{"id":22026,"date":"2020-07-20T17:19:09","date_gmt":"2020-07-20T21:19:09","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/currents\/?p=12678"},"modified":"2024-05-21T15:54:01","modified_gmt":"2024-05-21T19:54:01","slug":"celebrating-latino-conservation-week-spotlight-on-frank-lopez","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/ncseagrant.ncsu.edu\/coastwatch\/celebrating-latino-conservation-week-spotlight-on-frank-lopez\/","title":{"rendered":"Celebrating Latino Conservation Week: Spotlight on Frank L\u00f3pez"},"content":{"rendered":"
Communities throughout the country are connecting with the great outdoors during the 7th annual Latino Conservation Week<\/a>, July 18 through July 26.\u00a0<\/em>We celebrate the occasion here with Frank L\u00f3pez<\/a>,\u00a0extension director for North Carolina Sea Grant and the NC Water Resources Research Institute.<\/em><\/p>\n What does conservation mean to you?<\/strong><\/p>\n Frank L\u00f3pez<\/em>: Being able to benefit and enjoy outdoor places that others cared for and saved. I enjoy being on the water or out on a trail. Conservation also means using those spaces in a way that allows others to benefit and enjoy them in the future.<\/p>\n What advice do you have for a young person looking to start a career?<\/strong><\/p>\n Frank L\u00f3pez<\/em>: Don’t be afraid to take risks and always be looking for the opportunity to increase your network. It’s hard to\u00a0succeed alone. There are a lot of people in our profession willing and able to help you along the way. I decided on my career path through an internship and then found my first job managing a protected area in Ohio through the NOAA Coastal Management Fellowship.<\/p>\n To learn more about Frank’s career journey — and how he once survived a waterspout — read Coastwatch magazine’s profile<\/a> of him below.<\/em><\/p>\n Ten years ago. Frank L\u00f3pez is about to go riding around on a metal-bottomed landing craft in the middle of a lightning storm on Apalachicola Bay in Florida. The lightning will not be the most dangerous part. Not by far.<\/p>\n He\u2019s touring the field facility and research projects along an island in Apalachicola National Estuarine Research Reserve as part of a national reserve system meeting. The air\u2019s thick \u2014 that early summer Gulf Coast soup \u2014 and everybody\u2019s sweating, thoroughly, as they disperse across the little island\u2019s shoreline or investigate inland.<\/p>\n Without warning, mystery stirs the afternoon. The boat captain calmly but insistently starts rounding up his passengers and telling them to please hop aboard and maybe to hop aboard without delay. They really need to get back to the mainland, yes, clear across on the other side of the bay, and it wouldn\u2019t be a bad idea if people more or less hurried.<\/p>\n To their credit, everybody diligently makes their way through the grasses and sand and muck. Soon the captain takes the landing craft back out onto the cobalt water, now under the sort of suddenly dark sky that only arrives in black and white films with a feverish string quartet. It\u2019s obvious the field experiments are about to be replaced by some real-life meteorology. On cue, the storm hits in full, as if Fate had been lying in wait until the little boat had made the open water. Lightning cracks through eyelids, thunder rattles eardrums, rain whips faces.<\/p>\n \u201cWe\u2019re in a metal boat in the middle of a lightning storm on a bay,\u201d Frank L\u00f3pez says later, very matter-of-factly. \u201cSo that was cause for a little bit of alarm.\u201d He smiles. \u201cAnd then there was the waterspout.\u201d<\/p>\n The ominous journey across Apalachicola Bay was almost exactly one decade before Frank L\u00f3pez would become the new extension director for North Carolina Sea Grant and the state\u2019s Water Resources Research Institute. \u201cWe\u2019re lucky Frank made it out of Florida,\u201d says Susan White, executive director of both programs.<\/p>\n<\/a>
Into the Vortex with Frank L\u00f3pez
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