
Oregon Field Guide
Blue Mountain Forest Partners
Show title: Oregon Field Guide
Video title: Blue Mountain Forest Partners
Video duration: 7m 57sVideo description: A small group of loggers and environmentalists in Eastern Oregon have done the unthinkable: worked together to find common ground—and even become friends.
Watch Clip

Outdoor School
11m 44s
/ TV-G
Outdoor School has been a rite of passage for sixth graders in the Portland metro area since the mid-1960s. Recently, we spent a week at Camp Namanu outside Sandy with a group of students. We interview founder Warren “Gil” Gilfillan, and see film of students, educators and Mr. Gilfilan from the first Outdoor School in 1966.
Watch Clip

Condors and Lead
10m 46s
/ TV-G
Condor recovery efforts face serious setbacks when dozens of birds released to the wild get sick or die from lead poisoning. Scientists link the lead found in the condors to bullet fragments from hunters’ carcass discards. Producer - Vince Patton Videographer - Todd Sonflieth Editor - Lisa Suinn Kallem Video Courtesy - Jeff McLoughlin & "Shadow of the Condor", Michael Durham, Oregon Zoo
Watch Clip

Stormwater
8m 17s
Stormwater is a toxic cocktail of sediment, grease, road grime, tire wear and any litter small enough to slip into storm drains. And that’s just what can be seen. There’s much more.
Watch Clip

Aerial Fish Stocking
8m 48s
/ TV-G
Every other year, Oregon biologists dangle a device below a helicopter and drop young fish into high mountain lakes for the pleasure of Cascade anglers. The state takes precautions to sterilize many of the fish because most of the fish planted in Oregon lakes are not native to the region.
Watch Clip

Hiking from Portland to the Pacific Coast
7m 13s
After 7 years of scouting, Jim Thayer of Portland has plotted a hiking route from Portland to the Pacific coast without using highways. Since trails don’t cover the entire path, he has found logging roads open for public access. Here he shows us two segments, one along the Salmonberry River and its washed out rail line and another near Saddle Mountain suitable for biking down to Seaside.
Watch Clip

Cloud Cap Inn
7m 57s
/ TV-G
In 1889, visionary pioneers built the Cloud Cap Inn on the north shoulder on Mt Hood as a destination resort. They were ahead of the their time, but despite the vicissitudes of man and Mother Nature, the venerable inn endures today, lovingly preserved by the Hood River Crag Rats as their “open to the public” clubhouse.
Watch Clip

Drift Diving
3m 38s
/ TV-G
Take a dive into the chilly Wilson River as we hunt for Salmon, Steelhead, and Trout as part of a research project to see how well they're doing.
Watch Clip

Jim Rogers
11m 29s
/ TV-G
Jim Rogers is one of the most influential people you’ve probably never heard of. He’s a mountain man who lives deep in the woods. Yet his influence extends all the way to Washington DC. He helped create not one, but two official wilderness areas in Oregon. Some people call this environmental logger the “John Muir of the Elk River.”
Watch Clip

Warren Falls
7m 57s
/ TV-G
If there’s one thing that makes the Columbia River Gorge stand out, it’s the waterfalls. But did you know that one of those waterfalls is not natural. One waterfall lover wants that man-made waterfall closed down in order to restore Warren Falls, which has been blocked for more than 70 years.
Watch Clip

Mt. Hood's Volcanic Past
8m 20s
/ TV-G
As George Washington was winning the revolutionary war, a deluge of volcanic debris was killing trees on the Sandy River. Mount Hood erupted for nearly a decade, just a few years before Lewis & Clark came through. The mountain many Portlanders regard as part of the city skyline is actually an active volcano with a more recent history of activity than many people realize.
Watch Clip

Yellow Tuft Alyssum
8m 50s
/ TV-G
A new invasive species from Europe has been introduced in the Illinois River valley. Botanists say yellow tuft alyssum poses a threat to dozens of rare endemic Oregon wildflowers, but there's still hope it could be eradicated.
Watch Clip

Cattle Drives
9m 5s
/ TV-G
A historic cattle ranch in southeastern Oregon moves cows every day. In many ways, cattle drives there have changed little since a century ago. The ranch herds cattle from one end of a million acre range to the other over the course of a year.
Watch Clip

Timberline Lodge 75th Anniversary
9m 15s
/ TV-G
Oregon’s Timberline Lodge was part of FDR’s Works Progress Administration - a program that not only put people to work, but also preserved some of the finest of the Northwest’s indigenous arts. Despite the museum-quality art and hand-made furnishings, Timberline is still open to the public today. Could a large-scale public works project like Timberline, focused on recreation be built today?
Watch Clip

Gorge Weeds
8m 17s
/ TV-G
The Columbia Gorge is one of our favorite playgrounds. But recreational use brings in noxious weeds that crowd out native species and upset the area’s ecological balance. We take a look at the challenges state agencies, land managers and non-profit groups face in trying to control the influx of these invasive “game-changers” and their efforts to coordinate these efforts.
Watch Clip

Citizen Science
7m
Citizen scientists survey bugs in Portland backyards, measure rainfall and track the lifecycles of plants. A study questioned the reliability of crowd-sourced science, so scientists are improving training and new tools, like mobile apps.
Watch Clip

Time-lapse Photography
11m 28s
/ TV-G
Award-winning photographer Ben Canales takes us on a photo-safari to Olympic National Park to track down the swirling stars and boiling clouds that populate his amazing time-lapse videos.
Watch Clip

Ice Diving
8m 37s
/ TV-G
Why would anyone intentionally dive into a frozen lake? Field Guide follows ice divers from the Klamath County Dive Search & Rescue Team into a dangerous world of freezing temperatures and surprising beauty.
Watch Clip

North Umpqua Geology
9m 28s
/ TV-G
Southern Oregon’s North Umpqua River carves out one of our state’s more dramatic landscapes: a place where rivers collide and waterfalls plunge from spectacular cliffs. It is an incredible trip into this geologic wonderland.
Watch Clip

Cranberry Farming
7m 48s
/ TV-G
Oregon cranberry farmers call the south coast the NAPA valley of cranberry farming in the US. A longer growing season produces sweet berries. But don’t believe the myth that they grow in watery bogs. Cranberry fields are flooded only two days a year to help the farmers get the berries off the vine at harvest time.
Pagination
Supported by