in memory of George MacArthur I stared at a lone white cedar this morning, astonished, so few of that height and girth left standing from when they were hewn by hand for railroad ties by loggers. I…
Colleen Goodridge: a Product of the Kingdom
Born in Newport, Vermont, raised in Irasburg, and having lived much of her adult life in Albany, Colleen Goodridge considers herself “a product of the Kingdom.” For the uninitiated,…
Oh, Dear! How Deer Contribute to the Spread of Invasives
A winter walk in the forest reveals a flurry of wildlife activity that often goes unnoticed during other times of the year. Often among the many tracks in the snow are the nearly heart-shaped prints…
Rare Plants Hold Their Own on Adirondack Mountain Summits
Alpine plants grow where they do because mountain summits are cold, icy, windy, snowy – but also sunlit, dry, and hot. Alpine plants are directly vulnerable to warming temperatures, and…
Winter May Not Be the Limit for Blacklegged Ticks
For as long as the blacklegged tick has been expanding its range in the Northeast, many have thought that cold winters limit its geographic range. This belief in part derived from laboratory studies…
Marten and Fisher Can and Do Coexist in the Maine Woods
The American marten (Martes americana) and fisher (Pekania pennanti) are closely related inhabitants of the Northern Forest region. Both species have been impacted by historical trapping and forest…
Hibernation: Winter Survival by Chilling Out
Mammals and birds are endotherms, which means they generate their own body heat through relatively high metabolic rates. That high metabolism requires energy, which these animals garner from food. We…
Winter Wonder
Atop Cannon Mountain (elev. 4,081 feet) in Franconia, New Hampshire, we spotted feathery white formations growing sideways from trees and the railings of an observation tower at the summit. What is…
Into the Woods – by Snowshoe and Canoe – with Bill Novacek
Bill Novacek’s first job out of high school was at a sawmill in the Berkshires. In 1981, he moved north to Coos County in the White Mountains of New Hampshire, where his connection to wood…
There’s More to Fur Than Meets the Eye
A flash of orange streaks across the meadow – a red fox, like a starburst in the snow. Its fur shimmers in the early morning light, and I, bundled in my winter layers and still shivering cold,…
Green Long-jawed Spiders
Winter rambles often take me to East Woods in South Burlington, Vermont. While birders gaze skyward, I find myself drawn to movement on the ground. Snow cover reduces invertebrate numbers, and those…
December 2022
Your December photos included ice bells, fast-flowing meltwater, blaze orange fungi, and winter tree work by beavers and pileated woodpeckers. In Bristol, New Hampshire, Herb D’Arcy discovered a…
A Robin’s Winter Habits
One January day, my husband and I set off on a walk around our neighborhood. The temperature was a bone-chilling negative 19 degrees, and although we worked to get our blood pumping, our fingers and…
J Cantrell
Director of Finance and Operations
J Cantrell is the Director of Finance and Operations for Northern Woodlands. He has six years of nonprofit experience. You will most likely find him running and biking in the forest. He…
January Jack-o-lanterns?
We found what looked like tiny pumpkins balanced on 6-inch stems rising from the forest floor. What are these?
Building Community Through Conservation with Jen Plowden
Jen Plowden grew up in the open spaces of western Maine, along its border with New Hampshire. She helped her father log with horses, explored the fields and forests with her siblings, and participated…
Carolina Wrens Move North
I saw a new bird at my feeder last winter. In mid-December, a small, reddish-brown bird with an upturned tail, a white eyebrow-stripe, and a long, slender, downcurved bill was on the deck below our…
Creating a Climate-Resilient Forest at Tug Hill
Just east of Lake Ontario and west of the Adirondacks lies the Tug Hill Plateau, a chunk of sedimentary rock that rises from an elevation of 250 feet at its base near the lake to 2,100 feet on its…
Mount Washington Observatory: Measuring the “World’s Worst Weather”
Rising to an elevation of 6,288 feet, Mount Washington caps New Hampshire’s Presidential Range and is the highest peak in the Northeast. On a clear summer day, hordes of visitors flock to the…
Waxwings: Itinerant, Unpredictable Winter Jewels
Jays, chickadees, titmice, nuthatches, juncos, cardinals – these are the staple birds of winter, familiar to nearly all feeder watchers in the Northeast. In some years, nomadic finches such as…