Posted February 24, 2023
In April of 2022, I started a year-long internship with the US Fish and Wildlife Service (USFWS), funded by the Student Conservation Association (SCA). I spent about two months up in Anchorage, AK, surveying wetlands in the field, then came home to Seattle to digitize them into the National Wetland Inventory (NWI) database.
In the field I got to explore a ton of incredible wetland ecosystems, many of which I had never seen before! Skipping through the alpine on dense mats of stunted shrubs is one of my most treasured memories. And I'll never forget the burst of excitement I felt seeing my first wild sundew!
Alaskan wetlands aren't without their struggles, though. They really aren't kidding about the mosquitos-- on an average day, I could look down and count hundreds (hundreds!) of the blood-suckers on my clothes. I can joyously gatekeep now that I'm back in Seattle: "Oh this? It's nothing! You should see Alaska." (I kid)
It was fascinating how my field work translated to working in ArcGIS Pro. Layers of CIR, RGB, and LiDAR imagery showed me the grand landscape of the wetlands I visited, but I could still picture each one: "Oh, this magenta patch is where I topped out my boot, this depression is where we ate those Cloudberries..." Thousands of wetlands later, I'm so excited to see my work go up on the NWI Mapper! I've been promised it'll happen by the end of 2023.
And since I'm sure you'd like to see the more technical stuff from this project, please check out my reports and presentations here.
Thanks for reading!
Every art-related picture on my website (hopefully)
Bags galore! Plus some clever potholders and a first crack at hexaflexagons.
A custom toy for a baby who is into textures and a mama who is into squids.
Not promising there will be any more though...
A wedding art quilt for some SF friends <3
Couple hour long project for a white elephant. Design ripped off straight from the first page of Google Image results. Little underappreciated, but c'est la vie.
A project that has frustrated me to no end. I was inspired to make this after watching my bestie detangle a small box of necklaces for about two hours. The velcro necklace holder fixes that issue beautifully-- but I fear for the safety of the earrings without a stiff casing. She loves this bag and uses it all the time, but in my mind it is still a prototype.
Chicken quilt!! I adore this quilt. Made of flannel through and through. I like how the free motion quilting is reminiscent of a rooster comb. Really nailed this one.
Updated all wetland boundaries and classifications on Joint Base Elmendorf-Richardson (JBER) for the National Wetlands Inventory (NWI) using ArcGIS Pro. Available on the NWI Wetlands Mapper by end of 2023.
This is a short training video on digitizing wetlands in ArcGIS Pro, made for the National Wetlands Inventory. I adapted it from a portion of my final presentation to USFWS and US Air Force stakeholders about mapping the wetlands on Joint-Base Elmendorf Richardson after a request from the audience. Watch it here!
I made a free motion quilt based off of a snarky poster designed by Amber Share (@subparparks on Instagram)
A quilt for my pins :)
I volunteered to travel and camp for 2.5 weeks with four other team members through the Alaskan wilderness to study primary forest succession. We relocted and documented the status of 50 plots in remote marine environments in Glacier Bay National Park, braving poor weather, biting insects, and bear country. I've never had so much fun! Read about the experience from the project lead's blog here and here.
As a crew member in the Washington Conservation Corps (WCC), I restored native riparian and wetland ecosystems in King County, WA. I wrestled with Himalayan blackberry and English Ivy, personally planted over 4000 native trees, shrubs, and live stakes, and kept the team safe and healthy with daily safety talks.
I volunteer as an interpreter at the Seattle Aquarium's indoor touch pool exhibits, encouraging empathy and curiosity in our squeamish visitors. Stop by for a sea urchin hug!
This project brought me light in those early quarantine days. I generated random spirals using node.js, embroidered my favorites, and used the embroidery as ink stamps. Check it out here!
I implemented a k-means clustering algorithm (using Python libraries such as OpenCV, scikit-learn, and SciPy) to classify cropped areas of images from the NEOWISE satellite into "cosmic ray" or "not cosmic ray." Checkout this notebook on my Github to see my work.
This is project 6 with a submarine picture and tags environment and home.