The exhibit David Douglas: A Naturalist at Work has been extended to run through May 25 at the Washington State History Museum in Tacoma.
Read MoreOver a decade’s work of Jack Nisbet’s “Boundaries” columns for North Columbia Monthly are now fully indexed and easily accessible at http://www.northcolumbiamonthly.com This month’s column involves a search back through time for the story of a woolly mammoth mandible. Squirm alert: blowfly larvae are involved Jack will be presenting stories and artwork of birds collected by David Douglas during his journeys of 1824-34 at the Portland Audubon Society on the evening of January 16. See calendar for details.
Read MoreThe location of the Spokane Astronomical Society on Friday, May 3, has been changed to the Jepson Center on the west side of the Gonzaga campus, Room 017 on the lower level. See the Coming Events page for further details.
Read MoreIn The Collector, an earlier book about botanist David Douglas, Jack Nisbet artfully traces Douglas’s 19th century expeditions to the Pacific Northwest to collect and to study native flora and fauna. As I wrote in a review in these pages, Nisbet excels at this kind of integrated writing that combines historical knowledge with entries directly from Douglas’s own journals. In his current book, David Douglas: A Naturalist at Work – An Illustrated Exploration Across Two Centuries in the Pacific Northwest, Jack Nisbet again returns to Scottish naturalist David Douglas. Nisbet explains why: “I realized I had only begun to touch the dynamic worlds [Douglas] saw.” Nisbet writes...
Read MoreReviewed by Eileen Pearkes Jack Nisbet, Time Traveler Hidden in the beautiful landscape of the inland northwest are countless stories of those who have walked here before us, delighting in the region’s natural riches. Jack Nisbet’s new book allows us to lift the cover on some of these stories and peer into the deeper past while at the same time remaining firmly rooted in the present. David Douglas, A Naturalist at Work is in part a companion volume to the wonderful exhibit about Douglas currently running at the Northwest Museum of Art and Culture. It is also a larger celebration of the way plants and people can move across time. In the era of Internet research and...
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