We spotted this odd-looking goose on the ice of Lake Champlain. Why does it look different from the others?
Northern Woodlands Pollinator Garden
The Northern Woodlands Pollinator Garden, in the front yard of our headquarters in Lyme, New Hampshire, has transformed over the past few years into a living example of how a small space can support a…
January 2026
Your January photos captured handsome raptors, the meeting of sun and snow, and frozen water in a stunning variety of forms. In Dalton, New Hampshire, Sandy Miklas Dannis toasted the New Year during a…
In the Company of Dazzling Creatures with Sy Montgomery
Sy Montgomery is a writer and a naturalist, best known for her award-winning books on animals and the natural world. She is the author of nearly 40 books for children and adults, including National…
Phantoms of the North: Great Gray Owls
The great gray owl (Strix nebulosa) is a northern raptor that only occasionally graces our northeastern states. Also called the phantom of the north, these owls have large facial discs with…
Bundling Up: Soil Microbes in Winter
Like any good animal, we sense the change of seasons through a hundred subtle clues. Leaves change and shed, becoming crispy piles underfoot. Geese cross the bright sky. Other signs of winter are…
January: Week Five
This week in the woods, we heard the sharp, harsh jip calls from a gregarious flock of red crossbills and watched them alight on this red spruce and begin to forage. While a medieval European legend…
Winter Scape
We found this dried husk of a scape while skiing in Shelburne, Vermont. What flower was this?
Matthew Largess Speaks for the Trees
Matthew Largess is an arborist and old-growth forest enthusiast in Jamestown, Rhode Island. He studied forestry at Paul Smith’s College in the mid-1970s before leaving to work as a logger. After…
A Rare Winter Flicker of Red and Yellow
While many of our region’s colorful birds fly south for the cold months, resident woodpeckers offer a reliable contrast to this season’s monochrome palette. A pileated woodpecker’s…
January: Week Four
This week in the woods, we encountered a pair of bald eagles that had begun rebuilding a nest in Lyme, New Hampshire. Many overwintering birds, like the bald eagle to the left, fluff up their feathers…
Life Beneath the Ice and Snow: Turtles in Winter
For hundreds of years, people believed that, come autumn, barn swallows would dive under the surface of ponds and lakes, swim to the bottom, and bury themselves in the mud for the winter. We now know…
January: Week Three
This week in the woods, we shared a moment with a boreal chickadee, the more reclusive, higher-elevation cousin of our familiar feeder bird, the black-capped chickadee. Through the winter, the boreal…
On The Frontline of Forest Questions with Jessica Pierce
Jessica Pierce is a service forester at Pennsylvania Department of Conservation and Natural Resources in the Bureau of Forestry. She has been with the Department for 14 years and has worked across…
Who Scat That?
This pile of scat was found in an early-successional stand of hardwoods in Kingfield, Maine. Who produced it?
December 2025
Delicate ice art, bold snow tracks, and brilliant birds were among the subjects of December’s photo submissions. Dawn Brooks discovered bear tracks in Monterey, Massachusetts; Ken Dickerman…
Needle Ice
On an early winter walk with my three-year-old in a local town forest, we heard our steps crunch on the frozen ground. The dirt of the trail had been pushed up on delicate columns of ice that looked…
January: Week Two
This week in the woods, the familiar cigar shapes of cattails’ pollinated female flowers waved over a beaver pond in West Fairlee, Vermont. These cylinders are densely packed with hundreds of…
The Incredible Shrinking Shrew
Last autumn, I was canoeing in a quiet saltwater cove on the Maine coast when I realized I had a tiny stowaway onboard. A masked shrew (Sorex cinereus, also called the cinereus or common shrew) was…
January: Week One
This week in the woods, we’re watching the bouncy, undulating flight of the American goldfinch, which has earned comparison to a rollercoaster, a stone skipped across a lake, and a sine/cosine…