Twelve Signs That You’re a Member of the Terrestrial Team
- You see tree rings through a microscope (complete with cross hairs for measuring) whenever you go to sleep
- You know the difference between loamy sand and sandy loam
- You can estimate the carbon content of a given amount of biomass based on how it smells while it’s combusting
- You secretly hope you’ll get an increment borer for your birthday
- You know what a clinometer is (but not necessarily how to use it)
- You are amazed that nearly 4000 grams of moss can fit in a 1 m2 quadrant, in addition to the shrubs, woody debris, other plants, and dog
- You get overly excited when the 100th ring of a tree does not land on an extremely skinny ring, but rather the much wider one next to it
- You can calculate how far you could throw a stump based on its DBH
- You haven’t forgiven John for leaving the soil auger in Pleistocene Park
- You become increasingly anxious when approaching every 10th ring of a tree core while measuring
- You have calluses on your hands from sanding off your skin while processing tree cores
- If you came across a plot full of wet, silty soil and thick with trees (that were also rotten on the inside), you would give it a site name of <**^%E@*!>
Special thanks to Allison and Sam for help on compiling this list!
Comment(1)-
Ann Reed says
July 25, 2011 at 10:28 amGood Morning Dylan and team,
What a special surprise to log on to FACEBOOK and see Dylan, it has made my day. Love you, Ann