Kananaskis Speaker & Discovery Series is back!

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You Are a Friend Of Kananaskis

In this month's newsletter...

  • Kananaskis Speaker & Discovery Series
  • Thank You Supporters
  • Bighorn Country Proposal
  • News from the Board -- It's Almost a New Year!
  • Outdoor Ethics Part 1: Leave No Trace
  • The Plants of K-Country: Hypogymnia Physodes Lichen

Kananaskis Speaker & Discovery Series
by Nancy Ouimet, Executive Director
 


The 2019 winter Kananaskis Speaker and Discovery Series in partnership with Alberta Parks and in collaboration with the University of Calgary – Palliser Club offers a variety of presentation topics and discovery events at the University of Calgary or at the Peter Lougheed Discovery Centre. Here's the upcoming lineup.

University of Calgary – at 7:00pm, Science Theatres – ST 135 (Map)

MATT MUELLER, KANANASKIS PUBLIC SAFETY – February 13
Wisdom for the Winter

Join a Kananaskis Public Safety Specialist for an evening of rescue stories and tips on how to safely enjoy the winter season. This will be a chance to learn lessons through stories and a chance to ask that question you’ve always wanted to.


DANAH DUKE, MIISTAKIS INSTITUTE – March 7
How Do Animals in Alberta Cross the Road?

Transportation infrastructure across the world poses numerous environmental challenges, affecting our air, landscapes and water. From a landscape perspective, roads and railways cause wildlife mortality through collisions and act as a significant barrier to wildlife movements. The Miistakis Institute aims to generate awareness of the challenges that transportation infrastructure poses to wildlife and to promote workable solutions to these challenges. Examples will be given from their work addressing wildlife connectivity and highway mitigation along Highway 3, Highway 1 and Highway 68 in Alberta.

KRIS KENDELL, ALBERTA CONSERVATION ASSOCIATION – March 27
Amphibians of Kananaskis: insights in their conservation and stewardship

Join Kris Kendell, biologist with Alberta Conservation Association, for an informative presentation about the amphibians of Kananaskis Country. During the presentation you will increase your knowledge of the many unique adaptations and life histories of this fascinating group of animals. You will also learn about the greatest threats to their survival as well as actions you can take in your backyard, or on your land, that can benefit amphibians. The presentation will also explore how citizen scientists have contributed to the advancement of amphibian conservation in Alberta.

 

Peter Lougheed Discover Centre – at 1:00pm, meet in the Discovery Centre (Directions)

ROBYN MULLIGAN – Saturday, January 26
Nature Inspired Art


Join Canmore-based full-time artist Robyn Mulligan to create your own nature-inspired art piece to bring home. All supplies will be provided.





JIM THORNE – Sunday, February 17
Winter Survival Skills

Join Jim Thorne of Foothills Search and Rescue and discover basic winter survival skills, such as shelter building and fire starting!  Dress warm and prepare to be outside.




LEITH MONAGHAN – Sunday, March 24
Winter Ecology

Join outdoor enthusiast Leith Monaghan as she explores how the world around us changes as we move into the winter season. Dress warm and prepare to be outside! Please bring snowshoes (limited snowshoes are available).




**No sign up required, all events free with $5 suggested donation**


Thank You Supporters

December is always a busy fundraising month as we wrap up the Trail Love - Give Back fundraiser and celebrate year-end giving. We would like to take this opportunity to thank our recent supporters.

Patagonia Elements 
Patagonia Calgary|Banff|Victoria believes businesses should have a role in environmental stewardship. They show this commitment by being members of 1% For The Planet – a global network of organizations who are committed to leveraging their resources to create a healthier planet, by pledging a minimum of 1% of annual gross sales to groups working to find solutions to the environmental crisis.

The Friends of Kananskis Country are honoured to be the 2018 recipient of their 1% For The Planet donation. Support from Patagonia Calgary|Banff|Victoria will allow the Friends to build upon our stewardship and education programs, ensuring that the Kananaskis we love today will provide similar experiences for future generations.

Second Sixties Outdoor Club
Nancy had the privilege to join the Second Sixties Outdoor Club Christmas Luncheon in December and do a brief presentation on FKC. Formally constituted in the fall of 1977, the Second Sixties Outdoor Club became the first senior’s outdoor club in the City of Calgary and the province of Alberta. Up to that time, all senior’s organizations offered a variety of indoor activities, such as bridge, but no outdoor activities. Today, the Club continues to be one of the few seniors clubs in Calgary offering its members the opportunity to participate in year-round outdoor activities.

The Club's members embraced the tail end of the Trail Love - Give Back fundraiser, contributing $1,065 towards reaching our $10,000 goal. A big thank you to Colin Graver, Second Sixties member and FKC volunteer Crew Leader for helping coordinate our attendance at this great gathering.











Year End Donations
We received donations of over $6,000 during the holidays to support our work in Kananaskis Country. We are always inspired by the generosity and passion which “Friends of the Friends” give back to Kananaskis and extend our heartfelt thanks for your support.

To everyone who donated to the Friends of Kananaskis Country in 2018, THANK YOU! Your ongoing support is valued and appreciated.
 
Have your say about the proposed Bighorn Country



40 years ago, Albertans were introduced to Kananaskis Country, an ambitious proposal for the region that the Friends of Kananaskis today know well, and enjoy for it’s wide variety of recreation opportunities and outstanding scenery. While not perfect, Kananaskis Country strives to balance the conservation of natural landscapes with tourism and recreation, and even some industrial use. Today, a similar opportunity exists in the Bighorn, a vast region of mountains, foothills, grasslands, rivers and lakes east of Banff & Jasper National Parks. Incorporating some of the last tracts of intact wilderness in the province, the Bighorn region represents one of North America’s greatest conservation opportunities and amazing outdoor experiences.
 
On November 23, the government announced their proposal for Bighorn Country, a network of parks, recreation areas and public land use zones that offers greater protection of the headwaters of the North Saskatchewan River that provides clean drinking water to over one million people, and helps conserve high-quality habitat to Alberta’s most iconic species, like grizzly bears, wolverines, bighorn sheep, bull trout, and whitebark and limber pine. The proposal also aims to ensure that the Bighorn’s unparalleled opportunities for hiking, camping, climbing, hunting, fishing, paddling and horseback riding remain accessible for current and future generations of Albertans.
 
The government would like to hear from Albertans about the Bighorn, and to submit feedback via survey until February 15, 2019. We hope that you’ll take the time to learn about this historic proposal and encourage you to complete the survey, and ask your friends to do the same! For all the details & the survey link visit https://talkaep.alberta.ca/bighorn-country

Bear parade -- Photo courtesy of Alberta Environment and Parks
News from the Board -- It's Almost a New Year!
By Derek Ryder, Co-Chair

While your calendar might say January, and you were wishing folks Happy New Year earlier this month, it’s not quite New Year for us yet.

The Friends operates on a fiscal year of April 1 to March 31 each year, so we still have just over 9 weeks to go before we get to pop any champagne and celebrate a New Year. We’re still in the 4th Quarter of our Fiscal Year, and as anyone who does year-ends where you work knows, that’s a pretty busy time for us.

First issue is that we’re starting to close our financial books and sort out how close we came/will come to being on budget. Ours is a relatively simple organization, but we still face issues like projects that span multiple years (like our Interpretive Trail Signage Project, and Chester-Sawmill) where carryovers matter. Our splits between restricted and unrestricted funding and expenditures become critical.

Then there’s our Business Plan. We’re a business, so we put one of those together, and this is the time of the year where we start looking back at our 2018/19 plan, and thinking about creating the new plan for the 2019/20 fiscal year. What did we get done in 18/19? What didn’t we do in 18/19 that we wanted to do? What do we want to do differently next year? What did we learn? What needs have changed out there on the landscape? What are the burning issues? What do our members want us to be doing?

With a Business Plan comes a Budget that has to tie to that plan. Where do we have room to spend and where are we tight? What restricted funding for projects will come forward? What resources to we need to execute that plan? Even small things such as “what will our advertising bill be” get looked at.

This is also the time of year when Alberta Parks starts putting together trail plans for the same window, so we start engaging with them to see what projects (big and small) are coming down the pipeline. When they’re not grooming ski trails, the Trail Crew Supervisors with Alberta Parks build their own Business Plans and Budgets and start their approval processes, and we like to try to at least mirror some of that as we learn about it.

This time of year might seem quiet from the outside, but isn’t quiet for us internally. We’re excitedly preparing for our version of New Year’s Day (though our version of New Year’s Eve isn’t that exciting at all). As it becomes clearer into the future, I’ll share it with you in future newsletters.
 
Outdoor Ethics Part 1: Leave No Trace
1st in a series by Derek Ryder, Director of Communications
 
Growing up in Ontario 50 years ago, I spent a lot of time in the wilderness, and some time volunteering with the Bruce Trail Association. The majority of the volunteering I did as a teenager was repairing the damage done by trail users, which included cleaning up the campsites and shelters that were along the trail then (they’re all gone now), fixing broken stiles and gates that crossed fences, collecting garbage, repainting damaged blazes and repairing trees that had initials carved in them. I guess that was the start for me of the concept of Leave No Trace.

I never understood why people couldn’t leave things the way they found them. I got the concept of accidentally dropping a bit of paper, but couldn’t understand folks who neatly collected their trash in plastic bags -- only to leave the bags on the trail (much like dog poop bags today, which is a plague not just in K-Country but around the world as any Google search will show you). The whole idea that “if I carried it in, I could carry it out” seemed pretty intuitive to me.

I wasn’t even a personal fan of fires in the wilderness, even when I went camping or backpacking. Ignoring the fact that it made my clothes smell, it always left ash or charred wood or blackened rocks, which was clear evidence that I had been there. SO many people have random fires in K-Country, especially up the creeks, and leave them as scars on the landscape. The mess at left was one of THREE (illegal) fire pits within 50' of this location.

I used to think: “take only pictures, leave only footprints”. But I now understand that there are a lot of places where even leaving footprints is creating permanent scars on the landscape. And don't get me started on graffiti.

As more and more people recreate in our wild spaces, the concept of the ethics of being in the wilderness is more and more important. Enter the Leave No Trace global movement, and specifically in Canada, Leave No Trace Canada. To quote their website:

Leave No Trace Canada is a national non-profit organization dedicated to promoting and inspiring responsible outdoor recreation through education, research and partnerships. Leave No Trace builds awareness, appreciation and respect for our wildlands.

Many of us have taken a pine cone or rock, veered off the trail to dodge mud puddles, gotten too close to wildlife or tossed an apple core into the woods. While these actions may seem harmless at the time, until we learn to reduce our impact, the quality of our outdoor experiences and the recreational resources we enjoy are at critical risk. Also at risk is our continued access to wildlands as land management agencies sometimes take restrictive action to protect the resources they manage. Unless, of course, education catches up with behavior, and we all learn to leave the outdoors as unchanged as possible by our presence.


I have experienced land managers clawing back access first hand. As just one example, it is an annual occurence for Bruce Trail private landowners to get tired of the mess users make (and I was cleaning up regularly back in the 1970's), and revoke permission for the trail to cross their land, necessitating major trail re-routes.

And you have experienced it, too. Mt. Indefatigable’s east ridge used to be an incredibly popular official hike complete with memorial benches. Now there’s the sign posted at right. Research and collar data clearly shows that grizzlies forage in the summer and den up there. For the sake of the grizzlies, the trail was decommissioned, and land mangers asked people to respect the trail closure. Has that stopped people going up there? Nope, not at all. Making arguments like “if the grizzlies were there, they would put an area closure in place” or “I’ll make sure we don’t disturb them” or “you could run into bears anywhere”, sadly many, many folks still use that trail.

Another example was the closure of several sections of trail (including newly built trail) last summer in Bow Valley Wildland Provincial Park on the east bank of Cougar Creek in an area referred to as the Horseshoe Loop. The Friends has been heavily involved over the last 4 years working in partnership with various land managers and user groups to reduce trail density on the land in that area. Everyone agrees that the trail density is too high. Research (that I help with) clearly shows the deleterious effect that trail density has had, and is having, on wildlife. In the end, the land managers have the final say, and sometimes, actions to protect the land they manage will be taken.

Many places in K-Country are under such pressures, and I don’t see the trend of potentially increasing restrictive actions ending any time soon. Since the Friends is in the education business, enhancing education regarding treading lightly in the wilderness is part of what we need to do.

In this 8 part series, I’m going to use Leave No Trace Canada’s 7 Principles of Leave No Trace to explore ways to minimize our impact as users of K-Country, and how we can keep “A Kananaskis Country of exquisite natural and cultural landscapes enjoyed by present and future generations” – which just happens to be the Friends vision.
 
The Plants of K-Country: Hypogymnia Physodes Lichen
3rd in a series by Derek Ryder, IGA Interpretive Guide

Lichens are a bit strange. One guidebook I own says, “think of lichens as fungi that have discovered agriculture”. Lichens are a fungus (similar to mushrooms) that cultivates algae inside them. The algae inside are protected (a win for them, which is why they live there), and through photosynthesis, generate carbohydrates, vitamins and proteins that the fungus lives on. The ultimate in symbiotic relationships.

There are over 400 visible macrolichen species in the Rockies (ones big enough to see easily), and over 1,000 species in total if you had a microscope and went looking. The first lichen that I wrote about in this series in October 2016 was Usnea, or Old Man’s Beard. This month’s lichen, Hypogymnia, is a tree-based lichen just like Usnea. Lichens can live on trees, on the ground, or on rocks. They can take forms of dust, crusts, scales, leaves, clubs, shrubs or hairs (like Usnea).

Hypogymnia physodes, also known as Grey Monk’s-Hood, Hooded Bone, Heather Rags or even Tube Lichen, is leafy, but to me always looks like a miniature version of the coral heads that I see when snorkelling. Unlike most lichens, it’s tolerant of air pollution (though not so much excess nitrogen), so can be seen in cities as well as in the wilderness. It’s name Hypogymnia is Greek for “naked underneath”, because it lacks holdfasts that attach it to things, except right at the base. Physodese is Greek for “puffed out” or “inflated looking”, which describes the lobes of the leaves. Pull apart a lobe and it’s hollow inside, by the way, trapping air and moisture to make the algae happy.

Incredibly slow growing, those little lichens you see can be hundreds of years old, and used to date forests because they often will be older than the trees (which will eventually die, while the lichens live on). They reproduce in many ways; they generate spores on the outside that look like dust that float off in the wind. But break a bit off and it has everything it needs to grow and thrive if it lands in the right place, like another tree branch. Hypogymnia is found literally around the world.

While not true epiphytes, they don’t damage the trees they grow on, nor draw nourishment from them. They just kinda… hang out and farm their innards.
 

Your Donations are Always Appreciated and Needed
 
We are pleased to recognize the contributions of the 
Calgary Foundation, The Auxilium Foundation,
Alberta Government - Community Initiatives Program, FortisAlberta, TransAlta, Banff Canmore Community Foundation, Town of Canmore, Alberta TrailNet, OnwardUP, Alberta Apparel, Husky Energy, and the many individual donors and clubs & organizations who support our work.

There are many ways to express your gratitude for Kananaskis Country and we are always grateful for contributions that help us maintain our programs and operations. We provide charitable receipts for donations over $25. You can donate directly by mail or through the
donations link on our website.

Donations made through
CanadaHelps now have the option to include a dedication designation for your contribution.

Friends of Kananaskis Country
201-800 Railway Avenue
Canmore, AB  T1W 1P1
403-678-5593

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