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Picnic Day Takes Large Behind-the-Scenes Effort for Departments

Faculty and Staff Work for Weeks to Prepare

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Guy Kyser, far right, speaks to an attendee at Picnic Day.
Guy Kyser, far right, speaks to an attendee at Picnic Day. (Cody Kitaura/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis)

A month before Picnic Day every year, Plant Sciences staff research associate Guy Kyser prepares by driving around the campus鈥檚 expansive fields looking for weeds 鈥 but instead of trying to eradicate them, he鈥檚 trying to save them.

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Kyser is one of numerous faculty and staff who work behind the scenes of Picnic Day, creating exhibits, greeting community members and doling out expert advice. The weeds he collects become part of the 鈥淲eed Doctor鈥 exhibit where community members can ask questions about unwanted plants in their yards.

When Kyser spots a weed, he uproots it and immediately gives it some water to stave off initial shock that can kill the weed, then does his best to keep it alive in a small pot until Picnic Day (about six from this year鈥檚 collection died before the big day).

鈥淚f you take really good care of your weeds, sometimes they die. But they鈥檒l grow in a crack in the sidewalk,鈥 he said last Saturday while working as one of the 鈥淲eed Doctors.鈥

Kyser said he can identify weeds while driving, but he doesn鈥檛 have a specific 鈥渟hopping list鈥 of weeds in mind for the Picnic Day display. This year, he successfully preserved two varieties of filarees 鈥 鈥渁 scoop,鈥 he said, because they often die when uprooted.

Other Plant Sciences faculty and staff handed out small tomato plants, answered questions about when to plant vegetables, and provided native seeds for people who wanted to restore their yards to a more natural state. People had lined up for the campus-grown Shady Lady tomato plants before the exhibit even opened; greenhouse manager Garry Pearson said the department usually runs out by mid-afternoon.

Plant Sciences professor emeritus Robert Norris retired in 2001 but continues to come to Picnic Day, giving advice about how to grow everything from house plants to fruit trees.

鈥淔or me, this university has been an absolutely phenomenal place to work,鈥 Norris said. 鈥淭his is my giving back to society.鈥

Plant Sciences professor John Yoder, right, hands a Shady Lady tomato seedling to 4-year-old Evie Kraushaar, on her father James' shoulders. (Cody Kitaura/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis)
Plant Sciences professor John Yoder, right, hands a Shady Lady tomato seedling to 4-year-old Evie Kraushaar, on her father James' shoulders. (Cody Kitaura/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis)

Paper Hats Bring a Department Together

Halfway across campus, preparation for the Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences鈥 Picnic Day exhibit was also a month in the making. The department has handed out paper hats shaped like dinosaurs for more than two decades.

Earth and Planetary Sciences professor Eric Cowgill fits a dinosaur hat on his daughter, 4-year-old Simone, at Picnic Day. (Cody Kitaura/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis
Earth and Planetary Sciences professor Eric Cowgill fits a dinosaur hat on his daughter, 4-year-old Simone, at Picnic Day. (Cody Kitaura/新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis

This year鈥檚 dinosaur: the pterodactyl 鈥 colorful wings and a head attached to a paper band. The entire department helped to make the 500 hats that sprawled across a table in the Earth and Physical Sciences Building.

鈥淪taff in business meetings form an assembly line,鈥 senior artist Janice Fong said. 鈥淔aculty are cutting them on conference calls with other research institutions. 鈥 I鈥檓 so impressed with our faculty, staff and graduate students 鈥 the time they put into this.鈥

And people were waiting Saturday for the door to open, Fong said.

Research assistant Alyssa Henry and her ninth-grade daughter, Marlena Billings, each wore a pterodactyl hat while handing them to others last Saturday. Henry recalled a senior who said he finally came early enough to get a dinosaur hat.

Of course, paper hats were not the only things on display at the department鈥檚 Picnic Day exhibit. It showcased 新澳门六合彩内幕信息 Davis鈥 augmented reality sandbox and meteorites, and demonstrated natural selection in action by challenging people to pick up as many small, green beads as they could in 15 seconds. People found they were more successful when they grabbed the beads from a contrasting brown background than when they lay a bed of leafy greens.

鈥淲e give families something more than, 鈥楬ere鈥檚 a fossil.鈥 We鈥檙e trying to teach them something about what we do,鈥 said Sandy Carlson, a professor of paleontology. 鈥淭his forces us to explain to somebody who鈥檚 not a geologist what we do.鈥

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Cody Kitaura/Dateline, Dateline, 530-752-1932, kitaura@ucdavis.edu

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