What is the most challenging aspect of climbing trees?

Technical tree climbing involves a rope, saddle and other proper tree-climbing gear because you’re actually climbing on the rope rather than on branches. Getting the rope in place is usually the hardest part. For most trees in temperate forests, you can throw the first line up, but for really tall trees in tropical forests, you need to use a slingshot or a bow and arrow. It once took me three days to set a rope in a giant ceiba tree in Panama.

Have you ever been in danger while up in a tree?

Why do scientists call you?

I’m not a scientist, but the cool thing about my job is that I get to travel with them to remote places, such as the Western Ghats in India. A lot of novice researchers can go straight up a rope, but they don’t know how to go farther out onto the branches. I help them. For example, I’ve been in the field with canopy researcher Soubdra Devy, and I partner up with Meg Lowman, also known as the real-life Lorax, at least once a year, usually for a citizen science project. I also work with scientists doing outreach: I’ve brought kids into Monterey cypress trees to collect lichen samples.

Have you collected data yourself?

I’ve made tree measurements, gathered aerial soil, collected fruit and searched for red tree voles. I also went out with some herpetologists in India to find king cobras in the trees. Lucky for me, we were not successful (I have a mild fear of snakes).

What’s your next adventure?

This winter I’ll be in Monteverde, Costa Rica, teaching researchers about aerial-rescue techniques in tropical environments. I’ll also be joining the North Carolina Urban/Suburban Bear Study group, which will be accessing trees that bears den up in for the winter.

What’s your favorite type of tree to climb?

Getting 40 feet into an oak tree, putting up a hammock and just chilling out gives me a much deeper connection to nature. That’s what I like to call tree time.