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This Week in the Woods

April: Week Three

This Week in the Woods, some red fox kits are venturing out of the den. As Meghan McCarthy McPhaul notes in this Outside Story essay, fox breeding pairs “generally stay together after…

April: Week Two

This Week in the Woods, we are happy to see that common loons are returning from their coastal winter habitat. At the time the photo was taken, the loon had just resurfaced from under the lake…

April: Week One

This Week in the Woods, sugar maple buds are starting to open in the Upper Valley – a sure sign that sugaring season is coming to an end. Here’s an Outside Story essay by Audrey…

March: Week Five

This Week in the Woods, lakes and rivers have opened up again, and hooded mergansers are back. As Michael Caduto notes in this Outside Story essay, hoodies are short-distance migrants and…

March: Week Four

This Week in the Woods, the great spring melt is progressing rapidly. Even on shady, north-facing slopes, you can now see thaw circles – rings of bare ground around the trunks of trees,…

March: Week Three

This Week in the Woods, the snow’s melting and the March winds roar. Spring is on its way. Out in the wetlands, pussy willow catkins are emerging from their buds. As noted in this…

March: Week Two

This Week in the Woods, we’re seeing more dripping icicles and openings in frozen streams and rivers. The spring melt has begun. This seasonal change has profound impacts on aquatic…

March: Week One

This Week in the Woods, we found this chipmunk peeking out of its winter burrow. There were no dignitaries in top hats to greet him, but the chippie did seem to inspect his shadow before…

February: Week Four

This Week in the Woods, we’ve been grateful for snowshoes with metal teeth. The walking conditions out there are difficult! Editor Cheryl Daigle discovered this perfectly shaped capsule…

February: Week Three

This Week in the Woods, Northern Woodland’s assistant editor Meghan McCarthy McPhaul was “just skiing through the woods, lost in my thoughts, when a grouse burst out of the snow…

February: Week Two

This Week in the Woods we watched a nuthatch seem to defy gravity while gleaning bugs upside-down, on the underside of an almost-horizontal branch, and it occurred to us that strong claws and…

February: Week One

This Week in the Woods we’ve reached the middle of winter (according to Farmer’s Almanac, the exact midway point occurs on Wednesday, February 3 at 4:49 p.m.), and over the…

January: Week Four

This Week in the Woods, and more specifically this past sunny Saturday, we noticed how the new snow in the fields glittered. As Meghan McCarthy McPhaul notes in this Outside Story essay, 5 to…

January: Week Three

This Week in the Woods, Meghan McCarthy McPhaul found tracks along a frozen brook. They were clearly made by a mustelid (member of the weasel family), but which species? Sliding marks and a…

January: Week Two

This Week in the Woods, we’ve noticed three “fingered” yellow birch scales (bracts) and seeds that have recently fallen from their catkins onto the snow. Winter weather helps…

January: Week One

This Week in the Woods, we visited an old beaver pond which has drained out to become a damp meadow, surrounded by small tree stumps sprouting new stems. This is a natural example of…

December: Week Five

This Week in the Woods, those of us who celebrate Christmas did so amid weather that seemed appropriate for 2020 - i.e., a heavy rain that washed away the snow. The rain left in its wake…

December: Week Four

This Week in the Woods deep snow blanketed the region, and birds flocked to feeders. For mice, voles, and other small creatures, the snow brought protection from the cold, and cover from…

December: Week Three

This Week in the Woods, we’ve been seeking out bright colors wherever we can find them, including on the edge of marshes, where winterberry often grows. The red fruits of this wild holly…

December: Week Two

This Week in the Woods, we stumbled upon a patch of creeping snowberry. This ground plant’s tiny leaves (each about the size of raindrop) have white hairs widely spaced along the edges.…