The Outside Story Archive | Northern Woodlands page780 P780
Skip to navigation Skip to content

The Outside Story

Grouse_comp.jpg thumbnail

The “Other” Grouse Hangs On

One of Vermont and New Hampshire’s least-known birds is the spruce grouse. This is partly because the birds live exclusively in the boreal forests of northeast Vermont and northern New…

Salamanders.jpg thumbnail

Lung-less Salamanders of the Twin States

Many residents of Vermont and New Hampshire are familiar with salamanders such as the eastern newt (and its terrestrial form, the red eft, which can often be found along hiking trails and…

Old_Maple_Tree_1.jpg thumbnail

Sugar Maples in an Age of Climate Change

Unlike the Ents in Tolkien’s Lord of the Rings, real trees can’t walk away from danger or fight their own battles. When climate becomes inhospitable, forests can only shift ranges…

saptap.jpg thumbnail

Keeping Tap Holes Clean

The steady “drip, drip” of sap into buckets and the whirring of vacuum pumps pulling sap out of tubing mean that maple sugar season is underway once again across Vermont and New Hampshire.…

wild_turkeys.jpg thumbnail

Why Did the Turkey Cross the Road?

We’ve all seen them, picking their way thoughtfully across a cornfield or lurking quietly in an abandoned pasture. Wild turkeys seem to be everywhere now. In one field near my home in…

Biomass_Harvest.jpg thumbnail

Leaving the Best for the Future

Five years ago, my wife, Sue, and I swallowed hard, signed a contract on the advice of our forester, and invited loggers onto our land. We’d never had logging done before, so we were…

Snow.jpg thumbnail

The Secret Life of Snow

There are few things on this pulsing planet that appear less alive, and more adverse to life, than snow. It falls from the sky in sharp-edged crystals. It blankets the earth in white, silent…

red_squirrel_w.jpg thumbnail

Pine on the Cob

A few summers ago, I saw a red squirrel skittering along the top of a stonewall with something in its mouth. I snuck in closer and discovered the headless body of a chipmunk dangling from its…

hemlock_woolly_adelgid800_1.jpg thumbnail

A Cold Blast of Hope for Hemlocks

Cold got you down? Ready to trade in your hat and scarf for something a little scantier? While you’re waiting for that to happen – and good luck! – consider a visitor to these…

tree_dormancy_2.jpg thumbnail

How Do Trees Know When to Wake Up?

We take for granted that trees drop their leaves in fall and open their buds in spring, with a glorious burst of flowers and leaves. Indeed, florists know that apple branches cut in March and…

Sheep800.jpg thumbnail

Sheep, Externalities, and the Price of Grain

We lost money on sheep this year at our farm. In the grand scheme of things, we’re in good company: farmers in New Hampshire and Vermont have been losing money on sheep for going on 180…

african_violet.jpg thumbnail

Endangered Species on my Windowsill

It was with uneasiness that I accepted the little African violet a friend gave me for my birthday a few years ago. I had never had any luck growing the cute little furry things. To my dismay,…

Chronic_wasting_disease.jpg thumbnail

A Reprieve for Deer

Five years ago, chronic wasting disease (CWD) was spreading across North America like wildfire. It leapt from its stronghold in the Rocky Mountain states across the Mississippi River to…

insects_in_winter800.jpg thumbnail

Some Insects in Winter Get Super Cool

Insects have evolved a variety of different strategies for surviving the sub-zero temperatures of winter. Many spend the winter in a simple life stage – usually an egg – which is…

Chipmunk_cheeks.jpg thumbnail

Backyard Chipmunks Living the Good Life

Each fall day he appears with a skinny face and leaves with ballooned cheeks. Over and over, he fills his cheeks and runs away to empty them. Our eastern chipmunk, it seems, is living in a…

moosey.jpg thumbnail

Modern Moose Management

Moose are arguably the most novel of all North American large mammals, if for no other reason than their strange appearance. Whereas deer and elk are handsome creatures, rams majestic, and…

Frog_abnormalities_image.jpg thumbnail

Shouldn’t Have Happened to a Frog

On an August day 15 years ago, eight Minnesota junior high school students on a field trip caught 22 frogs in a farm pond. At least half of the frogs had some abnormality, mostly in their hind…

niche.jpg thumbnail

Every Niche Has Its Own Species

In the simplest terms, an ecological niche is analogous to the basic “ice-breaker” question asked at social gatherings: “So, what do you do for a living?” Of course, outside of a few…

silverfish.jpg thumbnail

Silverfish: Lurking in a Bathroom Near You

This afternoon, a 390-million-year-old thysanuran paid me a visit on my desk. It wasn’t really that old, just a little creature whose uninterrupted ancestry dates back at least that far.…

brown_trout_2.jpg thumbnail

Stalking the Wild Brown Trout

The rod was nearly yanked from my hands as a dark shadow tore out of the shallows and attached itself to my lure. When you’re 11 years old, this can be a life-changing experience. I…