Transcribing the field notes of the Museum of Vertebrate Zoology

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1925: Joseph Grinnell's field notes

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Collector: Grinnell - 1925 Location: Lassen Section Date: June 12-13, 1925 Page Number: 2461

Left our Payne Creek P.O. camp about 8 a.m. and proceeded on up the "Lassen Volcanic Highway", now in excellent shape. Arrived at Mineral about 10 a.m., and made our permanent camp, inside the fence which protects the "National Forest Camp-ground" from cattle. This is about 1/2 mile above (northeast of) the present postoffice and store called Mineral, and that far off the new thorough highway, which goes east to Morgan, Westwood, Susanville, etc. Our campsite is ideal - wonderful dryish slope beneath silver and red firs, ceanothus chaparral adjacent, a spring of cold clean water handy, and the edge of the Battle Creek Meadows within a few minutes' walk. The water in the various streams which meander thru the pastures is not safely drinkable. The abundance of birds in full song is bewildering. First impression is that never in any locality (unless the Colorado River bottom in May) have I encountered more plentiful bird life. Saw a family of bob-tailed young Juncos already out, despite the tardiness of the season (it snowed here a week ago according to the people at the store). Splendidly clean and warm here now, though. June 13, 1925. Joseph Dixon and family came up yesterday, too, and are camped close by. Spent the

Last edit almost 10 years ago by kcorriveau
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Indexed

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Collector: Grinnell - 1925 Location: Lassen Section (Mineral) Date: June 17, 1925 Page Number: 2471

then by the man on foot following the telephone wire, as we have done. We are now leveling at about 8000 ft., close to the south base of Brokeoff proper. We are in plain view of the lookout house on the summit, not yet occupied this year. The snow is abundant all about us, vastly more of it than last May at the same level. Indeed we found difficulty in finding a bare place, or a ridge, where we could be dry and avoid the intense glare of the sunlight from the snow. We are in high Canadian zone, getting into Hudsonian. The trees close about are red fir (predominantly), mountain pine, and alpine hemlock. The trunks and larger branches of the bigger trees are heavily festooned with a brilliantly yellow-green lichen, betokening much misty weather here. The forest floor appears to be bare save for low mats of arctostaphylos nevadensis on ridges and sunny places. The snow is melted away from the bases of the trees, but lies between the trees in heaps 2 to fully 6 feet deep. There are the usual summer clouds about; the sun beats down hotly, but the air is chilly whenever the sun is covered. I kept pencil census of all birds seen and heard for the five hours, 7-12 (see accompanying sheet). Some arriving here (at 12) till now (12:45) I have noted: Solitaire (one singing extatically among tree-tops, or giving the "barn-door creak" note at spaced intervals, many in slow sequence); Canada Nuthatch (I hear

Last edit almost 10 years ago by kcorriveau
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