CNPS - A Photographic Tour of the Genus Calochortus, July 22

Paige Woodward via pbs pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net
Fri, 23 Jul 2021 10:11:51 PDT
My connection (feeble DSL) is too slow for videos. Someday perhaps that will change. 

But I saw at the start of this presentation that relatively few people have seen it. I wonder whether there is a way for PBS to adopt it into its website, as a permanent reference. With permission of the author, of course. 

Links and posts floating on the “outside" internet, even archived ones, quite often drop into oblivion. We have adopted hoards of information before. We can’t adopt everything, but it would be pleasing if we could occasionally conserve entire presentations like this one. 

Paige Woodward 

> On Jul 23, 2021, at 7:24 AM, Mary Sue Ittner via pbs <pbs@lists.pacificbulbsociety.net> wrote:
> 
> Thanks to Faith for alerting us to this program. We watched it last night and thought it was excellent as he showed photos of all the species and talked about the differences between the different sections and often described  where he had taken his photos. Towards the end he showed some very interesting natural hybrids and a very strange plant someone had photographed, but no one else has found again. It's a little over an hour and  people who missed it can still see it on the link below.
> 
> Mary Sue
> 
> On 7/15/2021 9:58 AM, Faith Lindsay via pbs wrote:
>> Watch on youtube:///https://youtu.be/gaYnZNvcBCE
>> 
>> Spend a gorgeous evening with renowned botanist and photographer Jeff Bisbee, enjoying and discussing this genus of bulbs native to California and elsewhere on our continent. Calochortus is divided into three sections (Calochortus, Mariposa, and Cyclobothra). Botanists further divided each section into four subsections. Jeff will share about each subsection, including distinguishing characteristics of each. Jeff has previously delivered programs to Redbud on Arctostaphylos (manzanita) and Ceanothus.
>> 
>> Jeff was raised in Grass Valley, in a rural setting where he developed a passion for native plants.  His father worked for the Forest Service, and got him started on trees. His interest spread from there to other types of plants.  Jeff has always had the desire to document the beauty of plants with photography, and has had many of his photographs published.  He provided many photos for the book, “Conifers Around the World”, traveling throughout Mexico to photograph conifers in their native habitat.  Mike Vasey got him interested in photographing Arctostaphylos, which lead to the book ”Field Guide to Manzanitas”  Since then, he has moved on to other genera, such as Ceanothus, Calochortus, Fritillaria, Lilium, Erythronium, and his latest interest is the genus Eriogonum with its 300+ species.  He also enjoys cultivating many native plants from seed.  Jeff has an extensive collection of Mexican and western conifers on his family property in Colfax.  He has contributed many Mexican conifers to the U.C. Santa Cruz arboretum. He is also cultivating many Arctostaphylos and Ceanothus.  Jeff is currently living in Gardnerville, Nevada, which gives him easy access to many of the Calochortus species of the eastern Sierra.
> 
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