Brian Morris, PhD
@morrisforest.bsky.social
74 followers 62 following 21 posts
Forester, Scientist, 🌲nerd. Reforestation is my thing. 20+ years in the woods as a forester, firefighter, researcher, laborer, nursery manager and leader VP Resilient Reforestation @AmericanForests, leading national reforestation operations. Opinions mine
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@jpgannon.bsky.social is documenting his experience teaching about teaching. While I left the academic world some time ago, I see many parallels to my role as a program manager/leader. Definitely worth the quick weekly read for anyone in a teaching, coaching, leadership, or management role.
This semester, I'm going to write about what we discuss in my college teaching class. The first 2 weeks have been a doozy, but I managed to get some stuff down!

On beginner teaching philosophies and Ch 1 of McGlynn's College Science Teaching

thinkingthroughteaching.substack.com/p/graduate-t...
Graduate Teaching Class: Week 1 & 2
Writing my way through teaching a class on teaching
thinkingthroughteaching.substack.com
If you can’t join, register so you are notified when the recording is available
Want to learn about post fire forest restoration?

Join @epansing.bsky.social and our @americanforests.bsky.social colleagues on August 14th to learn about how we are scaling reforestation across the west through partnerships.

Aug 14 10:00-11:30AM MST

Registration link below
Scaling Resilient Reforestation Through Partnerships with American Forests – After The Flames
aftertheflames.com
Reposted by Brian Morris, PhD
Come work with me! We’re hiring an ecologist who will be working with Yellowstone and Grand Teton National Parks to support whitebark pine conservation and restoration. Please share!

workforcenow.adp.com/mascsr/defau...
Recruitment
workforcenow.adp.com
That’s my team on CBS! Our work on cone collection in South Central Oregon was highlighted on CBS over the weekend

youtu.be/zImNobBVqfg
How forests are being restored after wildfires
YouTube video by CBS Mornings
youtu.be
Headed to the 9th American Forest Congress and while I’m excited to discuss the future of forest management in the US I am also looking to ground myself with the words of a man who worked 40 years in the organization that was developed ‘almost immediately after’ the 1905 Forest Congress
8 years ago - Sunrise over the Columbia
on the fire I had been working night shift on since it was ignited by fireworks on July 4th. Things are a bit dry and federal resources are limited. Be careful with celebrations, would be great if we could avoid burning down the nations forests.
On this Forester Friday I’m getting ready for the 9th American Forest Congress where 400+ of the brightest minds in forestry will provide solutions for the future of US forests. Registration is still open, if you want to be ‘in the room where it happened’ click the link below.

forestcongress.org
9th American Forest Congress – Healthy Forests, Thriving Communities
forestcongress.org
Foresters ride bikes too. Really, we do. The past few months have been bumpy, but last weekend while out mountain biking with my son I remembered why continuing our work to ensure healthy forests for tomorrow is so important, it is for the generations to come, not ours.
Forester Friday! Brief overview of my standard woods attire and gear when doing inventory work. A bit different from what you will see at a trail head or campground, trading light weight for protection and durability.
Making progress on the reforestation backlog in the PNW requires an “all hands, all lands” approach. Today we are kicking off the PNW Reforestation Network with the goal of identifying and alleviating bottlenecks in the reforestation pipeline.
Forester Friday: This week on the west side of the Olympic Peninsula looking at slash and reforestation. This was salvage logged after a wildfire, machine piled, then cedar salvaged. The slash loading is high, but proximity to the ocean result in low fire hazard, but hard planting. (No Audio)
Forester Friday! A follow up on last weeks PSA about controlling listed noxious/invasive Himalayan blackberry. This work is being done to support the landowner’s objectives of creating and maintaining habitats for native flora and fauna.
It is found across western WA and down into CA. It is a problem for field work and will occupy a site, overtopping native plant communities and can overtop and suppress planted conifer.
Agreed, we have a native trailing blackberry in this region which I am a fan of, not as tasty but is native. However, Himalayan blackberry is not native to the PNW and is listed as a ‘Class C’ noxious plant by the WA Noxious Weed Board.
Forester Friday! A little public service announcement about controlling invasive species.
This week’s Forester Friday is a clip from January. Curious if anyone can identify the little critters at the end.

@momalusk.bsky.social you are my go to critter identifier
It’s Forester Friday, looking at root disease impacts and treatment in western WA Douglas-fir stands.
Trying a new thing, calling it ‘Forester Friday’. Images and videos from my time in the brush.

It’s spring in the PNW, suns out and these Doug-fir buds are getting ready to go. Looking for 4+ feet of height growth this season out of these trees I planted 3 and 4 years ago.
Spent Friday morning talking to 60+ fourth graders about careers in Natural Resources, primarily Reforestation. So many hard questions, their curiosity and care for the natural world gave me hope for the future.
Trying to figure out what to do here. So posting a pic from field work preparing a local forest management plan. Nothing special, just an old growth stump I found during a day in the woods