Shoals Marine Lab offers adult summer courses
An "education vacation" in the islands -- the Gulf
of Maine's Isles of Shoals, in particular -- is offered to
adults taking non-credit courses this summer at Shoals
Marine Laboratory.
Weekend and five-day courses are scheduled on Appledore Island by Cornell University and the University of New Hampshire, which jointly operate Shoals
Marine Laboratory. Topics range from natural history and
island gardens to pastel and watercolor painting.
Registration information is available at 255-3717 and
on the World Wide Web at http://www.sml.cornell.edu.
The informal, non-credit classes supplement the laboratory's May-August program of college-credit
marine science courses. This summer's non-credit courses are:
- "Island Bird Study," May 23-25, with Arthur C.
Borror of the University of New Hampshire and Steve Mirick of
the Audubon Society of New Hampshire. Scheduled at the
peak of spring migration, the class also visits resident birds
of Appledore and other Shoals islands.
- "A Garden Is a Sea of Flowers," July 25-27, with
John M. Kingsbury and others responsible for recreating the
19th century island garden of author Celia Thaxter.
- "Pastel Painting on Appledore Island, Where a
Flower Garden Meets the Sea," July 21-25, with professional
artist Elsie Dinsmore Popkin. The class is taught in the
same garden and surrounding landscape that inspired
American impressionist Childe Hassam.
- "Pools of Color, Layers of Paint," July 21-25,
with science illustrator Patricia Savage. This watercolor
class explores the rugged landscape of Appledore Island and
its shoreline plant and animal community.
- "A Sea of Life," Aug 18-22, with marine
biologists, geologists and historians Sarah Cohen, Frederic
Martini, Peter Stifel and Robert Tuttle. Field trips and
lectures survey life forms from whales and seabirds to
microscopic plants and animals that fuel the ocean's food chain.
- "The Ebb and Flow of Life on a Rocky Shore," Aug.
25-29, led by Shoals Director Jim Morin, with Borror,
Stifel and Tuttle. The islands' unusually rich intertidal
zone, where plant and animal inhabitants have adapted to
life between the tides, is the sight- and sound-filled setting
for this class.
| Cornell Chronicle Front Page |
| Table of Contents | | Cornell News Service
Home Page |