Juneberry – also called serviceberry or shadbush – is an unassuming native fruit in the genus Amelanchier with many common names. Members of the genus grow throughout most of North America…
Editor’s Note
Like the fledgling heron in the image on the page opposite this column, two of my own children are preparing to leave the nest this summer. And like the gangly bird in the photograph, my human…
Sunshine House
For 12 years, my family has spent a week on the same property in Downeast Maine. In mid-June, with summer draped lazily before us, we travel east along Route 1 and bear right after Bucksport. Time…
How Private and Public Management Affects Oaks
In much of the eastern United States, oaks are declining, while generalist species such as red maple (Acer rubrum) are on the rise in historically oak-dominated forests. This shift is in part…
The Crack in the Limb
Outside my window sits a grand old maple that I have grown to favor, not because it’s mine, but rather, I belong to it—despite our separate homes in nature. I see how it bears …
1,000 Words
“I have spent many seasons observing several great blue heron nests at this beaver pond in Amherst, New Hampshire. I look forward to these prehistoric-looking birds’ return yearly and…
Painted Turtles Basking
Painted turtles (like all reptiles) are ectothermic, or cold-blooded, and basking in the sun helps them warm up. Also, leeches and algae that attach to them as they swim dry up and fall off, leaving…
Caring for “The Farm” and its Woods in Connecticut
Ruth Cutler’s property in Ashford, Connecticut, has been in the family for nearly 100 years. Her grandfather purchased the original 127 acres in 1927, and the family has called it “The…
Mountain Birdwatch: Tracking the Northeast’s Montane Species
In late June, the route to the 3,839-foot summit of Plateau Mountain remained closed following a late spring storm that dumped heavy snow and ice, leaving a trail of downed trees that devastated many…
Conservation Easements: Connecting Land, People, and Ideas Through Time
A topiary garden. A dairy farm. A meandering river flanked by floodplain wetlands. Hundreds of thousands of acres of managed forest stitching together Maine’s North Woods. An iconic sledding…
The Cottongrasses
Botanically curious people often ask me, “How do you tell a sedge from a grass?” Many have heard that “sedges have edges,” but distinguishing grasses from sedges is often more…
Largemouth in Coal Country
By mid-June, green covers the mountainside, paints it a thousand verdant shades, leaf upon leaf upon leaf. Mountain laurel blossoms. Blackcap raspberries ripen. Hidden in the dense woods, a…
May: Week Four
This week in the woods, the starflower is the star. One of the most common spring bloomers in northeastern woodlands and tolerant of shade, the wildflower is blossoming all over the floors of our…
Against the Flow: Spring Alewife Run
One of the most exciting rites of spring is the alewife run, an annual event where throngs of fish race upstream from the ocean to inland water bodies on a reproductive journey. These “river…
May: Week Three
This week in the woods, a black-throated green warbler, a bird more often high up in the forest canopy, deigned to visit us in the understory for a moment and sing its fitting song: I’m so…
Nature’s Bubblegum?
This week in the woods we came across these globs of bright pink spattered across moss on a decaying log. What is this?
The Past, Present, and Future of Northeastern Forests with Shersingh Joseph Tumber-Dávila
When: May 20th 2025 5:00 - 6:00 PM
Where: at Lyme Congregational Church, 1 Dorchester Road, Lyme, New Hampshire
Join us for a discussion with Dartmouth College Assistant Professor of Environmental Studies Shersingh Joseph Tumber-Dávila, who will share perspectives on New England’s woodlands, with a…