March 18, 2026
Project Introduction
For the last few years my “someday” goal has been to create a nature field guide, of sorts, highlighting my many years of observations in the East Mountains of central New Mexico. Well, my “Someday” is officially here! Coinciding with the February 22, 2026 kick-off of the 100 Day Project1 (Project), I began by committing an hour/day to developing that field guide as my project and immediately penciled out an outline and a few thumbnail sketches of a sample page. But, after retrieving my iNaturalist lists of East Mountains sightings I’ve made from home and during countless hikes, eliminating redundancies, and totaling up the individual species, my reported observations still numbered in the many hundreds. I would be working on this Project for the next five to six years!
Interlude
When we moved to the East Mountains in the summer of 2017, we quickly fell in love with the beauty of the wide open landscapes, the grasslands and woodlands habitats, the diverse populations of wildflowers and mammals, resident and migratory birds, and the insects and reptiles. So yes, nature is plentiful; species are many.
Now Back to the Project
Not to be overwhelmed (or defeated) by the potential magnitude of my Project, I decided to:
- “Divide and Conquer” by focusing on a single location …. our current subdivision and surrounding area and trails; and
- Prioritize quality over quantity by creating one page over two days, keeping each work session to one hour; and
- Keep the Project motivating and interesting, by adding fun facts or other research tidbit about each species.
“These guidelines seemed more realistic,” I thought, with a cautiously optimistic chance of achieving my goal of creating a nature field guide.
So with that as an introduction to my Project, here’s Page 1 to “An Illustrated Guide to the Nature of Las Leyendas Subdivision & Environs, Tijeras, East Mountains, New Mexico” — with many more pages to follow. 🤞
Constance’s Spring Parsley (Vesper constancei)


1 “The 100 Day Project is a free global art project that takes place online (https://www.the100dayproject.org/). Every year, thousands of people all around the world commit to 100 days of creating, and anyone can participate. The idea is simple: choose a creative project, do it every single day for 100 days, and document and share your process online. The most recent round of the Project began February 22, 2026, but any day is a great day to begin.”

Bravo, Barb! This is such a wonderful, meaningful project. I really like how you created the 3 guidelines to keep you between the guardrails of creativity! That’s brilliant! You’re inspiring me for a project that I have had in my mind for a while but haven’t taken the time to just begin. Is the Spring Parsley edible, or maybe it has medicinal properties? I look forward to seeing how your illustrated guide develops! Thanks for sharing!
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I really appreciate your comments, Karen, and love your question regarding edibility of this pretty spring parsley! I’ve sent a bunch of info I found while creating my page, and have sent you a personal email with the highlights. I ran out of room to add this info, and thought adding just tidbits on how edible and tasty Constance’s spring parsley without expanding on the importance of positive ID ….. there are a number of members in this family that are poisonous (i.e. Water Hemlock).
I’d love to know what your project may be! Has your ‘someday’ also arrived?!
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