Canada Thistle

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Oregon State University Research & Extension

3/23/14  &  3/24/14: This week on "Fieldnotes:" "Canada Thistle," by Heather Sarantis.

"Despite its long list of drawbacks, I appreciate Canada thistle. Understanding its spread and growth patterns gives me insight into humans' relationships to the land. You see, while Canada thistle spreads quite easily, it fares especially well in disturbed areas - cultivated lands, cleared forests, roadsides, and cattle pastures. The greater the disturbance, the better the chance of Canada thistle establishing itself. The more contiguous the disturbance, the wider the area that Canada thistle invades. Put simply, the more we disturb the land, the more we are disturbed by what the land produces in response."

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Beth Anne Austein has been spinning tunes on the air (The Folk Show, Dancing With Tradition, Freeforms), as well as recording, editing and mixing audio for Montana Public Radio and Montana PBS, since the Clinton Administration. She’s jockeyed faders or "fixed it in post” for The Plant Detective; Listeners Bookstall; Fieldnotes; Musicians Spotlight; The Write Question; Storycorps; Selected Shorts; Bill Raoul’s music series; orchestral and chamber concerts; lecture series; news interviews; and outside producers’ programs about topics ranging from philosophy to ticks.