Showing posts with label volunteers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label volunteers. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2023

Volunteer Linda Martin: Decades of service and a commitment to progressive causes

A very dedicated duo of volunteers have been welcoming visitors to the museum and aquarium for over 14 years. In this profile we’ll focus on the “aquarium” half of the duo, aquarium docent, former board member and progressive political activist Linda Martin.

Pre-Covid Linda “shared” a docent shift, with her husband Mike, who volunteered as a docent in the museum. They continued this pattern once again this spring, until Mike was briefly taken out of action to undergo heart bypass surgery.

Although Linda’s devoted care to Mike throughout this event was assisted by a few of his cousins who traveled to be nearby, it also came with a dose of Taylor Swift. The very day that Mike underwent surgery, the first of Swift’s massive concerts at Lumen Field made finding accommodations VERY difficult. Ultimately, Linda secured the very last room at the Virginia Mason Inn, and Mike went on to a successful surgery and a good recovery.

Linda Martin (right) trained new volunteer Barbara

Linda and Mike both grew up in Raytown, Missouri and actually met each other in 3rd grade. They attended school together all the way through the twelfth grade, when Linda headed off to a state university, and Mike was appointed to the Naval Academy in Annapolis, Maryland. 

Both Linda and Mike had been married previously, but they reconnected in the mid-70’s after Mike successfully looked her up with the help of another classmate. Linda said their connection at this time was “Instant.It was like magic.” They married just a few months after reconnecting and last spring they celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary!

Mike and his first wife had three children at the time of his marriage to Linda, three boys aged 8, 11 and 12 years old, and Linda happily welcomed Mike’s oldest boy for the school year and the younger two over summer breaks.

Linda’s personal struggles with reproductive health helped focus her drive and attention on becoming an advocate for women’s health initiatives.

In 1972 she created a thirty minute film called “A Personal Choice” for the Michigan Abortion Referendum Committee which described the choices in a Michigan ballot initiative (Proposal B on the state ballot) legalizing abortion. The film was shown on TV with legendary newscaster Hugh Downs as narrator. 

As a Captain in the Navy, Mike’s position necessitated frequent moves. When they moved to Hawaii, Linda says, “I got political - the first thing I did was go back to grad school to get an Masters in Public Health and helped get a wellness program started in Hawaii.”

“The Well Women Clinic was free and independent, and proved to be very vital as that was the first year that the federal government stopped funding Planned Parenthood.” She then realized that “Hawaii had a big chunk of money and no place to put it,” so, she says, “I wrote a grant to apply for those funds. They decided to give us the money and we were able to open the clinic.” She was also instrumental in hiring a nurse midwife to staff the clinic, a first at the time.

In 1992, she ran for the Senate on the Green Party ticket in Hawaii, where she achieved an astounding 13% of the vote count. As a senate candidate “I was invited to the European Green Party convention in Finland.”

There she met office holders who were astounded to learn that even with earning 13% of the vote, she was not given a role in the government, as folks there are accustomed to proportionate representation.

Mike subsequently went on to achieve a PhD in physics, and as “Dr. Captain” worked for many years for the Center for Naval Analysis, until his retirement in 2004. Many visits to the Oregon coast and points northward focused their attention on Port Townsend as their retirement location.

One key experience leading to their decision to move to Port Townsend involved a wrong turn on their drive up the coast, which found them in Sequim. When they stopped in the visitor center there, and asked about Port Townsend, the aid said “Oh, you don’t want to go over there, it’s just a bunch of old hippies.” Linda says, “We decided right  then that this was who we wanted to be. When Mike retired on December 4, we loaded up the car and left for Port Townsend on December 6.” 

They rented a place initially and... “We had the kids come up and visit us, and they liked it too!”

Ultimately they found a home to purchase on Vista Boulevard with stunning water views in each room. And, for the former Naval Captain, there was a great view of all the ships coming and going to Indian Island.

Both Mike and Linda had served for many years as docents at Torrey Pines State Reserve, known as a ‘wilderness island in an urban sea,’ just 18 miles from San Diego. “Mike had been a guide, and I had been on the board, and also wrote the newsletter.”

One of the first things they did in town was to attend the annual holiday sale at the PTMSC museum. The host that day was Pam Gray, and she encouraged them to apply to become volunteers with PTMSC. Being brand new to the Pacific Northwest, Linda responded quite adamantly, “But we don’t know anything!” Pam’s response – “We’ll train you.”

The training itself turned out to be very notable. “Right as the training was about to begin the funniest thing happened, someone came rushing into the museum to announce that the river otters were mating on the beach.” Of course everyone had to rush out to witness nature’s miracle.

In addition to her service as a docent, Linda was also a PTMSC board member for a number of years. Board President Eric Harrington (now deceased) and Development Director Joanne Heron were impressed with her writing skills and she created a history of the organization for its 25th anniversary, including a profile of founder Judy D’Amore and Libby Palmer which was published in the Port Townsend Leader. She also managed PTMSC’s non profit vendor booth at the Port Townsend Farmers Market for five years, where she was responsible for setting up the booth on a monthly basis and encouraged folks to donate and become members, and of course, to volunteer.

It was wonderful to have the opportunity to join Linda for lunch and learn more about her fascinating history. In the future she’ll enjoy continuing as a docent and her appreciation for the personalities of the grunt sculpins, her favorite critter in the aquarium. Thank you for your years of service, Linda!

#volunteers #volunteerspotlight


Monday, January 23, 2017

Honoring a Legacy with Service: 5th Annual MLK Day Weed Pull

“Everybody can be great...because anybody can serve. You don't have to have a college degree to serve. You don't have to make your subject and verb agree to serve. You only need a heart full of grace. A soul generated by love.”  -Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. 
Brave volunteers tackling the Himalayan blackberry near the campgrounds. Photo by Wendy Feltham.

Every year in January, AmeriCorps members across the country honor Martin Luther King Jr. on his namesake national holiday with a day of service. MLK Day is usually a day off; a day off from school, work, meetings or errands—a long weekend in some regard. However, the legacy of MLK Jr. is one of taking action. That’s why Washington Service Corps and the Port Townsend Marine Science Center (PTMSC) strive to make it a day on, instead of a day off.

PTMSC AmeriCorps (from left to right) Juhi, Brooke, Sarah, Mattie. Photo by Wendy Feltham.
The AmeriCorps at PTMSC chose to serve the community of Port Townsend by committing to a term of service. The annual MLK Day of Service is meant to recruit others from the community to join us in that duty. This year marked the 5th annual day of service weed pull at Fort Worden State Park. On January 16th, 2017, we gathered with volunteers who rose to the call to join us in serving our community.

A clearing where invasive, pokey, Himalayan blackberry used to be. Not to be confused with trailing blackberry, a native species. 
Photo by Carolyn Woods.

This year we targeted the Himalayan blackberry and English ivy that were overrunning the area behind the Natural History Exhibit and campground. These are both quick-growing plants that out-compete the native species vital to the ecosystem at Fort Worden. We gathered at the Natural History Exhibit to identify target areas, gear up, and get to work.

Volunteers rolling up the English Ivy like a carpet; the best technique for those pesky vines! Photo by Wendy Feltham.
Although we had been prepared for rain to pour on us, somehow it managed to hold off for the weed pull. It was the only thing that held back. Over 50 volunteers showed up, donating a combined total of over 150 hours of service. The outpouring of support was tremendous, and the event an all-around success.



(Above, both) Team work makes the invasive-species-eradication
dream work! Photos by Carolyn Woods.
The weed pull couldn't have been so outstanding without the help of many. Thank you to PTMSC, Friends of Fort Worden, and Washington State Parks for partnering with us on the event. Thanks to the Noxious Weed Board, Native Plant Society, as well as individuals from the Coastal Artillery Museum and Department of Fish and Wildlife and other volunteers who generously donated tools. Thanks to the Fort Worden Rangers and Maintenance team for their continuous support. Thanks as well to our Washington Conservation Corps team at Fort Worden and to our fellow AmeriCorps from NOAA Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary for joining us in service. I also want to recognize and thank my teammates Sarah, Juhi, and Mattie for their individual and collective efforts in executing the weed pull. We have enormous gratitude for every single volunteer who joined us to honor MLK Jr. by coming together as a community and providing a service to our environment.

_

BROOKE ASKEY is the Citizen Science Educator and an AmeriCorps Member at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Four Reasons to be Thankful!

Reflecting on our successes this past week, we'd like to celebrate and extend our thanks to some of the people who make our work possible:

Our Friends & Members:



On Saturday, twenty-five people came down for a low tide walk at Kinzie Beach on a warm, blue-sky morning. Spreading out among the rocks, kelp, and seagrasses, visitors discovered shaggy mouse nudibranchs, gumboot chitons, blood stars, anemones, hermit crabs, sea worms, giant barnacles, limpets, and even a snailfish, named for its tail which folds inward like a snail shell when the fish is resting.

Our Generous Donors:



Last Tuesday and Wednesday, 128 people participated in our GiveBIG campaign, a 42% increase in participants over last year! Donations ranged from $10 to $2,500 and came from as far away as Vermont! Thank you all for coming together to collectively make a huge impact. We are happy to report that we surpassed our goal of $15,000, raising a total of $20,625!

We are thrilled with this 19% increase over last year — a new GiveBIG record for the Port Townsend Marine Science Center — and are humbled and honored by your support.

Our Volunteers:



Every weekend, squeals and laughter echo through our exhibits and touch tanks as our volunteer docents tell the story of our orca, Hope, and help visitors connect their own lives and choices with the health and conservation of the Salish Sea. Whether seeing a child touch the incredibly soft fur of a seal for the first time or wriggle with excitement as their finger is delicately "hugged" by a sea urchin, our volunteers help create small moments of inspiration almost daily. Those moments can shape a lifetime.

Our Lifelong Learners:



Yesterday, we welcomed a group of 80 second-grade students from Sand Hill Elementary School for a tour of our Marine Exhibit. One unanticipated highlight of the tour was a tank filled with seawater (and nothing else), which we had goofily named "the plankton tank." Upon discovering that seawater is filled with billions of plankton, one student asked for permission to uncover the tank so he could "please touch all the plankton." Students excitedly took turns dunking their hands into the sea water and looking at plankton under a microscope. One student expressed fear of having to leave before she got a chance to look at plankton under the microscope because, she said, "plankton are the coolest dudes ever!" The students were more hyped about the plankton than anything else, which is a marine exhibit first. When asked how the water in the "plankton tank" felt, one student exclaimed, "Oh my goodness! It feels like I'm being tickled by a billion tiny creatures!" Needless to say, the "plankton tank" was a total Sand Hill Elementary hit.

Thank you to all our members, donors, volunteers, students, and friends for making this past week such a success at the Marine Science Center.

Photo 1 by Port Townsend Marine Science Center | Photos 2 & 3 by Gary Larson | Photo 4 by Zofia Knorek



JOIN US AT OUR ANNUAL MEETING Thursday, May 26 from 5:00 to 6:30 for a recap of the Science Center's highlights and successes over the past year as well as a lecture presentation from new Program Director Karlisa Callwood on the Caribbean spiny lobster.

Monday, April 18, 2016

Volunteer Spotlight: Dennis Cartwright

Dennis Cartwright wears many hats: Sound Toxins Volunteer, Sea Star Monitoring Guru, Sensaphone First Responder, Sea Urchin Husbandry Expert, On-Call Aquarist, and Puppy Wrangler to name just a few. He navigates between these varied roles with ease, grace, and a constant smile. Below is a conversation we had yesterday, with a liberal addition of editor’s notes.

How long have you been a Marine Science Center volunteer?
A year and a half.
[After only 16 months, Dennis has racked up an impressive 250 volunteer hours.]

Are you a member of the Marine Science Center?
Yes.

And how’s the puppy?
The puppy is a monster. It learned how to hide things in pots the other day. And it knows that I eat cheerios every morning. I pour my cereal into the bowl over the kitchen floor so every morning, we both get cheerios for breakfast.

In what capacity to you volunteer here? Or maybe the better question is in what capacity don’t you volunteer here?
Sound Toxins, Sea Star Wasting, HomeCrew, and miscellaneous maintenance stuff.
[Examples of the aforementioned mysterious, miscellaneous maintenance: replacing rusty cables with high-quality line, removing live decorator crabs from the plumbing, and assuring me that yes, that sea star is fine.]

What aspect of the Marine Science Center’s work resonates with you?
Citizen Science.
[Dennis demonstrates his commitment to our Citizen Science program by regularly braving the wind and waves of Discovery Bay to collect plankton samples.]

What was your favorite day of volunteering so far?
Hm, I don’t know. That’s a tough one.

The day the new crop of AmeriCorps arrived, right?
Well, that actually was a great day. You know what the best day was? When you got into graduate school. And then again when Zofia got into graduate school. We’re all so happy for you. Did I ever tell you about seeing Bromus tectorum seeds walk?
[At this point, Dennis and I veered off into a conversation about awns and hydrostatic action and invasive terrestrial plants. I’ll spare you the details. Suffice it to say, wonderful, scientific distractions like this one are a regular part of my interactions with Dennis.]

What is your personal connection to the Salish Sea?
I started sailing on the Schooner Adventuress in 2003. My daughter started working with them and then she got me involved. You know, I grew up on Long Island Sound and then spent too many years inland [at Washington State University]. Coming to Port Townsend was almost like coming back to the water. [Here Dennis clearly wanted to say, “almost like coming home” but he could not bring himself to be even the littlest bit sentimental.]

Can you tell me about a particular experience of awe you’ve had with the Salish Sea?
Yes. I was spending some time at Friday Harbor Labs, taking photos to use in my Intro Biology slides. I was out taking a walk by myself one evening when I heard the strangest noise. I couldn’t figure out what was making it, so I followed the sounds all the way to the beach. Then, suddenly, a pod of orcas surfaced, only 50 feet away from the shore. And this was the first time I had ever seen orcas. It was misty and foggy and they surfaced so close. I’d call it mystical. [and I’d call it MIST-ical. But I’m far too punny for Dennis].

That sounds incredible.
The guy I was rooming with was so mad. [Dennis’ reenactment has been censored to ensure this blog is appropriate for all readers] He’d stayed behind to nap or read a book or something. And I’d seen whales.

Why do you feel the Marine Science Center’s work is important to the conservation of the Salish Sea?
The more people know about the Puget Sound, the more they will love it. And the more they love it, the more they will want to take care of it.



REBECCA MOSTOW is the Marine Exhibit Educator and an AmeriCorps member serving at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center.

The Marine Exhibit is open for Spring Hours! Come say hello to the resident animals and get ready to meet some brand-new critters! The exhibits are open Friday-Sunday, 12-5 pm.

Saturday, April 16, 2016

Volunteer Spotlight: Frank Handler

It is my (Zofia's) honor to highlight Frank Handler, a former board member-turned-citizen scientist. Before serving at PTMSC, Frank was a board member at the Cabrillo Marine Aquarium in San Pedro, CA from 1992-2000. He holds a BA in Chemistry from College of the Holy Cross, an MBA from New York University, an MA in Marine Biology from Occidental College, and is a graduate of the Navy Officer Candidate School. I distinctly remember Frank's best piece of advice, which he conferred me during our first meeting last fall: "It's what you do, not when you do it." I hope this transcript of our conversation does his embodiment of this counsel justice.
Frank keenly observing the beach outside PTMSC during
January's Brown Bag Lunch on Nature Journaling

How long have you been a Marine Science Center volunteer?
I was a board member from 2002-2009 (Development Chair), and have been working as a citizen scientist on the SoundToxins project since September 2015.

Are you a member of the Marine Science Center?
Yes.

In what capacity do you volunteer here?
I do SoundToxins and I hope, since I retired in September, to get involved in some other Citizen Science efforts like the Marine Mammal Stranding Network. I like Citizen Science because it is more behind-the-scenes work, and provides opportunities for more one-on-one interactions. The interaction of scientific ideas through collaboration and communication is key — our curiosity connects us [scientists].

What aspect of the Marine Science Center’s work resonates with you?
PTMSC's focus on marine sustainability...[and], the [volunteers and staff] are exceptionally enthusiastic and dedicated. They really believe in what they're doing and want to make a difference.

What is your favorite day or memory of volunteering so far?
[Past]: As a board member aboard [get it??] the Adventuress, I had the opportunity to spend quality time with other people during a day sail. [Recently]: Also, discovering the Sound Toxins program. Formerly, I had a career as a chemist and for two years I was a marine biologist so getting back into the lab was quite fun.

What is your personal relationship/connection with the Salish Sea?
I feel connected to, and part of, the whole ocean — I've always lived on (in New York City, Rhode Island, Los Angeles, Seattle, and now Port Townsend), in (as an Active Duty Navy Officer for three years; Reserve for 10), or under the ocean (as a SCUBA diver). I can't live away from it. As an NYC native, and seeing how heavily populated Long Island Sound is, I realize the Salish Sea is a natural wonderland; I want to see it preserved and kept healthy.

What inspires you, personally?
My kids, Scott and Kate. They are the joy of my life.

Can you tell me about a particular experience or moment of awe you’ve had with the Salish Sea that’s stuck with you?
[Thinking of the Salish Sea as part of the world ocean]: Being in the middle of a typhoon in the South China Sea while I was in the Navy, and when I first got SCUBA certified in Belize in 1987.

Why do you feel the Marine Science Center’s work is important to the conservation of the Salish Sea?
PTMSC articulates the issues that are undermining the health of the Salish Sea in a science-based and science-focused manner, which makes it credible. [And], inspiring children through our education programs. Instilling that first sense of awe is so important — they are the future.

Thank you, Frank, for sharing your thoughts and wisdom, and for your service to PTMSC!



ZOFIA KNOREK is the Citizen Science Educator and an AmeriCorps Member at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center

Friday, April 15, 2016

Volunteer Spotlight: Carol McCreary

Today's Volunteer Spotlight is on Carol McCreary. Enjoy!

Carol McCreary at the 2016 Tides of March Auction

How long have you been a Marine Science Center volunteer? 
Not very long. It was during my WSU Beach Watchers’ training that I became fascinated with the work of PTMSC.

Are you a member of the Marine Science Center?
Yes.

In what capacity do you volunteer here?
I have a Saturday afternoon gig at the Natural History Exhibit. Sometimes when I have a conflict and can’t make it, Jack, my husband who’s also a trained volunteer, takes my place.

What aspect of the Marine Science Center’s work resonates with you?
The science. When I last studied science in an institution, so much of what we know today about the ocean was unknown, including climate change and the pressing hazards that it brings.

What is your favorite day or memory of volunteering so far?
I love watching visitors engage on their own — noisy kids in the storm sewer, an adult and child working through the riddles on the Toxics screen, folks figuring out how the seal fin bones fit together and realizing what it means to be a mammal. The best questions that visitors come up with are the ones I can’t answer. So I engage the AmeriCorps on duty and learning surpasses everyone’s expectations.

What is your personal relationship/connection with the Salish Sea?
Jack and I sail on its waters year round. Fascinated by its richly diverse boundaries and the topography of its shores, we take lots of photos. Our subjects range from the quiet, hideaway coves in South Sound to the great seal haulouts of the San Juans to the majestic Desolation Sound and the chalky blue glacial waters of Toba Inlet all the way to the north end where waters surge back and forth through Seymour Narrows.

What inspires you, personally?
Sanitation, especially alternatives to waterborne systems. As we face drought, climate change, and the prospect of a pipe-breaking Cascadia Subduction Zone earthquake, we need to prototype new technologies that treat pathogens and toxics and help restore our soils. The recent NOAA Fisheries study of the impact of pharmaceuticals on fish should be a wake-up call.

Can you tell me about a particular experience or moment of awe you’ve had with the Salish Sea that’s stuck with you?
Spring brings low tides and time with the barnacles, fascinating sea creatures you can depend on to be there for you.

Why do you feel the Marine Science Center’s work is important to the conservation of the Salish Sea?
Most of our visitors have gone green. They’re on board with fighting climate change and ready to Go Blue!

Thank you to Carol for sharing your thoughts on volunteering at PTMSC!



CAROLYN WOODS is the Natural History Exhibit and Volunteer Educator and an AmeriCorps Member serving at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center.

Thursday, April 14, 2016

Volunteer Appreciation: an interview with Betty Petrie

Today I sat down with Betty Petrie to ask about her experience as a volunteer for the Port Townsend Marine Science Center. Originally from Houston, Texas, Betty has been living in Port Townsend for the past 18 years and has been volunteering with us for just as long! 


How long have you been a Marine Science Center Volunteer? 
18 years. 

Are you a member of the Marine Science Center?
Yes 

In what capacity do you volunteer here?
Homecrew: 18 years
On the board of directors: 3 years
Docenting the Marine Exhibit: 18 years
I also help out with fishprinting.

I used to docent at the cold water tank at the Houston Zoo and I taught zoology, so this was an easy transition. Years ago, docents used to give short presentations to the public about different subjects. I have presented about a lot of different topics such as crabs and whale evolution.

What aspect of the Marine Science Center's work resonates with you?
Just about everything really. But I really enjoy telling people what the different animals and plants are, what they do, and how they live. During homecrew, I like to clean the tanks so I can see all the new animals close up without a big crowd. 

What was your favorite day or memory of volunteering so far? 
That is hard to say, but flintsing the Grey Whale was definitely the best. I have never seen so many maggots in one place! 

What is your personal relationship/connection with the Salish Sea?
We saw so much of it from our boat when we first moved out here. At first it freaked me out because it was salt water and yet it was so clear. I could see all the animals! It also surprised me how deep it was and how quickly it became so deep.  I was not used to that coming from the Gulf of Mexico. 
On one of my first trips to downtown, I looked at the pilings at low tide and noticed all the animals! I thought to myself that I could have taught a whole zoology class right there. 

What inspires you, personally?
I am an active person, I like to move around and check things out. When I am in my boat I like to see what is at the bottom of the ocean, and I like to see what might be coming up with my crab pots. 

Can you tell me about a particular experience or moment of awe you've had with the Salish Sea that's stuck with you?
I saw a big pod of Orcas from Spieden Island. You can hike on it and at the far end we saw Orcas. I also saw many humpback whales. 

Why do you feel the Marine Science Center's work is important to the conservation of the Salish Sea? 

Mostly because it is giving people the awareness of what is going on and the realization of individual need to stop pollution. It shows people what is around and that you need to keep it pristine.



KATIE CONROY is the Marine Mammal Stranding Educator and an AmeriCorps member serving at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center.

Thursday, June 11, 2015

Sea Star Wasting Annual Report

Are you curious about the data our citizen scientists have been collecting about sea star wasting?
We have finally finished putting together our sea star wasting annual report.
The report shows observations and patterns that we've seen in the Port Townsend Marine Science Center tanks, as well as in our plots at Indian Island County Park, Port Hadlock, WA.


It's been a busy year for the Port Townsend Marine Science Center, and our work collecting data is far from over as we seek to understand the changes that we'll be seeing for our sea stars in the future.

Friday, May 8, 2015

4 Things I'm Thankful For

Reflecting on our successes this week, I'd like to celebrate and extend my thanks to some of the people who make our work possible:

Our Lifelong Learners 
On Monday, we welcomed a group of visiting students for a Whales of the Salish Sea class. It was a very successful program and one student's first time experiencing the ocean! It's inspiring to witness students developing relationships with the Salish Sea.


Our Generous Donors
On Tuesday, we participated in the GiveBIG campaign. I am happy to report that we surpassed our goal of $13,000, raising a total of $17,182!


We are thrilled with this 36% increase over last year and a new GiveBIG record for the Port Townsend Marine Science Center.

Our Friends & Members 
On Wednesday at the PTMSC annual meeting, Executive Director Janine Boire highlighted PTMSC's 2014 successes and future goals, Dr. Joseph K. Gaydos delivered an inspiring presentation and slideshow on his new book, The Salish Sea, Jewel of the Pacific North West, to a full house, and over 100 PTMSC members and friends flipped through their newly signed copies of his work.



Our Volunteers
On Friday, PTMSC volunteers pulled a 150-foot seine net through the eelgrass by the pier to collect fish for our exhibits. Come see the latest additions to the Marine Exhibit tanks this weekend, Friday - Sunday, 12-5. Remember, moms receive free admission to all our exhibits on Sunday in celebration of Mother's Day.




Thank you to all our members, donors, volunteers, students, and friends for making this week such a success at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center.

Wednesday, April 8, 2015

Earth Day Beach Clean Up: Saturday, April 25

Want to do your part for the oceans this Earth Day? Join the Port Townsend Marine Science Center at the Food Co-op on Saturday, April 25 from 1-5 pm, for an Earth Day Beach Clean-Up!
Register at our table anytime before 4pm at the Food Co-op (414 Kearney St. Port Townsend, Washington 98368) and we'll give you materials to collect trash on local PT beaches, assign you a beach, and give you data sheets to record what kind of trash you collect.

Once you're done having fun on the beaches, bring your trash back to the Co-op and receive a voucher redeemable at the Food Co-op!

Event is family-friendly, so bring your friends, your pals, and other acquaintances that also love to make a difference for our oceans. Go Blue!

We also need volunteers to help staff the booth on the day of the event. Set-up begins at 11:30. Contact Amy Johnson, 360-385-5582 x204, if you can help out during the event.

Our volunteers are the life-blood of the Marine Science Center. They provide invaluable support in everything we do. Almost everyone who has the willingness and time can find a role as a volunteer that contributes to the organization in important ways. Find out how you can get involved!

Monday, April 6, 2015

2015 Summer Marine Education Internships Available

It's that time of year again! We're starting to recruit for our 2015 Summer Marine Education Interns.
We are pleased to offer two unpaid 20-week internships for the 2015 season. Marine Education Interns will learn by actively assisting our program staff in a wide variety of programs and tasks including exhibit maintenance and interpretation, volunteer management, summer camp education, and citizen science. Interns are responsible for completing paperwork to receive university credit. Interns will receive a $2,000 stipend and rustic housing is provided.

Qualifications:
  • Ability or willingness to work with people of all ages and from all walks of life
  • Marine science and natural history background
  • Energetic, self-motivated, and willing to learn
  • Independent, well organized, and a team worker
  • Excellent verbal communication skills
  • CPR and First Aid certification completed before arrival
For more information and instructions for applications, please contact Amy Johnson, ajohnson@ptmsc.org or 360-385-5582 x204.

Friday, March 13, 2015

A Commited Community’s Passion For Fort Worden



A Story of Service 
By: Shannon Phillips
Marine Exhibit AmeriCorps

Port Townsend Marine Science Center (PTMSC) is nestled into the heart of charming Fort Worden.  Fort Worden State Park is 434-acres of beauty with over two miles of saltwater shoreline and plenty of trails to hike.  You’ll find yourself entering the Fort and passing by the parade grounds as you head downhill, and then a dramatic turn and you’ll be overlooking the Marine Science Center out on the pier along the sandy shoreline from atop the hills. I find myself fortunate to be gazing out upon this view again as I come in for my second term of service. It’s become almost a second home to me and one that I’m very fortunate to have found. 
View of PTMSC at the end of the pier.
As I learned during my last service term, Fort Worden, in all of its beauty, is also currently serving as a home to several noxious weeds and invasive species. These noxious weeds overgrow and outplace many of the park’s native plants. English Ivy climbs atop the beautiful trees, causing limb breakage with all of the extra weight. Meanwhile, each mature Scotch Broom plant is able to drop over 10,000 seeds, which shade out the native vegetation. In addition to learning about the destructive forces, I also learned that many people are just as concerned about them as I am. The community of Port Townsend continuously gathers to work against noxious weeds in many organized weed pulls, including one I helped organized to be held on Martin Luther King Jr. Day 2015. I have a feeling these weeds will only call Fort Worden a temporary home.

Introduction Lecture of the Importance of MLK Day, Pulling Noxious Weeds and Working Together
My one-word description of the Port Townsend community is passionate. The community is, as a whole, passionate about a diversity of topics, and all are able to find a home here. It is with this community that the AmeriCorps of PTMSC have established an annual Fort Worden State Park MLK Day Weed Pull. The many residents of Port Townsend, the AmeriCorps, Washington State Parks employees, and members of Friends of Fort Worden , devoted their day off to removing noxious weeds with assistance from Jefferson Land Trust, Native Plant Society, Noxious Weed Board, North Olympic Salmon Coalition, and Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. The passion and commitment of those that showed up to assist removing Scotch Broom, English Ivy and Poison Hemlock that have a continuous positive impact on the ecosystem.
Some of the 44 volunteers that attended MLK Day Weed Pull 2015

It is with the community of Port Townsend, that I continuously gain the valuable lesson of collective action and the greater impact that it is able to make. This was my second time organizing the MLK Day Weed Pull at Fort Worden as part of my service term, from contacting organizations to advertising to presenting the importance of this event, I was a small piece in making this PTMSC’s Third Annual MLK Day Weed Pull. For the second year in a row, the passion of this community has astounded me with their devotion to ensuring the beauty of Fort Worden.  44 volunteers gathered on January 19, 2015, to honor Martin Luther King Jr. by donating a total of 117 hours to pulling 1420 pounds of Scotch Broom, English Ivy and Poison Hemlock! Ridding Fort Worden of these noxious weeds will allow the native plants to thrive, adding to the beauty of the place I call my second home. Working together, the community of Port Townsend was able to make this MLK Day, “a day on, not a day off.” I am proud to be a part of this community, serve with AmeriCorps at PTMSC and to help rid the noxious weeds from Fort Worden.
Walking back to PTMSC after a successful weed pull


Check out the 3rd Annual MLK Day Video Here:

Monday, March 24, 2014

What Happened to That Cup?

In the Fall of 2013, PTMSC volunteer Nam Siu was fortunate enough to participate in the Ocean Exploration Trust’s Ocean Science Internship aboard the E/V Nautilus. Nam decorated this styrofoam cup with the PTMSC logo and sent it down to approximately 4000ft with ROV Hercules and ROV Argus. The tremendous pressure at that depth crushed the cup to its current size.

Nam working on ROV Hercules
This dive was made during the last leg of the 2013 exploration season off the west coast of Grenada, where the E/V Nautilus and her ROVs were exploring “Kick’em Jenny” the largest active submarine volcano in the Caribbean.  During these dives, the ROVs explored iron-rich hydrothermal vents with orange bacterial spires, methane cold-seeps with the world’s largest mussels at 14inches, and the abyssal planes around the volcano. 

Hydrothermal vent 
The Ocean Exploration Trust (OET), founded by Dr. Robert Ballard (famous for discovering the wrecks of the Titanic and battleship Bismarck and many other ships), is a non-profit organization for ocean exploration and education. OET owns the Exploration Vessel Nautilus, a 211ft research ship outfitted with two remotely operated vehicles used to explore the seafloor in real-time online via telepresence technology. The E/V Nautilus spent the 2013 exploration season in the Caribbean Sea exploring the “Caribbean Ring of Fire”, which is a series of submarine volcanos located on the eastern edge of the Caribbean plate caused by the subduction of the Atlantic plate.

Thanks Nam for including PTMSC in this amazing adventure!

Tuesday, July 24, 2012

Port Townsend Bay Monitoring Project


Students on the Monty Python after 
a rain cover was made for it.
Back in 1986, Judy and her friend Debra decided to start a project that would get local kids helping to monitor the water quality in Port Townsend Bay. They already had a boat—a scientist friend had donated the vessel Monty Python to PTMSC. Debra was a water quality engineer, and Judy reluctantly agreed to be the boat’s skipper until a real skipper took the helm. The Port Townsend Bay Monitoring Project, or MOPO, was born.

With six high school students in tow, they tried out many things that first year—sampling water from one end of PT Bay to the other, doing the first fish trawls, and testing bottom samples for contamination—tiny amphipods were placed in the sediment to see if it they died. (The test was tricky to do and results weren’t very clear.) Volunteers were involved too, monitoring beaches for change and surveying eelgrass beds.

MOPO continued for 14 years. After the first year, MOPO began working with all of Port Townsend’s 8th graders. Students got some in-class training and then they each got a turn going on a sampling trip on the Monty Python. When it was their turn they were often annoyed they had to put on baggy rain gear and wear thick life jackets, but once on the water nobody complained.  

Over the years they measured dissolved oxygen, salinity and temperature at four monitoring sites and recorded the variety of animals they sifted from the sediment at each site. But the best part was that so many students—around 100 each year—got out on the water to work as scientists for a day and learn what good water quality is all about—and why it’s so important.
                                                                        By Judy D’Amore, co-founder of PTMSC


This is one of 30 reasons to give $30 to celebrate 30 years. Or increase your impact and give more. All funds support the Future Fund to keep the PTMSC going strong. Donate online or call (360) 385-5582, ext. 104, or send a check to 532 Battery Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368.

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Sunday, July 22, 2012

Collecting our Marine Animals for the Exhibit

 
Every spring, the staff and volunteers at the PTMSC begin collecting animals for the tanks in the Marine Exhibit so the public can learn about them up close throughout the spring, summer and fall seasons. It’s an exciting and exhilarating time for everyone. Here’s an inside look at a small part of the process:


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JJZjFy4Qg2s&feature=BFa&list=FLkLknzBYXCa5Q6q_a3KFvGg

This is one of 30 reasons to give $30 to celebrate 30 years. Or increase your impact and give more. All funds support the Future Fund to keep the PTMSC going strong. Donate online  or call (360) 385-5582, ext. 104, or send a check to 532 Battery Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.


Monday, July 16, 2012

What a freezer could tell



Biology has a certain smell. In the case of marine biology it’s a very distinctive smell indeed—salty, fishy and sometimes overly pungent, in the case of marine mammal parts or the unique scent of low tide.

When you crack the freezer open at PTMSC, you are sometimes hit with all of these smells at once. Our freezers serve many purposes—they hold clams, krill, herring and squid for feeding our animals, whole tilapia used for fish printing, plankton samples collected by our citizen scientists and a bunch of rather unusual specimens stored for various purposes. There is a set of baleen plates from Spirit, the gray whale on display in NHE. A wide variety of fish specimens stored for later drying and use as educational tools. A river otter, Northern fur seal, and several small birds await the opportunity to be cleaned up and shown in a display or class. Two seal pups are on hold for future trainings on marine mammal strandings. 
Last year we stored a whole orca flipper until we could to have it scanned to accurately map out its bones for re-articulation. In past years it was the rare Lancet fish that washed ashore, Humboldt squid collected by local fisherman, and an occasional dog fish shark that was saved for a dissection demonstration. 
If those freezers could talk, they would tell the story of questions wanting answers and riddles waiting for their turn to be solved. This is the central idea of marine science—that the questions are more plentiful than the answers. Answering these questions is often a hands-on (and potentially smelly) investigation—which all starts in the freezer. 

By Chrissy McLean

This is one of 30 reasons to give $30 to celebrate 30 years. Or increase your impact and give more. All funds support the Future Fund to keep the PTMSC going strong. Donate online or call (360) 385-5582, ext. 104, or send a check to 532 Battery Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368.


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Sunday, July 15, 2012

Home Crew

For as long as the Marine Exhibit has been in operation it has needed people to keep the tanks clean, the animals fed and basically to offer TLC. Over the years, the team who performed these tasks was lovingly dubbed “Home Crew.”

These are the folks who haven’t been afraid to take the plunge (with their hands, that is!) and help with the care and feeding of all the wonderful sea creatures living in the Marine Exhibit touch pools and tanks on the Pier at Fort Worden State Park.

Ask any volunteer who’s helped on Home Crew and you’ll hear stories! We’re hoping some of you will add them below as Comments. 

 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X4O_t_3Duys&list=FLkLknzBYXCa5Q6q_a3KFvGg&index=4&feature=plpp_video

This is one of 30 reasons to give $30 to celebrate 30 years. Or increase your impact and give more. All funds support the Future Fund to keep the PTMSC going strong. Donate online or call (360) 385-5582, ext. 104, or send a check to 532 Battery Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368.

Follow us on Facebook and Twitter.

Tuesday, July 10, 2012

Our Beloved AmeriCorps

After hearing from past AmeriCorps all the way back to 2001, it’s easy to tell that all have very fond memories of their time at PTMSC. Whether it’s cleaning the intake screens under the Marine Exhibit, feeding our marine animals, or teaching school children about the wonders of the ocean. Many have moved on to earn Masters Degrees, have families, and get great jobs.
In 2010, our AmeriCorps decided they weren’t quite ready to move on yet and all four of them opted to stay for another year in 2011. We fondly dubbed them “the Sanderlings.”
Our bright young AmeriCorps can now be found at such places as NOAA, Olympic National Park, Center for Alaska Coastal Studies, and Woodland Park Zoo. Past PTMSC AmeriCorps all have one thing in common: they loved their time with the PTMSC “family” and wouldn’t trade their experience here for anything.

 





This is one of 30 reasons to give $30 to celebrate 30 years. Or increase your impact and give more. All funds support the Future Fund to keep the PTMSC going strong. Donate online or call (360) 385-5582, ext. 104, or send a check to 532 Battery Way, Port Townsend, WA 98368.



Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Volunteer Appreciation Week

When we say the words 'Thank You' to our volunteers what does it specifically mean? To us at the Port Townsend Marine Science Center it means much more than words can really say, but we'll try:

Thank you for partnering with us in helping to conserve our marine environment. Thank you for believing in and support our cause.

Thank you for being someone to learn from and alongside.

Thank you for inspiring us with your dedication to the center.

Thank you for being with us through all the trials and tribulations of daily cleaning tasks.

Thank you for being long-term, steadfast, and dedicated volunteers that allow our organization to function day to day, month to month, and year to year. Without you it would truly be impossible to even begin to accomplish our mission.

Thank you for so frequently saying or doing what exactly we need at the exact right moment (even if you don't realize it at the time). Sometimes it's the unexpected small gestures that really make the difference in our day.

Sometimes we feel like we don't say 'Thank you' enough but this is us trying.

THANK YOU!



Enjoying food at the 2010 Volunteer Gathering

Volunteer Gathering 2010

Volunteers pulling a seine net

Just some of our volunteer buttons

Volunteers at the New Years low tide walk