by Eric Apalategui
 Bill Wagner
Wielding loppers, Kathleen Sayce cuts through brambles
smothering a parcel in the heart of historic and otherwise tidy
Oysterville on southwest Washington’s Willapa Bay.
Between a leaning red alder and a mangled Sitka spruce, Sayce
(’78 M.S. Bot.) opens a narrow trail through native bittersweet,
salmonberry, and red elderberry plants. With verve, she hacks
invasive ivy and blackberry vines. In the center of the
thicket she unveils shredded food wrappers, perhaps the plunder of
black bears living on Long Beach Peninsula.
The science officer at ShoreBank Pacific, Sayce—-sporting a
sheen of perspiration and bug repellant—-is no buttoned-down
banker. She is the only working biologist or botanist at a
commercial bank in the United States, says her boss, bank CEO
Dave Williams.
Emphasize working; because even though Sayce is one of
the Pacific Northwest’s foremost experts on coastal plants, she’d
rather be tromping through woods than planted in a laboratory. “I
realized in graduate school [at Washington State University]
that I like to do things that are very practical,” she says. “I
wanted the work that I did to make a visible difference.”
Everywhere you look around the lush landscape of the lower
Columbia River, Sayce is making a difference.
ShoreBank, which has an Ilwaco office serving nearby
communities, concentrates on sustainable lending, considering loan
applications with a longterm view rooted in conservation and
community as well as economics. Most banks don’t track a client’s
environmental footprint, but Sayce monitors borrowers long after
the papers are signed.
“If they’re damaging the environment,” Williams reasons,
“they’re not going to last very long.”
The bank also hires out Sayce as an environmental contractor. On
this summer day, she and a contract geologist survey the
Oysterville property for its owner. Their assignment is to
map out the parcel’s wetlands to determine the best place for a
prospective buyer to build a home.
Marking off wetlands isn’t a matter of tugging a measuring tape
until your boots get wet. Water ebbs and flows with the seasons,
the years, the generations. In the dry season, the line between
upland and wetland is subtle, but there’s evidence in the soils and
the plants growing there.
On the latter, Sayce has few peers in this moss-draped
landscape.
“She’s 10 miles deep and 100 miles wide in her knowledge base,”
says Kim Patten (’83 Ph.D. Hort.), a WSU researcher and
associate professor of horticulture who often asks Sayce to
identify plants growing along the bay or in cranberry bogs. “I
don’t think there is a living soul who knows half what she does—-a
quarter, even.”
Before joining ShoreBank in 1998, Sayce’s varied career
included doing much of the early science on Srartina
alterniflora, forming a foundation on which Patten and other
partners built a strategy to eradicate much of the nonnative
cordgrass, reopening Willapa Bay’s vast mudflats to
foraging shorebirds.
The Willapa National Wildlife Refuge also frequently taps
Sayce’s deep well of plant knowledge, manager Charlie Stenvall
says. “She’s always been able to give us information.”
For instance, Sayce identified bog loosestrife, another invasive
newcomer Stenvall hopes to eliminate. And just last year she
confirmed a refuge biologist’s sighting of pink sand verbena at
Leadbetter Point—-leading to a restoration project half a century
after the native dune plant was last noted in Washington.
Sayce, the daughter of a shellfish biologist, was born in
Ilwaco, grew up in Ocean Park, and moved out of Pacific County only
for college. When she was a child, the peninsula had 1,500
permanent residents. Now eight times that many people live on the
fragile sand finger dividing serene Willapa Bay from the pounding
Pacific Ocean, and the area is a magnet for tourists and
second-home owners.
Though she’s the last person to don a superhero’s cape, Sayce is
a guardian of the region’s environmental and historic heritage.
Aside from her bank duties, she keeps tabs on native and
invasive plants and shares findings on her Columbia Coast
Plants Website. She volunteers for the refuge’s “friends”
group, land conservancies, and native plant societies to protect
ecosystems and educate people. She joins citizen battles against
damaging developments. She represents coastal communities on
the board of the Confluence Project, teaming with famed architect
Maya Lin to commemorate the bicentennial of the Lewis and Clark
Expedition with art installations along the Columbia River.
“I would easily use the word ‘extraordinary’ board member,” says
Jane Jacobsen, Confluence’s executive director, who leans on Sayce
for native plant restoration at project sites.
Although activities such as Confluence are meant to be visible,
Sayce often shies from the spotlight.
“It’s just sort of the way I operate,” she says. “I’d rather
work behind the scenes. It’s kind of amazing what I can get done
that way.”
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