Skip to Navigation Skip to Content
Decorative woodsy background

Site Discussions

Paulette Paulsen
Nov 09, 2016

I really enjoyed this article and learned a lot. Good info explaining how turtles can survive the winter. Also, I do try to stop and help any turtle I see heading onto the road. We sure don’t see as many as we did growing up.

From "It’s a Shell Game for Turtles" »

Pauline
Nov 08, 2016

Love this programme and what you are doing for people. You guys are great!!!

From "The Treehouse Guys" »

Carlie
Nov 07, 2016

Best advice is to keep the water fairly cool to prevent them from sprouting legs! Keeping the water in a cool dark place will trick them into hibernation sagely worn no danger of freezing. .. you can even place the water in an area cooler than the house that is safe from freezing.  We keep our house at 65 in the fall and winter and that is cool enough but you can keep them in an area 45 F to 65 F and that will keep them from morphing. The cooler the better.

From "The Tadpoles of Winter" »

fred graves
Nov 06, 2016

I spend the summers in Ontario, CA about the same latitude as the above writers from <aine, VT and NH. This spring (?) a female grouse started striking my white cap as I drove near her area, once knocking it off. This continued all summer, with 8 “attacks”. It happened to others who visited me, so I’ve got witnesses.

I’ve never seen such a display in 49 years there… and the hen and the male both did it,, and would boldly follow me down the bike trail and eat the corn I’d throw them, always with fierce looks and fearless. Towards the end of the summer, I could rev up my 4 wheeler and they would come, once bringing their now-grown clutch. Weird! And now I can’t even think of hunting them.

From "Why Ruffed Grouse Take Winter in Stride" »

Carolyn
Nov 05, 2016

And then there’s Interstate 91. What kind of hullaballoo occurred when that went in? Without it, our scenic state would have far fewer hikers, skiers, and tourists to appreciate it and bring their dollars to our perpetually struggling economy. It enabled some internal employment, too, both short and long term, meanwhile allowing residents to get to jobs and resources in other states more easily. But it’s an eco-unfriendly travesty to the landscape caused by government force and commercial interests, just like the skyline drive would have been and wind towers and solar farms are today. Would we be better off without it?

From "History Doing That Cyclical Thing Again" »

Tyler Davis
Nov 02, 2016

Interesting article. I’m currently reading “Nature Wars” by Jim Streba and he talks about how the non-migrating goose population was formed by released decoy birds.

From "Canada Geese – Migrant or Resident?" »

MK
Oct 31, 2016

Destroying the tips of the oldest mountains in our land is unwise. Much sensitive and rare ecosystems are lost when turbines are erected. Renewable energy is an important issue, but at what cost?

From "History Doing That Cyclical Thing Again" »

Dave Coulter
Oct 31, 2016

I am one the those lucky enough to have hiked the Long Trail just a few years ago.  I remember the few wind turbines in the south and wishing they weren’t there though understanding the supposed need for them.  I am also one the kucky ones that sees the forest for the trees and not for the dollar signs.  For any state to give up mother earths splendor for limited years of thoughtless gain is unfathomable.  I would encourage all Vermonters to not give away the jewels of their state with the simple stroke of the pencil.

From "History Doing That Cyclical Thing Again" »

Joy Jay Jean Dyke
Oct 29, 2016

My husband’s grandfather wanted me to graft a black apple in 1970, but he passed away before he could show me the tree. I would like to get a tree to plant. I also bought a tree years ago from Miller orchard that is green outside and a Rosie pink flesh. I have lost the name of the apple and would like to find out what it is.

From "Heirloom Apples" »

Janet stoddard
Oct 29, 2016

A couple years ago a gentleman stopped at my family’s home in North Yarmouth, Maine when he noticed our OLD apple trees. He told me a story of his journey looking for long forgotten apple varieties and asked if he could take a few of the apples. He said he had a friend who specialized in identifying heirloom varieties and would let me know what he found out. I never heard from him.  I’m wondering if he might have been part of this group?!

From "Heirloom Apples" »

Michael Gow
Oct 29, 2016

When I was 12 years old and growing up in Duluth, Minnesota, my teacher asked the students in the class to choose a state to research. After studying the map, I confidently chose a state I knew very little about. I remember writing a letter to someone in Vermont requesting information about the little state. What I received when I opened the giant envelope was brochure after brochure filled with pictures of quaint villages, high peaked mountains, and fall foliage that even Minnesota could not compete. From that day on, Vermont found a place in my psyche. At 42 and a resident of New England for the past 18 years, I still hold that sincere fondness for a state I knew only in pictures as a child. Nine years ago, I traversed Vermont by foot as an LT NOBO. The pictures I saw as a child came alive for me. The wilderness was wild, calm, beautiful, and peaceful. I shutter at the thought of seeing giant windmills, dirt roads, fencing, communication towers, and electric cable lines crisscrossing the the very scene I fell in love with all those years ago. I am a huge proponent of renewable energy and vote for candidates that promote the cause, but the idea of losing something I love for an energy source that can be captured on the roofs of so many homes is not worth it. I encourage Vermonters to save the beauty that stills captures the minds of those who live elsewhere.

From "History Doing That Cyclical Thing Again" »

Maureen
Oct 26, 2016

Or the animal under your shed is a pack rat.

From "In Homes on Ice, Muskrats Endure the Season" »

Jo Josephson
Oct 25, 2016

To take Michael Caduto’s article on heritage apples a step further back in time, as John Bunker of Fedco Trees in Maine tells it each heritage apple variety comes with its own story of people and place.  The story of the so-called nine ounce apple aka the Deane apple is a great example. Not only did the apple originate on the farm of Cyrus Deane in Temple, Maine in the 18th century, the farm was also a way station of the underground railroad.  A descendant of Deane is quoted recalling “vague traditions of Negroes arriving under cover of darkness from the southern part of the state the following night being on their way to the Canadian border.” I savor the story as Temple has been my home since 1978, long enough for me to return the variety to Temple (it was all but lost but not forgotten as Bunker would say) by planting a so-called two-part Deane apple tree in my land. The “parent” was discovered in an abandoned orchard in a neighboring town.

From "Heirloom Apples" »

Daryl Burtnett
Oct 25, 2016

The quote in the piece “Rather than sequestering carbon in the soil, we saw an increase in soil respiration, which could contribute to global warming even more.” leads me to ask, “even more” than what?

From "Leaf Litter Stunner" »

S A Adams
Oct 21, 2016

An interesting and beautiful article. Thank you.

From "The Garter Snake: Commonly Seen, Uncommonly Understood" »

csblackburn
Oct 19, 2016

Those winter ticks are nasty. I can’t believe a researcher found 40,000 of them!!

From "Declining Moose Populations: What Does the Future Hold?" »

Sherry Marshall
Oct 17, 2016

Just came across this article. We have been “backyard” birders for the past 44 years and had observed gray jays around our camp in n.central Maine for many years.However, during the past several years we have observed these intriguing birds while snowshoeing in the NEK, specifically in the Wenlock /Ferdinand area of Vt….having now retired we seem to be spending more time exploring this area and in the past 2 years have noticed an increase in numbers of gray jays each time we are in Ferdinand..in earlier years it appeared that we would observe 2 or 3 gray jays ..they were quite timid,however,the past 3 to7 months we have noticed that they were becoming more inquisitive,and during the past month, from Sept -now mid October,we have had the experience of feeding the gray jays out of our hands..as they cache and return…weekend of 10/07 -10/10 there were 3 following us on the Moose Bog Trail..feeding as we stopped along the way…and the weekend of 10/14 -10/16 we had the experience of 8 gray jays “finding” us at the observation deck off the moose bog trail..once again voraciously competing for granola bars, raisins, cranberries!..what an amazing event for us…stayed over 1 hour as we were enthralled by these birds of the boreal forest.

From "Gray Jays: Birds With Attitude" »

Sarah
Oct 16, 2016

I also have tadpoles in the water trough in Mid Oct….MANY of them. I was wondering if they are a different type of frog. Not sure what to do with them.

From "The Tadpoles of Winter" »

Bob Poirier
Oct 16, 2016

I am trying to find out if the Conn. CCC ever built a traffic tower at the intersection of Mammonasset Beach and route one in Madison,Connecticut. I would appreciate any help.Thank You.

From "A Legacy of Forests and Parks: The Civilian Conservation Corps" »

Terri
Oct 14, 2016

Will the milkweed plant leaves grow back after caterpillars eat them?

From "Transformations: Which Caterpillar Becomes Which Butterfly?" »