What a shock, what a loss. My deepest condolences to Rick's family. I met Rick in 1993 when he was a grad student at UNR, and I was so impressed that I lured him to UC Davis as a postdoc a year later. For many years we were collaborators on a series of studies on wild pigs, oak woodland conservation, and Catalina Island bison. I have never met someone who was more passionate about field biology than Rick. We drifted apart in recent years as his career took him a new direction, but I have thought of him often nonetheless - and I always will.
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I also met Rick in graduate school. Lots of memories of classes, research, and the life of a grad student. We shared a house for a time. I'll never forget hiking in the Granites, Dondur and Blitzen (his silly dogs), training our houseplants to live in a desert (i.e. never remembering to water them), waking up to his coffee grinder at 5am each day... Ah, great times. You're missed, Rick.
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Rick and I were very close friends during our graduate training at the University of Nevada, Reno. I went to his Granite Mountains study area several times and we forged a very strong friendship. So strong that together we went on five arctic canoe trips. I have posted a not great quality photo of one on the Mountain River in the Northwest Territories. We were canoeing a canyon and tried to avoid the worst whitewater - a ledge that is easily seen in the photo - and we barely missed it avoiding a capsize. Rick, as usual, shook it off as no big deal and that's how it goes when you canoe wild rivers in the far north. I loved that. We had four other trips and another on the South MacMillian River in the Yukon Territory we practiced for months to be ready for the whitewater and when we did it together we were ready and super dialed in accomplishing many difficult moves on a challenging remote river. I'll never forget those times. Nor will I forget the time we spent together learning about how science was done and going to conferences and sharing life stories. Drinking beer, laughing. This is just tragic, and should not be. Having a little trouble getting over this. Far, far too young.
Doug Smith - Dudes and Wilderness Forever.
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In addition to working together at Grand Canyon, I shared many adventures with Rick, from backpacking in the Granite Mountains, unpredictable roadtrips as well as a few friendly bets over UND vs. NDSU Football games. The last time I saw Rick was in 2014 while I was on sabbatical in Reno. Rick invited my family to share one of his famous dinners at his cabin on the Mount Rose Highway. I already miss Rick's quirky sense of humor, his enthusiasm, his passion for wildlife research and his loyalty as on of my oldest friends. Rest in Peace, my friend. I share my condolences with Rick's family and his friends. - Craig Stockwell
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1985, Grand Canyon, AZ, USA
Rick as he worked as a field assistant on a bighorn sheep study.
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