Newsletter - WINGS WorldQuest
Transcription
Newsletter - WINGS WorldQuest
Subscribe to our email list Share this: Newsletter Fall 2013 Milbry Polk and Leila Hadley Luce. Photo by Karen Zieff. Liz Bennett at Hillary and Dan Wallace's party. Photo by Bree Polk-Bauman. Susan Eaton, Milbry Polk, Lynne Danaher. Danaher returns her flag to travel on expedition with Eaton, who will be snorkelling the Northwest Passage. Photo by Pat and Rosemarie Keough. Dear Friends, I am writing to tell you that I am returning to Wings WorldQuest as Executive Director after a two-year sabbatical. My whole life has been about exploration. I have led expeditions in the Middle East, North Africa, Asia and the Arctic. I read and write extensively about exploration history, Board Chair Karen Zieff, and have created a platform for the little-known but extraordinary contributions of women explorers to world knowledge. Hazzah of Lion Guardians, with Stephanie Dolrenry, and Leela Mary Britt, Wings Treasurer, at Hazzah's event. It has become clear to me over the last two years that Wings, now more than ever, is critical to the exploration and scientific community. Wings began modestly. When in the field I became curious about what other women had done in exploration. At that time I rarely encountered women in the field. This prompted me to start an Oral History project, where I found five elderly, extraordinary women explorers, recorded their stories, and helped place their archives. CBS Sunday Morning’s profile of me spurred me to write a history of women explorers, authored with my friend Mary Tiegreen, titled Women of Discovery. Leila Hadley Luce and I then founded Wings WorldQuest to support women explorers. Over ten years, with the help of an amazing board and informed advisors, we identified nearly 70 outstanding women who were elected as Fellows. Our annual Galas raised nearly half a million dollars, which we awarded to these Fellows, and used to support a Constanza Ceruti climbing in Alaska. robust education program. During those years an additional 30 women, and Fellows, carried the Wings Flag into the field on more than 50 expeditions. Wings education programs in America and abroad reached tens of thousands of adults and children. Since starting my sabbatical, the last two years have been busy. I was co-chair of a major conference entitled Affordable World Security in Washington DC; I led a Flag expedition (Wings, The Explorers Club and the Royal Canadian Geographic) to North Western Greenland; I lectured in Southern Chile and explored the fjords; I lectured in the Andaman Islands and southern India, and journeyed to Kenya to visit our Fellows research sites. During this time I maintained contact with our Fellows, helping them secure grants, making connections and keeping alive the community we created. Most recently I co-chaired the Explorers Club Annual Dinner. Grace Kalema-Zilusoka at her research site in Uganda. Our Goals are: 1.To build and expand our extraordinary worldwide community. 2. To establish an office in NYC, which will be a center for women explorers. A plea: Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Fellows and others please send me copies of your books for this room. It is vital to showcase the groundbreaking discoveries of our Fellows, Flag Carriers and all Page 1 / 3 1.To build and expand our extraordinary worldwide community. 2. To establish an office in NYC, which will be a center for women explorers. A plea: Fellows and others please send me copies of your books for this room. It is vital to showcase the groundbreaking discoveries of our Fellows, Flag Carriers and all women explorers. 3. To rebuild our website to enhance our reach around the globe, both as a virtual community and as a resource portal for education. 4. To convene the first Fellows Forum to gather Fellows, Flag Carriers and supporters for a 2-day exchange of ideas, discoveries and networking in May, 2013. Wings has real value, now more than ever. I welcome you all to join me in this new adventure! Wings M&Ms designed by Hillary Wallace. Photo by Bree PolkBauman. Wings WorldQuest Board Karen Zieff, Chair Claire Werner, Secretary Mary Britt, Treasurer Milbry Milbry Polk, Executive Director/Co-Founder/Fellow SAVE THE DATE Ann Bancroft, Fellow Susan Hannah Wings Worldquest Gala May 9, 2014 Julia Mair Fellows Forum May 10, 2014 Diane Terry In the spring of 2013 Wings initiated a series of talks in NYC Maya Tolstoy, Fellow Maya Tolstoy spoke about her discoveries regarding tsunamis and earthquakes off Maud Welles the NW Coast of North America. Hosted by Maud Welles. Elizabeth Bennett spoke about her conservation work in Borneo. Hosted by Hillary and Dan Wallace. Thanks to our 2013 supporters Felicity Aston spoke about her expedition crossing Antarctica. Hosted by Ted Janulis. Plym Foundation Leela Hazzah spoke on her work with Lion Guardians in Kenya. Hosted by Ashley Ann Bancroft Jurgensen at Top of the Garden. Hillary Wallace Liz Gilbert spoke about her latest journey in Africa. Hosted by The Explorers Club. Lisa Woodward Upcoming Events Caleb & Julia Dula Educational Foundation Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka will speak about her work with gorillas. Hosted by Ted Janulis. Tawani Foundation Alison Chace Brown Ted Janulis Cherry Provost Jane Poynter will speak about her latest work on the Mars Mission. Hosted by Diane Terry. Rob & Urling Searle Ann Bancroft Edie Widder will talk about her search for the Giant Squid. Hosted by Ashley Jurgensen at Top of the Garden. Maud Welles Cecily Selby News from Fellows and Flag Carriers Elizabeth Johnson Felicity Aston just published her latest book Alone in Antarctica. Hollis Salzman Emily Zuber returned a flag from her expedition to Mexico exploring what may be one of the deepest and longest caves in the world. She passed her flag to Lynn Danaher at the Explorers Club in NY for Lynn’s Marquesas Rock Art Expedition. Edie Widder “I have said for a long time now that I think we have been exploring the oceans wrong, that we are scaring the animals away using camera platforms with bright white lights and noisy thrusters,” Widder designed a camera and bioluminescent sphere to attract and film the Giant Squid for the first time. Her expedition and discovery have been featured in major magazines and news channels across America. Irina Tolstoy Kristie Hepburn Mary Britt Mary McBride Mary Moore Mindy Gabler Patrick Toth Sandra Krasovec Susan Hannah Sabriye Tenberken’s two programs, a school for the blind in Lhasa, Tibet, and a school for social entrepreneurs in Kerala, Southern India, are thriving. Four of Sabriye’s students in Lhasa took University exams, becoming the first blind students in China to take exams with sighted students. At Kanthari, Sabriye helps participants to chase their dreams and make them real. Her graduates are now creating successful programs in Asia, Africa and Europe. Constanza Ceruti has finished her autobiography detailing the rigors of being the only female high altitude archaeologist in Argentina. She continues to climb and is working on a worldwide sacred mountain research project. [insert image] going on mountaineering expeditions in the last year to Sardinia, the Yukon, Austrian Alps, Southern Patagonia and Thailand. William Buell Will Roseman Ashley Jurgensen Birch Walthen Lenox School David Moody & Eileen Guilfoyle Newsletter designed by Mary McBride Maureen Clemmons perseveres with her study of ancient Egypt and her theory that the pyramids were built using wind power. There is a great You Tube of an interview she gave in February 2013- Google it! Ana Pinto led a National Geographic tour of prehistoric sites in southern France and NW Spain. Otherwise, her extraordinary career in the prehistoric caves of northern Spain has been put on hold due to the economic crisis in Spain. Selma Huxley Barkham has been honored and bestowed with a Gold medal in San Sebastian, Spain for her discovery of the 16th century Basque fishing site in Red Bay, Labrador, which was recently designated a UNESCO World Heritage site. See http://www.cbc.ca/nl/features/redbay/index.html Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Erin Pettit was named an Emerging Explorer for 2013 at National Geographic. Page 2 / 3 Selma Huxley Barkham has been honored and bestowed with a Gold medal in San Sebastian, Spain for her discovery of the 16th century Basque fishing site in Red Bay, Labrador, which was recently designated a UNESCO World Heritage site. See http://www.cbc.ca/nl/features/redbay/index.html Erin Pettit was named an Emerging Explorer for 2013 at National Geographic. Kate Harris is holed up in a remote cabin in the Yukon writing a book about her epic Cycling Silk Expedition across Asia. Congratulations to Kate who just got married. Anna Cummins launched the Plastic Beach Project to systematically analyze plastic pollution on beaches along the West Coast and to develop a Plastic Pollution Report Card to better determine which beaches need additional beach cleanup. Gladys Kalema-Zikusoka was featured in a CCTV documentary Faces of Africa series entitled: Gorillas in Our Midst http://english.cntv.cn/program/facesofafrica/20130204/100515.shtml. Andrea Polli recently edited a book about the Arctic and Antarctic Far-Field-DigitalCulture-Climate. Rosemarie Keough received the Queen Elizabeth II Diamond Jubilee Medal for her extraordinary work in exploration photography, film making and publishing. Her latest book with husband Pat is The Inside Passage. Laphams Quarterly issue The Sea, featured Marie Tharp and her groundbreaking discovery of the Mid Atlantic Ridge, which was the proof of plate tectonics. Aimee Morgana was also featured in Lapham’s Quarterly for her unique work in animal communication. Leela Hazzah won the 2013 St. Andrews Prize for her work founding and running Lion Guardians in Kenya and is now branching out into Tanzania. Alexandra Morton is continuing her crusade against farmed salmon. See information on a documentary made about her work documenting disease spreading in salmon http://salmonconfidential.ca Helen Thayer continues her worldwide Adventure Classroom and her books are now available in 9 languages, including Chinese. She writes "I recently walked 900 miles through 4 Sahara countries with the Berber tribe as they searched for water. This became a study of the Berber tribe and the ever-increasing water problems many Sahara groups face. I'm leaving soon to walk 1,500 miles through northern India to document the various cultures there." Milbry Polk led an expedition to Northern Greenland last August and gave a presentation of the results at Rosemarie Keough’s Salt Spring Island Symposium in September. Waikiki Aquarium hosted an invasive algae clean-up honoring Dr. Isabella Abbott. Meg Lowman has a new book, Treetops at Risk: Challenges of Global Canopy Ecology and Conservation and continues her groundbreaking work in the remnants of Ethiopian forests. Terrie William's book on the endangered Hawaiian monk seal, KP2, was awarded the 2013 AAAS prize for scientific writing. She has developed a new wildlife tracking collar for large mammals that shows both location and movement patterns and, for the first time, behavior and energetic costs of wild animals. It is being used on mountain lions to predict hunting patterns and also the potential for human-lion conflicts. Her next round of expeditions to the Antarctic begins in 2014 to continue her work with Weddell seals who hunt in darkness. Finally she says her "work on elephant thermoregulation and the effects of drought in Africa that was supported by my award from Wings was published by the Journal of Experimental Biology this year." Diana Beresford-Kroeger is the subject of a BBC documentary for her work saving the old trees and forests of the world. EDUCATION Wings continues its collaboration with the Birch Lenox Waltham School in New York to bring women explorers to talk to the students. 17 West 17th Street, 9th Floor • New York • NY 10011 • Phone: 646.839.5907 [email protected] • www.wingsworldquest.org Generated with www.html-to-pdf.net Page 3 / 3