Karl Urban

 Karl Urban

“A flower is an exquisite thing, beautiful and delicate, a harbinger of hope for the green world that lets us all survive.” – Karl Urban, 1983 Karl was born June 6, 1943 in Kimberly, Idaho. In 1962 he entered the botany program at the University of Idaho, earning both BS and MS degrees. In 1968…

Kenton Chambers

 Kenton Chambers

Biography and Botany Some Perspectives In her request for autobiographical remarks, our editor told me to “keep it brief.” I’ll do my best, but please remember the directions for that Mechanical Professor toy, “Wind it up, and it gives a lecture.” My reasons for choosing botanical taxonomy as a career are several. Firstly, I like…

Wilbur Bluhm

 Wilbur Bluhm

The NPSO Fellows Committee and the Board of Directors have chosen Wilbur Bluhm and Kenton L. Chambers to become Fellows of the Native Plant Society of Oregon, our organization’s highest honor. The awards will be presented at this summer’s Annual Meeting. Wilbur Bluhm was born in Seward, Nebraska and took his Bachelor’s Degree at the…

Ruth Hansen

Ruth Hansen

Ruth Hansen is a pioneer of the Native Plant Society of Oregon, which was established in 1961 in Portland. Ruth joined in 1970, and was soon active as a field trip leader and an officer, first treasurer, then vice president. She seldom missed a field trip and even more often was out on the trails,…

John Robotham

John Robotham

My Life and Times Our national heroes – Jefferson, Lincoln, and the rest – have taken a beating lately, proving they were human too. I still have regard for Lincoln, though; after all he was born on my birthday, although some years earlier. I was born in West Concord, New Hampshire, during the first quarter…

Keith Chamberlin

Keith Chamberlin

In our modern world there is an inclination to be widely traveled. The more of the world we get to see, the richer we think our lives are. But this is not always the case. Keith Chamberlain (1914- 1998) spent his life in the Columbia River Gorge. He attended school in Mosier, Oregon, when there…