Site Discussions
Does hardwood and softwood make a difference in the angle you sharpen a chain at?
From "Tricks of the Trade: Myths and Mistakes of Chainsaw Sharpening" »
Earliest known leaf miners were recently found in Massachusetts in a 300+ million year old fossil…
https://phys.org/news/2023-10-unearthing-leaf-miners-ancient-million-year-old.html
From "Documenting Natural Resources and Interesting Insects with Charley Eiseman" »
I HIGHLY RECOMMEND Charley’s works, his book ‘Tracks & Sign of Insects and Other Invertebrates’ (http://charleyeiseman.com/publications/) and his e-book ‘Leafminers of North America’. At Distant Hill Gardens, our nonprofit environmental learning center in Walpole, New Hampshire, we had the privilege of hosting Charley for an amazing and enlightening ‘Insect Tracking’ workshop in 2022. The experience transformed the way all attendees, myself included, now perceive the relationship between plants and insects. With Charley’s guidance, we learned how to more closely observe plants in a landscape and to uncover the subtle evidence of insects utilizing them as host plants, deepening our understanding of the intricate relationship between plants and insects and their importance within a functioning ecosystem.
Thank you, Charley, for opening my eyes to the overlooked but ever present plant/insect interactions taking place right in front of us!
From "Documenting Natural Resources and Interesting Insects with Charley Eiseman" »
We had a flock of about 20 pine grosbeaks last winter. That hung around for several weeks and ate us out of house and home!
From "A Tale of Two Grosbeaks" »
What a great profile of Charley. I heartily recommend his “Tracks and Sign” book (http://charleyeiseman.com/publications/). Its content could provide a virtually inexhaustible supply of content for Northern Woodlands’ “What in the Woods is That?” quiz.
From "Documenting Natural Resources and Interesting Insects with Charley Eiseman" »
The lack of snowpack over the last 20 years breaks my heart. Yes, I miss xc skiing out my back door, but what truly scares me is the effect this is having on our environment. I worry about the ancient maples in my front yard with no blanket of snow to speak of, the subnivean critters, exposed to the severe cold we’ve had this past week, and the future weather patterns we ar facing. I wish our government would take climate change seriously and show some leadership.
From "How Ebbing Snow Cover Affects Plants and Animals" »
Great article. Finally, someone is starting to talk about the catastrophic loss of winter in the only sense that really matters - loss. Not “transition,” or “change,” but loss, period. Anyone who does not feel a deep sense of loss and grief over the human destruction of winter is not fully human as far as I’m concerned.
I have to take exception to a couple points, however. There will be no snow at all in the American northeast by 2100; Vermont will have the climate of NE Alabama by 2050, if not sooner. For a number of understandable reasons the IPCC models are far too conservative, as has been repeatedly shown in real world measurement over the past ten years. Climate change is not linear, and its rate of acceleration is increasing as can be plainly seen over the past five years. Models and studies that necessarily rely on past data significantly underestimate Earth’s climate sensitivity and are poor predictors of future outcomes.
This is important because we need to understand and prepare for actual outcomes, not convenient fictions. However much emotionally desired or data driven, these are not accurate understandings of future reality. It is indeed much worse than anyone wants to admit or think about. This is not “doomer” talk; it’s the reality we’ve created, and if we’re to be reality based this must be the framework for these kinds of discussions, which for many if not most of us requires acknowledgement and acceptance of something noone wants to acknowledge or accept. In that vein, Jim Henson’s 2023 paper, “Global Warming In the Pipeline,” should be required reading for everyone in the environmental field.
Again, great article. This is why I love this magazine.
From "How Ebbing Snow Cover Affects Plants and Animals" »
This is somewhat similar to the northward migrations of backyard feeder birds such as tufted titmice and red bellied woodpeckers. These southern birds are now being sighting throughout New England. Similarly to opossums, these expansions probably have to do with greater winter survival rates due to the availability of foods, such as bird seed and beef suet, in urban, suburban, and rural backyards.
From "Opossums Find Cold Comfort in New England’s Winters" »
A few years back, we saw a dead opossum on the road shortly before avoiding two that were very much alive. Strangely, the opossum pair appeared to be travelling together.
Surprisingly, this was near Lancaster in northern New Hampshire, which is north of Littleton.
This was well north of central New Hampshire, so a significant sighting suggesting that they are indeed migrating north.
From "Opossums Find Cold Comfort in New England’s Winters" »
Eastern newt toxins might be specific to vertebrates, especially fish.
Supposedly, though, crayfish also avoid them.
From "Dragonfly Predation on Eastern Newts" »
We have a possum living in our backyard this winter, midcoast Maine.
From "Opossums Find Cold Comfort in New England’s Winters" »
Thank you Tim! That sounds like a nice diversity of pine cones!
From "Pine Cones: The Complicated Lives of Conifer Seeds" »
Wonderfully written, engaging article. Thank you very much.
From "Discovering Orion" »
Are they a source of food for birds in late winter?
From "Snow fleas: Now You See Them, Now You Don’t" »
What a gift Lisa is to this organization and this state! The Cooperators program blows one’s mind open to all the aspects of owning a woodland and teaches us to treasure that. Over the years Lisa has expanded the offerings of Coverts so there is something for all of us, including, as she mentioned, those of us who can’t nip around the woods anymore. I feel such gratitude for the years I was able to wander in my woods with my late husband and now am blessed that my son has come to know them better too. So thank you Lisa for all you do!
From "Into the Vermont Woods with Lisa Sausville" »
I am a forest steward in Northwestern New Jersey, and have gone to our version of a 3-4 day educational program. I would love to join your bookclub, and maybe start one up with my group. This magazine is amazing. I look forward to the photos. But this column, hearing the stories of the LUCKY folk who get to work outdoors and know so much about the land, is exceptional. Thank you.
From "Into the Vermont Woods with Lisa Sausville" »
It would be great to have a list of the books your group has read and plan to read.
From "The Amazing Chickadee" »