Tuesday, December 19, 2017

Agroborealis Research Highlights published


Read about the research conducted by Professors Meriam Karlsson and Dave Verbyla in the newest Agroborealis Research Highlights. One highlight describes greenhouse research by Karlsson — her work with bell pepper production, her analysis of the nutritional value of Alaska-grown vegetables versus those grown outside Alaska, and her studies of how different combinations of LED lights affect production.

A second highlight focuses on Dave Verbyla's remote sensing studies of changing Dall sheep habitat in Alaska, the Northwest Territories, northern British Columbia and the Yukon Territory. His research is part of a four-year study funded by NASA, which will consider how vegetation and snow conditions are changing in alpine ecosystems and how those changes may affect Dall sheep.

Agroborealis is the research publication of the Agricultural and Forestry Experiment Station and the School of Natural Resources and Extension. The publication, which was founded in 1969, became available in a new format this spring. Downloadable Highlights are published online twice yearly at www.uaf.edu/snre/agroborealis.

Agroborealis Research Highlights published this spring looked at efforts to develop an early maturing spring wheat and research on how well forest regeneration efforts worked on boreal forestlands in the Interior that were harvested between 1975 and 2004.

Links to the stories will be emailed when they are posted on this site. If you’d like to be added to the email list, please subscribe here.

Friday, December 15, 2017

SNRE says goodbye to four faculty members

The School of Natural Resources and Extension will say goodbye to four longtime faculty members at the end of this month.

They include Roxie Dinstel, the associate director of the UAF Cooperative Extension Service and the SNRE interim executive officer; Gary Kofinas, a professor of resource policy and management; State 4-H Program Leader Deb Jones; and Kari van Delden, the Extension agent in Nome.

Roxie Dinstel
Roxie Dinstel demonstrates hot water bath canning. This
photo was taken a few years ago.
Roxie Dinstel’s career with the Cooperative Extension Service began in Abilene, Texas, 41 years ago, shortly after she graduated from college with degrees in home economics and business. She worked for Extensions in Oklahoma, Montana and, for the past 22 years, Alaska. Dinstel  was the district home economist in Fairbanks until four years ago, when she became the associate director for Extension. She has also been filling in as the school’s executive officer since March.

Dinstel’s retirement plans include a 1,700-acre ranch in the southeast corner of Montana, which is within 10 miles of where her husband, Dan, grew up. They hope to raise cattle and dryland hay on the property, which is near Ridge, Montana. It’s a life she knows, since she grew up on a ranch and she and Dan have already raised cattle in Montana and Texas.

“It’s a family failing,” she joked. If all goes well with the purchase, the Dinstels will take over the ranch in April.

Dinstel said she has enjoyed Extension because it involved working with people and helping them solve problems. It is satisfying to know you really helped someone and met a need, she said. Her passions have included teaching food preservation, family and home economics and working with food businesses.

“What other career can you have that they pay you to keep learning?” she asks.

In addition to earning a master’s degree at Texas Woman’s University, she completed all the coursework for a doctorate at UAF. Her many recognitions include a Distinguished Service Award from the National Association of Extension 4-H Agents and the Distinguished Service and Continuing Excellence Awards from the National Extension Association for Family and Consumer Services.

Gary Kofinas
Professor Gary Kofinas will retire from his tenured faculty position with the university at the end of the month, but he plans to continue his research through the Institute of Arctic Biology.

Gary Kofinas poses with "wünderhound Gwinzee" at Teton Pass.
Kofinas has had a split appointment with the school and IAB since 2002, but his connections with the school extend to 1989 when he taught a Summer Sessions class, a six-week field “controversial issues” course on the question of oil vs. wilderness in Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The school was then known as the School of Agriculture and Land Resources Management.

A professor of resource policy and management, Kofinas has specialized in the resilience and sustainability of indigenous rural communities.

Kofinas served as director of the Resilience and Adaptation Program (RAP), a graduate program in sustainability science, from 2007 to 2010, and he coordinated the program for five years before that. He taught graduate-level natural resources management classes that were cross-listed with biology, anthropology and economics, including Local-to-Global Sustainability, Integrated Assessment and Adaptive Management, Resilience Graduate Seminar and Resilience Internship.

Kofinas received an interdisciplinary doctorate in resource management science from the University of British Columbia in 1998. His dissertation focused on community involvement in the Canadian co-management of the Porcupine caribou herd. That research involved living in rural indigenous communities of northern Canada for about a year.

Before and after receiving his doctorate, he worked as a research associate for the Institute of Arctic Biology for five years. He also worked as a research assistant professor for the Institute of Social and Economic Research at UAA. Kofinas received several awards, including the Secretary of the Interior’s Partnerships in Conservation Award for his project on the study of sharing networks to assess the vulnerability of local communities to oil and gas development in Arctic Alaska.

Kofinas now lives in Wilson, Wyoming, at the foot of the Tetons, in a home he has owned since 1988. Post retirement, he says he will work with his current graduate students, launch a scenarios project for the Teton Region and “continue his search for the perfect powder turn.”

Deb Jones
Deb Jones says she has come full circle from her start as a 4-H volunteer in Alaska to adventures with the University of New Hampshire, Virginia Tech, Utah State University, and then back to Alaska. She served as county agent, Extension specialist, state program leader and department chair.

Deb Jones with Alaska Sen. Mike Dunleavy at a breakfast
hosted by the 4-H Youth in Governance program.
Jones came to UAF in 2009 as the state 4-H program leader. Before that, she worked as a 4-H youth development specialist at Utah State University for eight years and as a 4-H agent for Virginia Cooperative Extension for eight years. She earned a doctorate at Nova Southeastern University in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.

Special areas of interest have included youth development in different cultures, afterschool and military programs, 4-H family and consumer sciences programming, and the role of spirituality in youth programs. She received the Distinguished Service and Meritorious Service Awards from the National Association of Extension 4-H Agents.

Jones says the best part of 4-H is going anywhere in the country and doing what you love, and staying in touch with Extension family. She said one of the highlights of her service in Alaska has been relationship building with partner agencies and organizations whereby each partner benefits in cost sharing to support local staffing for youth and their families. “This is something particularly important as we stay strong during these uncertain economic times,” she said.

She recently was recognized for 25 years of service with 4-H and is now exploring something new.

Kari van Delden
After 13 years as the sole Extension agent in Nome and 24 years in the community, Kari van Delden is headed to Washington state to be closer to family.

Kari van Delden
Van Delden, who has a background in childhood development, moved to Nome to direct an infant learning program for Norton Sound Health Corp. The job required more than 200 village visits to serve families with special needs children. “I just really fell in love with the region,” she says.

As a health, home and family development agent, she has offered a variety of programs, including sessions on nutrition, childhood obesity prevention, cooking, food preservation and the importance of vitamin D in the North.

Van Delden has worked closely with community groups to determine what to offer. She has trained daycare providers and provided diversity and racial equity training to many agency employees and community members. She worked with representatives from Kawerak, Inc. and a social justice task force to develop the Historic Trauma and Decolonization workshop. The training encourages participants to discuss the effects of racism, historical trauma and colonization.

“The workshop focuses on self awareness and healing,” she said.

After Van Delden and Pangaga Pungowiyi , the wellness director for Kawerak Inc., presented the training to Norton Sound Health Corp. administrators, they decided to offer it to all employees. It was also presented to community members in St. Michael and to many groups in Anchorage. She has also co-taught and trained instructors for Knowing Who You Are workshop, a racial equity workshop that was developed for people who work in the child welfare system, and Green Dot violence prevention trainings.

Van Delden received the Distinguished Service Award from the National Extension Association for Family and Consumer Sciences this past October.

Kari’s husband, Andre, retired as a high school math teacher last year. Their home will be in Concrete, Washington, a small town an hour east of Bellingham. Kari says she knows she will miss Nome terribly and plans to return to see friends.

Longtime Extension employee Kathi Tweet will continue to coordinate programming at the Nome office.






































































Thursday, December 14, 2017

OneTree Alaska wins international birch syrup honors

Jan Dawe displays the award OneTree Alaska
received in the Birch Syrups World Challenge.
Jan Dawe and the OneTree Alaska birch sap crew won first place in an international birch syrup competition that drew entries from Alaska, Canada and Russia.

The competition, the Birch Syrups World Challenge, is coordinated by a Russian birch syrup producer Dawe met at an international birch sap and syrup conference in New York two years ago. This is the second year for the challenge.

Dawe said the syrup that was submitted was made from OneTree’s “first day reserve,” the first run of sap, which contains a little sucrose as well as glucose and the fruit sugar, fructose.

“That’s the really good stuff,” she said. Sixty-five testers in Russia judged the syrups, Dawe said. The organizer says the idea of the competition is to identify a consumer favorite. Kahiltna Birchworks in Talkeetna placed second and a Russian producer, third. The competition was this spring but Dawe only recently received the medal.

OneTree has been experimenting with different processing methods and working with individuals interested in small-scale production of birch syrup or birch sap products. Dawe is a research assistant professor who coordinates OneTree Alaska, a forest education, research and outreach program affiliated with SNRE.

Volunteers with a birch syrup cooperative and OneTree staff collected 5,300 gallons of birch sap this past spring. The volunteers received a portion of the birch syrup that was made in exchange for their labors.

Dawe and her volunteers hoped to use the rest of the birch sap concentrate, which would have boiled down to 50 gallons, to make and sell caramels and fudge to support the OneTree program. Unfortunately, that concentrate was lost in late October when the freezer failed.

“That was devastating,” said Dawe.

Instead, Dawe hopes to raise $50,000 by February to help pay for the sap season crew this spring. Toward that end, she and volunteers are selling ice luminaria for $10 each until the end of December and accepting contributions through a University of Alaska Foundation account. Anyone who is interested in ordering luminaria may call 474-5907 or email Dawe at jcdawe@alaska.edu or OneTree at alaskaonetree@alaska.edu. If you are interested in giving to OneTreeAlaska, go to the UA Foundation giving page at www.alaska.edu/foundation/ways_to_give/give-now/.