Conference
Highlights:
Co-chairs Sharon
Alonzo and John Trowbridge and other members of The Southern Association
of Marine Educators (SAME) hosted this exciting conference in the Big
Easy.
Board meetings,
committee meetings, and conference registration dominated the time on
August 1st and 2nd.
On the 3rd, there
was a discussion group, moderated by Barbara Lee, which focused on “National
Perspectives in Marine Education-Long-Term Goals for NMEA”. This
was followed by an opening and keynote panel made up of Sharon Walker
(outgoing President of NMEA) , Donald Davis of Louisiana State University,
and Rezneat Darnell of Texas A & M. Concurrent sessions began after
lunch. Chapter meetings followed the sessions. A reception at the Aquarium
of the Americas-Dine with the Ginglymostomatidae topped off
the evening. For those who don’t know what a Ginglymostomatidae
is, it’s a nurse shark.
Conference
Program
Photographs by Susan Leach Snyder

Left:
An eel was one of the many animals seen at the Aquarium of the Americas.
Right: Being good conservationists, we used our conference mugs, instead
of paper cups.
On
August 4th, there were mini-sessions, concurrent sessions, Sea World’s
Marine Science Live via satellite, dinner, the silent auction,
a play called “Estuary: Quest to the Sea,” the live auction,
and a night out at the world famous bar, Tipitina’s.

This
sign was posted on a telephone pole advertising Tipitina's.
The next morning
was the membership meeting and continental breakfast, followed by concurrent
sessions, awards, the Stegner Lecture with Jack and Ann Rudlow, Sea
Swap, and Hot August Night at the Audubon Zoo.
The field trips
on August 6th provided opportunities to visit the Louisiana Universities
Marine Consortium research facility; tour the J. L. Scott Marine Education
Center and Huckleberry Hill, USM Arboretum; canoe through LaBranche
wetlands; explore Horn Island on a barrier island excursion; visit Honey
Island on a swamp tour; visit Turtle Cove Environmental Research Station;
hike through Jean Lafitte National Park, tour historic Fort Massachusetts
and beachcomb along the Gulf of Mexico; or explore the “Cities
of the Dead”-the above-ground cemeteries of New Orleans. At the
end of the day, there was a sampling of Louisiana foods at the Louisiana
Nature and Science Center. 
Right:
This was one of the many large grasshoppers spotted along the canoe
trip in the LaBranche wetlands.
The conference ended with
the New Board meeting, Sea Faire and brunch, and the closing activities
on August 7th.