New Nature Mapping Data Entry Form

New Nature Mapping Data Entry Form

nature-mapping-entry
Thanks to the feedback from Nature Mappers over this past year, we have just released the latest version of our new data entry form which enables you to:

  • Select species more quickly
  • Enter different ages, genders, activities, etc. under this same entry
  • Toggle to a map and click an arrow to set location or enter the UTMs manually
  • Review your entry and make corrections before you press “send”

This new form is accessed through both the “New Entry Form” green button located at bottom of the Nature Mapping website or mobile device.

To get the feel of the new form, you can find a training version in the “What’s New” section of the main page of the Nature Mapping website. The training version is equipped with tutorial information and allows you to enter observations that will not be submitted to the official Nature Mapping database as you practice.

We hope you find this new form easy. We’ve done our best to work through the inevitable glitches. However, if there’s something you think is not working right or you have additional feedback, please let us know by emailing paul@jhwildlife.org.

 

JHWF Enters New Year with New Executive Director

JHWF Enters New Year with New Executive Director

Jon Mobeck
The Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation (JHWF) is pleased to announce that Jon Mobeck – a conservation leader and decade-long resident of Jackson – will join JHWF as its executive director in January. He will officially begin work with JHWF on January 4, 2016.

Mobeck contributed to the local conservation community as a staff member of The Murie Center from 2009-2014, serving as executive director from 2012-2014. He has lived in Jackson for 10 of the last 15 years. He returns to Jackson this January after spending the past year in Boulder, Colorado with the WILD Foundation, an organization dedicated to connecting people, wilderness and wildlife globally.

“We are elated to welcome Jon as executive director to lead JHWF. Jon brings a wealth of conservation experience and enthusiasm that will benefit JHWF, its volunteers, and the wildlife of Jackson Hole,” Alyson Courtemanch, President of the Board of Directors, said. “Returning to Jackson to contribute to such an effective wildlife organization is a gift,” Mobeck said. “I’m grateful and honored to take on this role, and I’m already impressed by the dedication and effectiveness of the board and volunteers.”

Cory Hatch stepped down as JHWF’s executive director in late November to resume his science writing career. “I’m immensely proud to have served as executive director of the Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation,” Hatch said. “Thanks to hundreds of dedicated volunteers, JHWF is incredibly effective at delivering on-the-ground benefits for wildlife in Jackson Hole. It’s gratifying to know that Jon will take the helm. Jackson Hole’s wildlife are in good hands.”

Mobeck will lead the four main programs of JHWF: Wildlife-Friendlier Fencing, Bear Wise, Nature Mapping, and Give Wildlife a Brake. Mobeck will also usher in a new project in summer 2016, building wildlife ramps on the Teton County levee system to help animals cross the miles of rocks and boulders along the Snake River.

Mobeck first got involved in community nonprofit work with the Jackson Hole Chamber of Commerce as Membership and Communications Director from 2001-2003.

In Loving Memory of our amazing friend and JHWF family member Greg Griffith

In Loving Memory of our amazing friend and JHWF family member Greg Griffith

Greg Griffith - JHWF Super Volunteer
On behalf of us all at JHWF, we are so very shocked and saddened over the sudden passing of our amazing volunteer, Fence Program Leader Greg Griffith. We are so very grateful to have known him and be witness to his incredible passion–helping to keep wildlife safe.

Greg was a man of honor, respect, and loyalty and he was so deeply devoted to any project he was working on. What Greg valued most was the commitment of the Fence Volunteers who gave up many hours every year helping him get projects completed. On our behalf, Greg had an incredible relationship with our agency partners, private and public land owners, schools, non-profit groups, corporations, ranchers, wranglers, and so many others. His time spent in organizing on behalf of JHWF and for wildlife was endless. His passion was to always keep wildlife as the focus of his work. He never once waivered to what may be easier- he stood up for wildlife, for wilderness and for conservation. Greg remained diplomatic, working many times on two sides of a fence with his goal in the end to be a win-win for people and the wildlife they were interacting with.

He had led the Fence program to the highest standard ever, getting the materials needed, transporting equipment, collecting data, constant due diligence, site recons, and then running the project days. He educated volunteers with regard to what the project day would be, the safety steps, and so many other things, always showing us on project days how to work together and be open to learn from one another. He was passionate about his role at JHWF and it showed immensely. He was brilliant in his knowledge of wildlife and fencing and habitat and he spent so many hours prepping for a project and engineering what would have the least impact on the wildlife. Greg was truly one of a kind.

As our community and our wildlife mourn the loss of Greg, we thank you for your emotional support, especially to Greg’s family and friends. He led a very private life and in deep respect for Greg and how he chose to live his life, we ask for your prayers and thoughts to his family and friends. We would be honored to pass on any notes you may have for Greg’s family. If you wish to do so, please mail them to our JHWF office with attention to Greg’s Family and we will pass them along. The Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation Fence program will go on and we will do our best to continue the very important work that Greg dedicated his life to. We owe that to Greg and his precious wildlife.

With our deepest sympathy, Aly, Bob, Cory, Dan, Dawson, Geneva, Gretchen, Henry, Steve B., Steve M., and Sue

Frances Clark, Nature Mapping’s “volunteer” volunteer coordinator-extraordinaire

Frances Clark, Nature Mapping’s “volunteer” volunteer coordinator-extraordinaire

frances-clark-volunteer-coordinator
Frances Clark, Nature Mapping’s “volunteer” volunteer coordinator-extraordinaire
By Cory Hatch

Botanist Frances Clark credits her grandmother for cultivating her conservation roots while on family trips to New Hampshire when she was just a small child.

“My grandmother grew peonies and had a fabulous garden,” Clark said. “She was also a fisherwoman and a birder. She had this walled garden. It was magic to someone who was three feet high.”

Now, as Nature Mapping Jackson Hole’s “volunteer” volunteer coordinator, Clark is passing on that magic to the dozens trained citizen scientists who gather wildlife observations for the Nature Mapping database.

Born and raised just outside of Boston, Clark was one of five siblings. Until 3rd grade, she attended Shady Hill School, an experiential learning environment that furthered her exposure to wild animals and wild places. “They had this great science program,” she said. “We got to handle snakes and turtles, and we would break apart owl pellets to see the tiny bones.”

After attending George Washington University for two years, Clark took a break from college and volunteered at the New England Aquarium. The hands-on experience with living things triggered something fundamental, and Clark began thinking of a career in biology.

She eventually settled on plants and focused her year off on volunteering at Harvard’s Arnold Arboretum. It was there that she experienced the satisfaction and sense of community that volunteering can foster.

At the conclusion of this hiatus, Frances finished college at the University of New Hampshire, majoring in plant science and continuing what has become a lifetime passion for public gardens and flowers.

After a stint at the Callaway Gardens in Georgia and a fellowship at the University of Delaware, Frances began what proved a long-term relationship with the New England Wildflower Society. There, she started as an educational program coordinator and eventually worked her way up to serve as the chair of the board of directors. Even now, she continues her association with the group as she runs her own botanical consulting business.

Frances and her partner, Bernie McHugh, landed in Jackson after spending a portion of eight summers here “mostly to enjoy the wildlife and the wildflowers,” she said. “We needed a break… and this seemed to be the logical spot.”

While plants remain her true passion, the Jackson Hole Wildlife Foundation’s Nature Mapping program has cultivated in her a deep appreciation for our specular wildlife. Nature Mapping started out as a way “to focus on and learn about the wildlife while helping to conserve them,” she said. “The Nature Mapping program was easy and fun.”

Now, volunteering as the volunteer coordinator, Clark said she hopes to help create a community that cares about the wildlife. “I think that’s critical to their conservation in the future,” she said.

Plus, “It’s fun to hang out with biologists as well as botanists,” Clark continued. “It’s good people.”

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