Passion never rests
For the âZooBots,â a quarter at the 91±ŹÁÏ means watching whales breach off the coast of San Juan Island, hiking through the old-growth forest, and taking a sunset row into Friday Harbor. It means lowering a dive light from the docks to see crabs crawling and sea lions swimming and jellyfish glowing in the moonlight, and having a bonfire with classmates who have quickly become like family.
Explore the 91±ŹÁÏ
Named for the subjects theyâre studying â zoology and botany â 17 undergraduate âZooBotsâ spend their days traipsing around the 91±ŹÁÏâs Friday Harbor Laboratories (FHL) campus, which feels, in many ways, like âscience camp for adults,â says Susan Harris, â15.
The Bellingham, Washington native grew up fishing salmon in the San Juans with her dad every year. âMy dad would always point out the labs,â says Harris, whose college career included a year moonlighting as Harry the Husky and a summer studying through the Alaska Salmon Program. âHeâd say, âYou see what that is? That whole land is owned by the 91±ŹÁÏ.ââ
That âwhole landâ is nearly 2,000 acres of untouched biological preserve, to be exact. Untouched, that is, save for the small bundle of buildings that make up the College of the Environmentâs facilities, which have been home to respected faculty and the worldâs foremost researchers for more than a century.
And, for 10 weeks a year, itâs home to aspiring students like Harris, who drive 80 miles from Seattle and hop a ferry to live, eat and work at the field station, which overlooks the bustling harbor. The suite of courses â two days of zoology, two days of botany, and Friday for independent research projects â is designed to give young scientists a crash course in marine biology. According to Harris, who studied fisheries, it delivers.
âWhatâs really amazing about the structure of the quarter is we have a lecture on invertebrates or seaweed in the morning, and then we go straight to lab and see exactly what we just talked about,â she says.
Better yet, the students are going to the field and collecting exactly what they just talked about. âA couple times a week, the class will take vans out to a different kind of rocky intertidal habitat or to a beach, and anything you can pick up, Professor Megan Dethier and Professor Tom Mumford â who are ecology lords â can tell you a story about,â says Harris. âHere, youâre taking what youâre studying from right there in front of you, right out of the ocean. Itâs something thatâs part of the 91±ŹÁÏ thatâs right in our backyard, and thatâs rare,â says Harris of the hands-on learning experience.
âAnd thatâs why Iâm super purple,â says Harris, whoâs working a summer job on a tender vessel in the Gulf of Alaska thanks to connections she made through the Alaska Salmon Program. âI wouldnât have gotten these opportunities anywhere else. When you find something youâre passionate about at the 91±ŹÁÏ and you find that niche, you can do anything.â
Check out the daily Friday Harbor Labs life on Susan Harrisâ Instagram
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