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dave
Mar 06, 2012

check out this piece to learn more about wolf/coyote hybrids.

http://northernwoodlands.org/outside_story/article/canis-soupus-the-eastern-coy-wolf/

From "Survival of the Fittest" »

Meghan Oliver
Mar 06, 2012

Hi Chris.

I have not heard anything about the warmer winter causing tree damage of this sort.

If I had to take a guess, I imagine the large amount of downed and uprooted trees are likely “leftovers” from the early snowstorm much of New England and parts of New York experienced back in October 2011. I know driving to CT from VT a few months ago, I was surprised to see so much tree debris along the roadways, dating back to that October storm. Also, there may still be some downed trees from Tropical Storm Irene.

If any other readers out there have thoughts on this, please weigh in.

From "What Do Tree Roots Do in Winter?" »

Frank Merewether
Mar 06, 2012

The extinction of wolves in NH & VT is probably more due to concerted efforts at extermination by humans than any lack of adaption to the changed environment, other than not avoiding humans. Also I’ve heard several wildlife experts say on some local radio program that the coyotes from the west have interbred with wolves (possibly coming in from Canada) and that now the current local “coyote” has a fair amount of wolf genes (by DNA analysis). They also appear (or at least did a few years ago) to have adopted wolf tactics and hunt in packs. At least that’s what it sounds like.
Just minor comment on great article.

From "Survival of the Fittest" »

Jenna Dixon
Mar 05, 2012

Nice, warm intro, Meghan. I just wanted to chime in with the mention of the iPod Touch (think iPhone without the phone): more affordable and more portable than the iPad and Leafsnap et al. work on it too….. Disclaimer: I own no stock in Apple!

From "Not Your Grandma's Field Guide" »

Chris
Mar 04, 2012

I have a question if anyone has any information. I live outside of new York city. Is there any correlation between the extremely warm winter we are having and the large amount of downed and uprooted trees?

From "What Do Tree Roots Do in Winter?" »

gary bobseine
Mar 04, 2012

Thanks for the educational piece on mourning doves, Michele.  We definitely see many more over-wintering doves here in western NY than in the past. It is always a pleasure to hear the first spring “coos” of the male doves, which occurred here on February 29 this year. This sign of spring rates right up there with the first robin sighting, the first bluebird song, or the first “peents” and aerial displays of the woodcock.

I had a chance to hunt, and eat, some mourning doves in southwest Texas with my son last September.  They offer challenging shooting and delectable table fare.  It is unfortunate that we sportspeople in the Northeast aren’t able to take advantage of the healthy supply of excess doves, which hunting or not, will only overwinter less than half of the fall population, hunting season or not.

From "The Secret Life of the Mourning Dove" »

gary bobseine
Mar 04, 2012

I once declared war on porkys on a couple hundred acres of forested land that we own in southern Cattaraugus County, in western New York.  It seemed that they could not get enough of the painted steel covering on the windows of the new cabin we built.  They disregarded the lumber and ate the steel and paint.  They also ate the aluminum handle of a pot that was left outside on the porch.

After eliminating 18 porkys in the vicinity of the cabin, the problem abated.  Subsequent to my assault, we started seeing fisher sign in our woods.  The Pa. game Commission (I believe) had stocked fisher in the nearby Allegany National Forest. Porky numbers have remained low since.

From "The Porcupine: Nature’s Pincushion" »

stephen moses
Feb 28, 2012

I enjoy your articles and always learn something from them.  I’d like to share an insight about their behavior that I haven’t seen in any literature.  One winter I located an active den tree in a far corner of my property, a place where mostly beech, ash, hard maple grew with hemlock and red oak sprinkled in.  I could see clearly in the deep snow that this porcupine wasn’t travelling far to find food.  There were several paths to nearby beech and maple trees ten to twenty feet from the base of the den.  The animal chewed patches of bark at the base of several trees, some large patches, some small.  I was puzzled by this.  I knew they would chew beech, but a rough barked maple?  And it didn’t climb; all the patches were at ground level.  Then it dawned on me.  This animal conserved energy by not travelling far and not climbing to chew bark,and it was creating future den trees in the process!  Debarking would certainly cause rot at the base of those trees creating potential den trees decades hence.  This type of behavior would have a selective advantage to the individual as well as the species itself.
An additional note, one spring day in the ‘70s I counted eleven porcupines, seven adults and four youngsters on my property of 165 acres.  Twenty eight thousand pine trees were planted in the late 50s and porcupines were chewing many of them.  Today those trees are 65 ft tall and seldom do I see a porcupine in one of them.  I’ve shot only one in forty years.  There is an active den and that animal will chew a twenty foot beech until there’s no bark left.  I think the pines are too tall to scale in the winter.  Why expend all that energy when there are short beech trees nearby.  And, yes, I still find bases of nearby trees eaten.
Thank you for reading.  I was a biology major (BA,MS) and still get a thrill (chills, really) thinking about what organisms have to endure to survive.

From "The Porcupine: Nature’s Pincushion" »

dave
Feb 27, 2012

Hi J,

The equation is constantly changing, as the sugar content of sap fluctuates throughout the season. To figure it out, you have to divide the sugar content of your sap by 86. Thus, if you’re boiling 1 percent sap, you’ll need 86 gallons of sap to make a gallon of syrup. 2 percent sap you’ll need 43 gallons.

From "Dispatch from the Sugarwoods 2012" »

J
Feb 24, 2012

What is the ratio of gathered sap to maple syrup?

How many gallons of sap does it take to make one gallon of Syrup.

(This is a real question from a east coast fisherman type who knows nothing about sugaring.)

From "Dispatch from the Sugarwoods 2012" »

dave
Feb 16, 2012

Hi Jason,

“Buddy” is an off-flavor that typically develops late in the season, when buds are swelling and the tree’s metabolism is changing. It might be associated with increased amounts of amino acids in sap. There’s another naturally occurring off-flavor called “Metabolism,” which is sort of like buddy but happens earlier in the season, usually during a warm spell. People have described buddy as tasting like chocolate or butterscotch; metabolism as tasting like popcorn or peanut butter. As you can imagine, it’s very hard to free associate like this and have it make sense to anyone but the taster. Some years there are reports of widespread metabolism, other years no reports at all. Because these are naturally occurring off flavors, there’s nothing a producer can do about them.

As for the specific taste of red maple sap, it would seem, based on the size of the buds compared to hard maple buds that the syrup would go “buddy” quicker. We just started tapping red maples in our sugarbush in the past few years, and because all the sap gets blended with hard maple sap, i can’t say one way or the other if this is true. As you know, there are so many variables that effect syrup flavor, it’s really hard to isolate one variable and make a definitive declaration.

Finally, on most years trees will get sweeter (then less sweet) as the season progresses. We usually start around 1.5% in our bush in February, peak at about 2.5% in mid-March, then fall back down to around 1% in mid-April. Early tapping reports in southern Vermont had sugar content around 1% in late January. This sap will almost certainly get sweeter as the trees wake up and shrug off winter dormancy.

Proctor Maple Research Center http://www.uvm.edu/~pmrc/ and the Cornell Research and Extension program http://maple.dnr.cornell.edu/ are both good sources of maple info where you can learn more. Let us know how you make out this year, and whether this year’s syrup has that same nutty/vanilla flavor.

From "When Tapping, Don't Disregard Red Maple" »

jason
Feb 15, 2012

Going from this article, I decided to purchase sugar supplies and tap my read maples this year. The syrup made from these seems to be somewhat darker (article mentioned) but also the syrup has a nutty/vanilla flavor. I also noticed that I took it past the recommended sugar content by bringing it off at 32. I should have brought it off at 30 or just after.
Is there more information on the taste of the final product, syrup made from a Red Maple? All my sap is from Red Maples. Perhaps, weird winter this year, I started to tap early. Is there any information on starch levels in the sap if tapped to early? Perhaps explain the slight off taste?
With a temp of 20’s at night, days 40ish, and I gathered the sap on a two day drip, I cooked it down right away, I am sure there is no spoilage.. Can you explain “buddy”?

From "When Tapping, Don't Disregard Red Maple" »

tom wormell
Feb 15, 2012

I liked reading the article to hear what is happening in different parts of the northeast.

From "Editor's Note" »

Art Hislop
Feb 15, 2012

My daughter thinks trees need no water in Winter - none between Oct to Mar. Water is costly & we are rapidly draining our 1,000 year old underground lake source.
Roots do need water, as I see in literature.
We have 2 Chase, 1 Catalpa, & 8 Pine trees for shade. A bunch of crepe mrytle bushes for shade.
My thoughts 1.  Winter- water every 2 to 3 weeks-all are 1 to 5 years old.  2. I think deep watering once a week except when we have long term 100º, 110º +++days. Do you have any papers on winter watering needs? She does not like my opinion! I am a retire 87 year old BSEE engineer from Illinois. This high desert-2,300 above SL is 20-30 nights and 6o to 70 day time in this whole winter. Thanks.
ah

From "What Do Tree Roots Do in Winter?" »

Sara
Feb 13, 2012

Hello fellow birders:

This is Sara, the birding buddy mentioned in the above blog.  Please rest assure that I DID enter our sightings into ebird.  I hope you all enjoyed this story, it was a wonderful experience - thanks Meghan!

Sara Eisenhauer

From "Victory in Victory" »

Noel Dodge
Feb 10, 2012

A wonderfull tale, might I make a request? Please enter your bird counts in eBird.
http://www.ebird.org
Thanks! Noel Dodge

From "Victory in Victory" »

Jeff
Feb 09, 2012

Agreed.  Whitingham is 1,038 folks.  The Hurricane hit hard and the economy is difficult, but it allows an opportunity to remove unnecessary aspects of life and focus on and appreciate the core of good, sustainable, local living. 

It brings to mind two Wendell Berry quotes and my favorite bumper sticker….

“When despair for the world grows in me and I wake in the night at the least sound in fear of what my life and my children’s lives may be, I go and lie down where the wood drake rests in his beauty on the water, and the great heron feeds. I come into the peace of wild things who do not tax their lives with forethought of grief. I come into the presence of still water. And I feel above me the day-blind stars waiting with their light. For a time I rest in the grace of the world, and am free.”

“Be joyful because it is humanly possible.”

Bumper sticker on my truck (Art Buckwold quote)  - The Best Things in Life, Aren’t Things.

From "From the Center" »

Meghan
Feb 06, 2012

Hi there, Guy.

That is great you are considering building a heron platform. You can check out this link for a PDF that has heron plans:
http://www.redsquirrels.info/Documents/Building_Nest_Boxes.pdf

Also, I highly recommend the book, Woodworking for Wildlife, put out by the Minnesota Dept. of Natural Resources. I have built nest boxes myself using this book—it’s a must have for anyone considering building homes for wildlife!
http://www.dnr.state.mn.us/publications/books/index.html

Thanks,
Meghan

From "In the Great Blue Heronry" »

Wendi Leiby
Feb 05, 2012

My husband just called me from work (in Putney, VT) awhile ago and told me that a big huge headed tan cat just walked in front of him (outside) about 6 feet away from him. This was about midnight. I asked him if it was a house cat and he said, “No. It was about 4 to 5 times bigger than any house cat he had ever seen.” I asked him if it was over 50 pounds and he said, “Well over that.” I asked him if it had stripes or a long tail or pointy ears? He said, “I don’t know I was more worried about it attacking me than whether or not it had pointy ears and a long tail, But it did not have stripes.” I said do you think it was a mountain lion? He said, “I don’t know. But what it wasn’t was a tame domestic cat. It looked wild! But it just walked past me and down by the woods.” He then told me that they just had a new early calf born in the barn that night and that they have chickens all around up there. I told him to be careful and to watch his back cause that is how they attack. He said he was staying inside now for the rest of the night and would be very careful if he goes outside.  So then I took a photo of a mountain lion online and sent it to him on his cell phone. He said that is exactly what it looked like. He said that he is sooo glad the moon is out and so bright tonight.  So I guess no matter what the fish and game dept says, there are mountain lions in VT. I also saw one when I was a child in Marlboro, VT but my Dad said I was seeing things. The one I saw was all black. And it was at least 2 ft tall, I could see his back well over the uncut hay in the field. It walked along the edge of the woods and then into the woods across the road from my house. I know what house cats look like and this was huge and muscular. Like a panther. This was 40 years ago and I still have never forgotten even when I have been out in the woods hunting I always look for tracks. And have seen many small bobcat tracks but no big cat tracks yet. Weird. It is like they are a ghost. Tonight there was no tracks because there is no snow and the ground is frozen. So no evidence this time either. I would love to see photo’s of any that anyone has taken of them in VT. Send them to .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address) Thanks…

From "Some Suspects in On-Going Catamount Investigation" »

Madeline Bodin
Feb 01, 2012

Dan: Yes, while researching this article I heard those stories too. It’s interesting how long this has been a low-level problem in NH. NH law considers feral swine someone’s escaped property, so yes, you have to ask before killing them. But I’ve heard that the park always says yes, even while saying that they are not their boars.

Michael: I think that just about everyone who knows the damage these creatures have done in the South is right with you on this.

Karen: I saved the tough questions for last. The wild boars in North America are either imported Eurasian wild boars, or domesticated pigs turned feral. Pigs are believed to have been domesticated from wild boars 15,000 years ago in what is now Iraq. They are not native to North America either.

In Eurasia, their native continent, the main predator of the wild boar is the tiger. Wolves are another predator, as are jackals.

Wild boars were never native to North America. However, the U.S. does have native animal that looks similar: the javelina or collared peccary. These animals are native to the desert southwestern U.S., Mexico and points south. I’ve read that peccaries are not pigs, although they look an awful lot like pigs to me.

From "North Country Pig Out" »