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.”

mthew

  • Breaking Raptor News

    Staten Island’s wharf rats have met their match. A juvenile Swainson’s Hawk (Buteo swainsoni) was spotted Sunday on Front Street by the S.I. Railroad’s big car maintenance building. The bird was in the same area Monday, when I took these pictures. Those long primaries! (They edge just past the tail.) Swainson’s are a fairly common…

  • Mammal Monday

    A rising tide lifts all boats, but also covers over this seal rock off Staten Island. Good timing here… An hour earlier, at the nadir of the tide. There were a couple of these Atlantic Harbor Seals (Phoca vitulina) around.

  • Knobs

    A growth on a Tuliptree trunk. With evidence of several others that have broken off. Or, uh, been broken off, as in this case. I grabbed it and it snapped right off. Meanwhile, on an oak. What are these things? Burls of some kind? Root tissue? On beech. Same type of growth or different?

  • Ice Fishing, Part II

    I’ve written a lot about birds and ornithology for Jstor Daily over the years, and so have my co-workers. The editors compiled all these bird-stories this week. Enjoy!

  • Ice Fishing, Part I

    Two days of very cold weather over Christmas weekend froze up Sylvan Water. By Wednesday, a little patch was open. To be continued… (FYI: temps this week reached towards 60F).

  • Winter Beauty

  • Raptor Wednesday

    The low winter sun is murder on the naturalist’s eyes, but whenever I’m heading home and turn the corner onto 5th Avenue I always glance up at the tall antenna tower at 40th Street. A female American Kestrel has been up there at last once a day all winter so far. Anyway, this old TV…

  • Frozen Sap

    Horse-chestnut. Conifer. European Beech. (Sluggish at the start of the work-week after a holiday weekend.)

  • Formal Portrait

    While we’re overrun with Tufted Titmice, there are definitely fewer Dark-eyed Juncos in my patch this year. Here are two, one individual above and one below:

  • New Year’s Accipters Greetings

    And this just in: Happy New Year from the first raptor of 2023, a Coopers high atop the Peregrine perch! (Above and below 7:26 a.m.)