Backyard and Beyond

Starting out from Brooklyn, an amateur naturalist explores our world.

As John Burroughs said, “The place to observe nature is where you are.”

October 2012

  • Peregrine

    Storm King Mountain, not quite at peak fall color on Sunday. This picture was from atop Little Stony Point, which is just north of Cold Spring, NY, beneath the better known Bull Mountain (Mt. Taurus). Granite used to be shipped from here to the city to build little things like the Brooklyn Bridge. While facing…

  • Four October Butterflies

    On Friday at Fort Tilden, the sun was bright when I got there but a cold front moved in from the northwest as I stood atop the hawk watch platform. These were all seen while the sun was still bright.Monarchs (Danaus plexippus) predominated, still, floating along the coast towards the south. A sulphur, probably Clouded…

  • Hawk Watch

    Looking northwest towards Gotham-Metropolis; the birds come cruising along from the right. It’s no Hawk Mountain or Veracruz, Mexico, where thousands of North America’s Broad-winged hawks squeeze by on their way south, but I’ve never been to those places, and home is where the raptor is. Or at least just passing through, following the coast…

  • Beyond the Feathers

    I usually only use my own photography here, but this image was too impressive to not share. It’s an X-ray of a young Peregrine falcon male who was caught up in some electrical wires on Nantucket recently and sent to the Humane Society/Fund for Animals’ Cape Wildlife Center (and on Facebook) for rehabilitation. There was…

  • Bird Sense

    Tim Birkhead’s Bird Sense: What’s It’s Like to Be a Bird details our current knowledge of birds and the history of how we got to this state. Written for the lay reader, a person with an interest in the world; by which I mean it’s hardly necessary that you be a bird watcher to enjoy…

  • Explorers

    Holly Sears‘s art on this Poetry in Motion poster caught me by surprise the other day. These are elephants, but with the series title “Hudson River Explorers” and the sturgeon, I immediately thought of other giants, the mastodons and the mammoths. Those big creatures used to roam North America; Jefferson even charged Lewis and Clark…

  • More, please

    Like tracks into the future, irrigation lines underline the new plantings at Pier 5, Brooklyn Bridge Park.

  • High Gloss Lady

    My “Year of the Ladybug” continues. Or, should I say, Year of the Aphids? Since it is the aphids, those little buggers, who have ushered in the ladies. This glossy creature is the Polished Lady Beetle, Cycloneda munda, a species new to me.Also known commonly as the Red Lady Beetle and the Immaculate — that…

  • High tide

    Most of the high tide trash here in the corner of the Brooklyn Bridge Park salt marsh is made up of the tops of plastic bottles. What a fine place to be reminded of Brooklyn-raised Barry Commoner’s four laws of ecology: everything is connected; everything has to go somewhere; nature knows best; there is no…

  • Prospect Park

    The Upper Pool is just starting to blush with the coming of fall. A walk through the park yesterday. We saw: Wood Duck, Mallard, Red-tailed Hawk, Rock Pigeon, Mourning Dove, Chimney Swift, Red-bellied Woodpecker, Downy Woodpecker, Hairy Woodpecker, Northern Flicker, American Kestrel, Blue Jay, Black-capped Chickadee, Red-breasted Nuthatch, White-breasted Nuthatch, Brown Creeper, House Wren, Carolina…