Five Question Friday: Ed Pembleton

Five Question Friday with Ed Pembleton. Pembleton is the director of the Leopold Education Project, QF's education division.
QF: People say you look like __________?
EP: Actually, I can not remember any comparisons lately. Perhaps that's a benefit of not having much of a short term memory—or long term for that matter.
QF: The movie you could watch over and over again is ____________?
EP: I tend to watch a movie once and move on to the next task, but the movie that I have watched over and over again is "Aldo Leopold: A Prophet for All Seasons," which we use with the Leopold Education Project. Not as good as the book, but lots of interesting interviews with people who are no longer around to reflect.
QF: You're an avid photographer. Through your years of capturing the outdoors through a lens, what one photo sticks out in your mind?
EP: There are so many, that picking just one photo would be impossible. There are many photos that I consider outstanding because they bring back a whole series of memories about time spent outdoors with my wife and friends. A second set of photos come to mind because I was fortunate to capture an image that had a special composition, subject or setting and their technical and emotional values are memorable. For example, an image of a single dandelion seed with the sun in the background created in the 1970s had such an effect on me, and I recalled that picture a few months ago when something was needed for an article in Upland Tales.
QF: What's the rarest bird you've seen, and where did you see it?
EP: Whooping cranes are among the rarest birds on Earth and I was fortunate to first see them in Texas at the Aransas National Wildlife Refuge. Then three months later my wife and I saw two of them arrive and land along the Platte River on the Lillian Annette Rowe Sanctuary near Kearney, Nebraska. That was very satisfying because they chose the kind of habitat that we (I was an Audubon employee at the time) had been working to restore for more than a decade. The work to restore and protect the Platte River is still going on and the importance of the habitat work between Kearney and Grand Island is also critical for the half-million sand hill cranes that use the area from February to May each year. The really good news is that prairie restoration along the Platte has produced great pheasant habitat!
QF: The path to enlightenment is found _____________?
EP: Right behind the flashlight!
Previous Five Question Fridays
- 02/08/2008: Five Question Friday: Shannon Hansel
- 01/25/2008: Five Question Friday: Diane Osowski
- 12/28/2007: Five Question Friday: Diane Lueck
- 12/20/2007: Five Question Friday: Kris Kringle
- 12/07/2007: Five Question Friday: Sara Polge
- 11/30/2007: Five Question Friday: Heather Eaton
- 11/09/2007: Five Question Friday: Chris Sarkowski
- 11/02/2007: Five Question Friday: Howard Vincent
- 10/26/2007: Five Question Friday: Michael Johnson
- 09/19/2007: Five Question Friday: Kim Price
- 10/12/2007: Five Question Friday: Ed Pembleton
- 10/05/2007: Five Question Friday: Bill White
- 09/21/2007: Five Question Friday: Scott Brummond
- 09/07/2007: Five Question Friday: Kyle Lairmore
- 08/30/2007: Five Question Friday: Dennis Lynch
- 08/24/2007: Five Question Friday: Gary Brannock
- 08/17/2007: Five Question Friday: Brice Walker
- 08/10/2007: Five Question Friday: Linda Garner
- 08/03/2007: Five Question Friday: Dale Garner
- 07/27/2007: Five Question Friday: Ben Streitz
- 07/20/2007: Five Question Friday: Jim Inglis
- 07/13/2007: Five Question Friday: Tim Bandy
- 07/06/2007: Five Question Friday: Jodi Moulder
- 06/29/2007: Five Question Friday: Grant Cannatella
- 06/22/2007: Five Question Friday: Jon Murphy
- 06/15/2007: Five Question Friday: Jim Wooley
- 06/08/2007: Five Question Friday: Scott Sudkamp
- 06/01/2007: Five Question Friday: Mike Christensen
- 05/25/2007: Five Question Friday: Ed Moore
- 05/18/2007: Five Question Friday: Rick Hamrick
- 05/11/2007: Five Question Friday: Jaenold Satterlee
- 05/04/2007: Five Question Friday: Andy Ellingson
- 04/26/2007: Five Question Friday: Regina Knauer
- 04/19/2007: Five Question Friday: John Mason
- 04/12/2007: Five Question Friday: Tim Middleton
- 04/05/2007: Five Question Friday: Sara Bales-Lyda
- 03/29/2007: Five Question Friday: James Dietsch
- 03/22/2007: Five Question Friday: Elsa Gallagher
- 03/15/2007: Five Question Friday: David Bub





