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

  • The Last Month

    It’s one month before the election. The fascist Republican Party, uniting oligarchy, fundamentalism, and white supremacy, is attempting to lock its minority rule on the future. Here are some resources for defending our democracy. Voting early guide Get out the vote. Protect our vote. New Yorkers can register to vote until October 9th. Early voting…

  • Notes on Galls

    “Galls are highly specialized plant tissues whose development is induced by another organism.” The relationship is essentially parasitic, says Britain’s Plant Galls: A Photographic Guide, but “few gall-causers seem to cause more than localised, short-term damage to their host plants.” This book continues: “Plant galls can be caused or induced by a very wide variety…

  • Back To The Galls

    Andricus quercusstrobilanus on swamp white oak (Quercus bicolor). There’s no common name for this gall-forcing wasp species. Note the gap here, and the hollows within. The individual galls brown and shrivel up as they grow. Then they fall to the ground. (I don’t think this is standard for gall wasps in general). Since this tree…

  • Sad Underwing

    What a stupid common name for Catocala maestosa. This fabulous riot of patterning isn’t sad. Methinks the guy who came up with a lot of the common names for our moths, especially the underwings — the Girlfriend, Sweetheart, Magdalen, Once-Married, Mother, Semirelict, Darling, Bride, Tearful, Widow, Obscure, Betrothed, Penitent — had some issues, as they…

  • Raptor Wednesday

    Red-tailed Hawk. Cooper’s with Starlings. Same Coop without them. American Kestrel male. Northern Harrier. Broad-winged Hawk. Another Cooper’s.

  • Flickerings

    Northern Flickers, passing through on their south-bound migration, will often rocket off the ground well before your approach. A couple on the path ahead of me recently allowed me to stand still as they policed the edges for ants and, presumably, other delicacies. There certainly are a lot of components to this species’ plumage. And,…

  • Monarchs, Mostly

    All the Monarch caterpillars I’ve seen this month in Green-Wood. Not overwhelmed by the numbers, unlike two years ago. Black Swallowtail for a change of pace. *** I thought this Judith Butler interview on gender was excellent. It was an exchange of emails, so much better than a conversation; the written word is still the…

  • Old Standbys And Passers-Through

    Election protection.

  • Grosbeak, Beechnut

    Red-breasted Grosbeak foraging for beech nuts. This is a female. The yellow underwings underline that. Males are pinkish-red under there. This one and several others are scarfing up dogwood fruits. *** New Yorkers have until October 9th to register to vote. Other states.

  • Day-flying Nighthawks

    On Wednesday morning around a quarter to eleven, I happened to look outside and saw a small herd of Common Nighthawks passing by. There were nine of them! This was after I’d seen a Broad-winged Hawk overhead, the first time I’ve seen one of these long-distance migrants in Brooklyn. Good birds to see from the…