Jade Strapart

Meet our Educators: Paul Arbetan

Paul Arbetan

Associate Professor of Ecology, Diné College

Tsaile, AZ / Navajo Nation

11/08/21 – 11/24/21

 

     Paul Arbetan teaches ecology at Diné college in Tsaile, Arizona on the Navajo Nation. After working with the Bureau of Land Management and New Mexico’s Department of Military Affairs, conducting ecological surveys, Paul is well versed in desert life systems. As a professor, he teaches his students to make close observations about the ever-evolving natural world. He reads the landscape closely, paying attention to the function of microscopic bacteria, the changes in vegetation brought about by differing levels of moisture in the air and the humans inhabiting it. Though, he walks faster than an Olympic race-walker, he takes the time to pause and look around. He turns to his students and asks “if seeds are everywhere why does vegetation exhibit patterns on the landscape?” He teaches his students to identify the climate processes and the importance of water availability which affect the types of plants growing in a specific area.

     Paul emphasizes that everything in the natural world is interconnected and undergoes constant change. “Modern ecology, thinks of relationship of organisms and the patterns as this constant evolutionary interplay between the niche space of these plants and the organisms that feed on them. It’s this constant change, constant reshifting of the organisms in the landscape, and to us in our short lifetimes, it just often seems as though it seems pretty constant. But it's not.”

     Although a scientist by trade, Paul looks at science, philosophy, and the arts as different yet all indispensable methods of knowing. After weeks of teaching Semester in the West students about ecology, Paul engaged in conversations not only about desert grasses but also free will and consciousness. Well versed in philosophy Paul says he only knows one thing for sure and that is that he knows absolutely nothing.

 

By Jade Strapart

Meet our Guests: Paul Hessburg

Paul Hessburg

Research Landscape Ecologist, U.S. Forest Service

Methow Valley, WA

9/3/21

 

Paul Hessburg is a fire connoisseur who looks at forests with a deep-rooted knowledge of ecology. He understands and imparts that a healthy forest does not look like the abundance of thick-canopied trees that many people imagine, but instead contains meadows and bare space. He looks at forests through the eyes of fire – thinking of where it would go when it inevitably comes back to the landscape, invited or not. Hessburg speaks of Native Americans’ relationships with fire, one he admits was much more in tune with the landscape. In a landscape impacted by the effects of climate change, Paul shares his knowledge within the U.S Forest Service and his community so that others can begin to understand that the only constant in landscape and fire ecology is change.

Conservation, in a world with a rapidly changing climate, must be thought of in much broader terms, Paul says. He believes that requires looking at the history of fire management, understanding the present social problems communities face, and diligently studying ecology. With this holistic view, Paul explains that “fire in this landscape is non-negotiable, so finding a way to invite it back so that it does good things: burn up dead wood, thin out trees, is the goal.”

 

By Jade Strapart

Meet our Guests: Rich Wandschneider

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Rich Wandschneider

Library Director, Josephy Center for Arts and Culture

Joseph, OR

8/25/2

 

     In the small town of Joseph Oregon, so named for the famous Nimiipuu (also known as the Nez Perce) leader Chief Joseph, there lives a storyteller. Rich Wandschneider is an animated local historian and Library Director at the Josephy Center for Arts and Culture. Rich tells the stories of the Nez Perce tribes who inhabited and still inhabit the West: stories of cultural annihilation, land expropriated from the tribe by white settlers, and promises unkept. These stories aren’t his own, but he explains that when white settlers came to the West, they kept written notes detailing of all their journeys and conquests. With these stories, outreach and extensive research, Rich put together the Nez Perce Treaties and Reservations Exhibit at the Josephy Center. The exhibit includes detailed maps, historic drawings and paintings all to illustrate the impact treaties have had and still have on the Nez Perce tribe. Rich is a steward of Native American history in the West working to share the stories of the Nimiipuu with his community of Joseph, Oregon and all of its visitors.

 

By Jade Strapart