ teaspoons coarse sea salt, plus additional salt for sprinkling lightly on cookies
  • 2 ½ sticks (10 ounces) unsalted butter
  • 1 2/3 cups (10 ounces) lightly packed light brown sugar
  • 1 cup (8 ounces) granulated sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 18 to 20 ounces bittersweet chocolate, cut into large chip-size chunks (I recommend chocolate with at least 60% cacao content and prefer Scharffen Berger or Callebaut.) **I used one bag of bittersweet choc chips**
Directions
  1. Whisk flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt together in a bowl. Set aside.
  2. Using a stand mixer with a paddle attachment or an electric hand mixer, cream butter and sugars together until lightened, 3 to 5 minutes.
  3. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in vanilla.
  4. Add flour mixture, blending at lowest speed until just combined.
  5. Drop chocolate pieces in and mix in gently, by hand.
  6. Wrap dough in plastic and refrigerate for 1 to 24 hours.
  7. Preheat convection oven to 325˚F. If convection is not available, preheat conventional oven to 350˚F.
  8. Roll dough into 1 ½-inch balls and place 2 inches apart on a sheet pan lined with a silpat liner or parchment paper.
  9. Sprinkle just a few grains of salt on each ball of dough and bake until cookies are golden around the edges and cooked through, but still soft, 12-15 minutes (on the longer side for conventional ovens).
  10. Let the cookies cool for 3 to 5 minutes on the pan. They are best eaten when warm. If they will not be eaten right away, transfer the cookies to a wire rack and cool further before storing.

Environmental Career Apprenticeship Program

The Sierra Club is now accepting applications for the the 2012 Environmental Apprenticeship program!

The online application and essay are due Friday, February 24, 2012. All required supplemental materials (transcript, letters of recommendation) are due Friday, March 9, 2012.

Click here to apply!


Sierra Club’s Environmental Apprenticeship is a training program to cultivate future leaders in environmental advocacy. This program is designed for recent college graduates who are interested in legislation, media, and community outreach as a means of promoting green initiatives. Consider this your starting point for an environmental career course, helping you transition from your college experience into the non-profit working world.

An Apprenticeship is a full-time, 6 month paid staff position based in one of our offices around the country. Past work locations have included San Francisco, CA; Washington, DC; Minneapolis, MN; Chicago, IL; Los Angeles, CA, and Austin, TX. Location placements for the chosen 2012 Apprentices will be based on the Conservation Department’s campaign or program needs, as well as the chosen candidates’ individual experiences and skills. Location placements occur after all final Apprenticeship candidates have been chosen.


[event] Art Exhibition: Particles on the Wall

Join Nick Thorp from WPSR and INND/Toxipedia for the opening reception of the latest installation of Particles on the Wall at the University of Washington in Seattle, in Odegaard Undergraduate Library.

The artist forum will begin at 7:30 in Room 220, January 6th. The exhibit will continue through March 29th.

                                 

The program provides a unique opportunity to hear from artists, poets, and scientists who have been inspired by Hanford to create a wide variety of art. From poetry readings, to discussions on the inspirations for their art and their impressions on Hanford, the panel of artists will shed a new and interesting light on the site that created the bomb dropped on Nagasaki and is now the most contaminated place in the Western Hemisphere.

Come see the exhibit and follow the event on facebook! 


Exploration Seminar in Peru!

Interested in an ecological and cultural exploration throughout eastern Peru? Join Ursula Valdez and Tim Bill in an Exploration Seminar in Peru this year! 

Information Seminar: 27 Jan 2012, PAA A023D (Kincaid Basement 2-5 PM)

Click here for the seminar website! 

Applications are open! Click here to apply!