Outside In: Connecting With Nature During Shelter-in-Place

New Comics

I know it’s not the same as being outside, especially as the weather’s getting nicer, but you can still get your nature fix even if you can’t leave home! These are just some suggestions to get you started; I bet you can come up with others.

Species portrayed: Human (Homo sapiens), domestic dog (Canis lupus familiaris), domestic cat (Felis catus), American robin (Turdus migratorius), cottontail rabbit (Sylvilagus sp.), varied croton (Codiaeum variegatum), Anna’s hummingbird (Calypte anna), geranium (Pelargonium sp.), Pacific rhododendron (Rhododendron macrophyllum), Garry oak (Quercus garryana), air plants (Tillandsia spp.), betta (Betta splendens), lace Java fern (Microsorum pteropus “Windelov”), Java moss (Vesicularia dubyana), pothos (Epipremnum aureum), snow leopard (Panthera uncia)

Did You Know That Waterfowl Have Teeth?

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Honestly, geese aren’t all that scary. You just avoid their nests and young during spring and summer, and give them a respectful distance otherwise. The problem is when they have a very well-hidden nest and someone stumbles upon it, and then feathered hell breaks loose.

Also, it took me forever to get the head shape on this Canada goose right. I’m not the only artist who has to redraw lines multiple times, right? Right?

Species portrayed: Canada goose (Branta canadensis)

[Commissioned Art] The Disabled Hiker’s Guide

Other Art

A while back I was commissioned to create this sticker art for the Disabled Hikers Guide IndieGoGo campaign. That campaign has been live for a few weeks now, and since this is the time in which contributions often slump I thought I’d give it a little boost. Why support this project? Here’s what the book is about, as per the IndieGoGo at https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/the-disabled-hiker-s-guidebook :

The Disabled Hiker’s Guide to Western Washington and Oregon: 60 outdoor adventures accessible by car, wheelchair, and foot elevates the needs of disabled folks and brings diverse disability representation to the outdoor publishing industry. It will be the first book of its kind to consider the diverse needs of disabled people in the outdoors. The book will remove one of the barriers to access — a lack of information – by utilizing a difficulty rating system and detailed trail information designed for the disability community.

This groundbreaking guidebook will feature 60 outdoor adventures, including approximately:

  • 20% drive-up experiences
  • 20% wheelchair accessible trails
  • 50% trails in the 1-3 difficulty rating
  • 10% in the 4-5 difficulty rating.

The Disabled Hiker’s Guide will also contain additional hiking tips, resources, and Indigenous land acknowledgments and information. This flagship book sets a precedent for more guides written by disabled hikers for disabled hikers.

It’s filling a niche that’s very much needed, and I for one would like to see it happen. Please reblog/share wherever you think it might find interested people! Again, that link is https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/the-disabled-hiker-s-guidebook

Mt. St. Helens – April 3, 1980

New Comics

Here’s where the public really began to notice what was going on. By March 27, Cowlitz County had put up a roadblock on the Spirit Lake Highway, the main road going to Mt. St. Helens from the west. Loggers were allowed through since Weyerhauser was still clearcutting the land out that way; scientists and journalists also had access. Initially even homeowners could sometimes talk their way in, though this would change as the danger grew more apparent. The roadblock was meant to keep out sightseers, but many wound their way through back roads and logging roads. Moreover, the roadblock was moved several times; if it was moved further away from the mountain for safety and to cut off access to some of the side routes, business owners would complain, and so it would be moved back.

These points of tension would increase, as would the pressure growing beneath the mountain.

Latra and Lontra

New Comics

So when I started What You Need To Know About Nature, I promised myself it wasn’t going to become just another “talking animals” nature comic with a punchline at the end of each. It’s a fun format and I very much enjoy reading them, but I wanted WYNTKAN to primarily be educational and informative. However, a while back I was looking at some photos by Trish Carney of a river otter following a coyote along a river bank. Even though I know that the otter was actually harassing the coyote to try to get it to go away, it looked a little like an over-eager, dweeby otter was tagging along behind a very annoyed coyote who was just trying to play it cool. That of course expanded into the idea of this otter thinking she could be the coyote’s partner, in the same way that coyotes sometimes team up with American badgers.

So here, have something a little more character driven; if people like it (and, more importantly, if I have fun with it) I may create one every so often mixed in with the usual informative comics. I do want to give a shout-out to a few comics artists whose style and writing inspired this diversion from my usual fare: Roberta Gregory (Bitchy Bitch, True Cat Toons, and many more), Ben Hed (Pixie and Brutus), and, of course, Walt Kelly (Pogo).

Species portrayed: Coyote (Canis latrans), North American river otter (Lontra canadensis)

Mt. St. Helens – 3-27-1980

New Comics

There. Now she’s got some proper snow on her!

Drawing rock formations of any sorts is really difficult for me; I have a lot of trouble getting there to be any depth. I think I did alright here, though I’m happier with how the ash plume turned out. Also look, shading!

We of course know how this will turn out, but I hope you’ll stick around as I continue to tell the story.

A Simple Rhyme

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Things are greening up here in the PNW, and the various grasses and grass look-alikes are starting to pop up out of the ground. I thought that made a great excuse to make a comic with my favorite little nature rhyme. I also had a lot of fun drawing these plants, especially the melic grass. They have such fun shapes and lines!

Species portrayed: Slough sedge (Carex obnupta), brown-headed rush (Juncus phaeocephalus), smallflower melic (Melica imperfecta)

My Favorite Nature Words: Estuary

New Comics

Okay, I gotta say I really love how this one turned out. I’ve always been intimidated by landscapes, and this one actually has some depth to it! I’m fortunate to live near a couple of really nice estuaries, where I can directly observe the biodiversity that exists there. What makes these ecosystems so productive is the mixing of two different sets of nutrients, one set from the ocean and one from the river or other freshwater source. The water itself is what’s known as brackish, which means it’s got some salt in it, but not as much as in the ocean. As I tell people when I do environmental education on this subject, it’s like taking two buffets–maybe an Indian buffet and a Chinese buffet–and smashing them together into one really big buffet! And then maybe the chefs will get together and even create some cool fusion dishes, too. So that means there’s more variety in the food available, and therefore opportunities for more species than only in the ocean or only in the river.