Ever wondered what’s lurking in your garden?
A friend of mine has a budding1 professional interest. She’s a volunteer in Vancouver’s Stanley Park, and as part of her role has come across an activity known as nature mapping2.
As far as I understand it, the ultimate goal of nature mapping – also called barefoot mapping – is to catalogue the hidden biodiversity tucked away in parks and gardens. My friend has partnered with an amateur artist, and they are potentially interested in mapping private residences and producing personalised works of art, complete with information about the property’s ownership, location, physical description, ecological and cultural values, stewardship and conservation goals, etc.
Everyone needs to practice their trade, and what better way than in your friends’ gardens? So, one sunny summer day, she arrived at my house with notebook, camera and measuring tape in hand, and we proceeded to measure dimensions and sketch outlines and move inch by inch through the garden, listing and photographing every living thing we found. The results are below the fold; I’ll be forwarding this link to my friend, who is brand new to the blogosphere, so please give her a gentle introduction3 to our little corner of the internet!

Cath, this is brilliant. It really points out that science isn’t only in labs and ecology doesn’t only happen in exotic foreign countries but right outside your doorstep (although from my desk in Cambridgeshire, Stanley Park IS and exotic location). I might try to engage the smaller members of my clan in this for our garden or at least part of it. If I do we’ll post the result here I promise.
It reminds me a little of International Rock Flipping Day
which was 2nd September. My friend Bora had great fun finding things under rocks in 2007, though less so in 2008.
Perhaps we should instigate an International Nature Mapping Day, if one doesn’t exist already.
Image curtesy of digitalfrontiersmedia
Thanks Chris! This would be an excellent activity for kids. I’m hoping to involve at least one of my nephews in the Sunshine Coast effort, but it’s been a few years since we went rock flipping and bug hunting together in that same garden, and I’m not sure if he’ll still be interested.