Pen and ink drawing of the small plant inhabitants in the Decomposition Plots at the Andrews forest, including species of fungi and lichen.

In the very large, the very small

To a New Englander who is used to modest, glacier-rounded “mountains” and to whom a 100-foot-tall hemlock is “towering,” everything in the Pacific Northwest is out-sized. Rounding a bend of highway, I get a sudden, gasp-inducing revelation of a snow-capped peak, dwarfing hills the size of the east’s highest peaks. I can’t photograph even an adolescent Douglas fir with fewer than three stitched-together frames. “Birdwatching” entails craning my neck to glimpse a moving silhouette in the distant canopy (the bird giving me a raspberry from its safe perch). The honey-crisp apples are melon-sized. Even the splattering raindrops, plopping on my sketchbook, are big. This Oregonian forest is majestic, yes, but a little overwhelming in the sensory department. I am a Lilliputian in a dizzyingly gargantuan world, and I’m feeling ever so slightly seasick.

Time, too, is a rather relative concept here. Some of these big Doug firs are 800 years old, three times older than the oldest of those towering New England hemlocks. Plant a seedling today, and my grandchildren’s grandchildren won’t even call it a sapling.

How can a scientist-artist hybrid like me, accustomed to studying and illustrating organisms the size of my hand and smaller, possibly take all this in? Slowly, quietly, gradually, meditatively, I suppose. But I only have one privileged week, mooching on the hospitality of the Andrews LTER, and I don’t have a lot of time to sit and listen to my brain cells divide. I start by focusing on the living things – or parts of living things – that I perceive within my immediate field of vision. I tell myself to appreciate the wonders I can hold in my hand, and then to place them in the impossibly large context of an immense old-growth forest (or, maybe, the history of the known Universe…okay, my noisy brain cells are still on over-drive).

One slow and quiet afternoon, I take the luxury to sit and sketch near the banks of Lookout Creek on the upper Old-Growth Trail. I sit humbly at the base of a centuries-old cedar, and it’s some minutes before I can stop gaping dumbly at the silent stand of trees, their upper boughs swathed in mist. Feeling somewhat damp and completely inadequate to the task, I rummage through my pack for my sketchbook and pen. “Plop!” goes an errant raindrop. A bird sneers at me unseen from somewhere up there. For my first subject, I choose the butt-snapped fir stump in front of me, rather than attempting a more traditional “landscape” of the tree-clad hillside in the middle distance.

As I draw, I become enchanted with the fairy-tale world that this six-foot-diameter stump encompasses.
Hemlock seedlings have rooted along its “cliffs,”resembling mature palms lining the road to a palace; the central hollow contains its own emergent forest.

Continue reading Elizabeth Farnsworth’s “In the very large, the very small” here.