Day six: Today I woke up at 7:00 AM, I had some breakfast. Today is a science day, we got started at around a little after 8:30, first thing we did was we learned about what bacteria's we are supposed to look out for. Then we had a open discussion about the different water qualities we have collected from all the stop we had on our trip. We also discussed about some hypnosis about our water samples, we talked about that for about four hours, then we broke for lunch. After lunch we did some lab work, with some of the other water samples that we have collected at Bird creek and Swamp creek. we look for and found some bacteria growth, and then we put them on some agar plates and incubated them. That was very interesting and fun, it was something different then other lab work I have done in the past. We did that for a couple of hours, and took a quick break, after the break we talked and worked on our posters that we will be presenting at some point in time. Which I am looking forward to, we worked on them till about 5:30, and then we ended the day and had some dinner, and I went to bed because we have a long travel day ahead of us.
Day thirteen: I woke up today a 7:00 AM. Today is the last full day of the trip and we will be heading tomorrow. The first thing we did was go to the Walla Walla fish hatchery and took a tour of the facility. We met Thomas Tallbull. He is a Hatchery manager there, Thomas graduated from the University of Idaho in 2012 with a bachelor's degree in fish and wildlife, and a master's from the University of Oklahoma in 2021, he was the one giving us the tour. He showed us everything there is that happens at a fish hatchery, from the spawning pools, and where they tag the fish so they can keep track of them. Next he showed us how they separate the natural fish from the tagged fish and he even showed us some lamprey. He said that they release hundreds of thousands of fish each year, I liked the tour it was very interesting. Then after the tour we went back to camp and did some gram staining on the rest of our water samples. We did that for almost two hours, and had some lunch, then we ...
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