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

  • Twas the Night Before The Argument

    Rock Doves in the rain, through a dirty window and screen. Ready to do combat with pig-headed or worse (oh, much worse) relatives for the holiday? Here's some social science to mull over: A brief explanation of why facts — like, say, about global warming — do nothing to convince people. (It was a religious…

  • All Melted Since

    Big Carbon knew they were causing global warming in the 1970s. But they, and their sociopath plutocratic allies, started funding PR campaigns to attack science and scientists who said so. The denialists were born, and they successfully took over the reactionary Republicans with their base in angry ignorance. Now these extremists have grown into a…

  • The Spider Who Stayed Out in the Cold

    Originally posted on Backyard and Beyond: This large Araneus diadematus orb-weaver has been living outside a Bronx living room window for nearly three months now. That included the last of summer, when a large window fan blew out towards her, making the web bounce like a trampoline. The web spans the breadth of the window.…

  • Whose Woods These Are

    I think I know.The winter woodpeckers are out there. Red-bellied Woodpeckers, as above, and Downy Woodpeckers are our regulars. A few Hairy Woodpeckers and Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers keep us honest. And yet… The indispensable Monbiot on not knowing what we’re losing. A must read. Here, if you really want to wallow, are some things I’ve written…

  • Raptor Wednesday

    Local falcons:American Kestrel. This one was a long avenue block from the Green-Wood linden. The same male, I think, perched atop Sunset Park High School.Another day. Just a few blocks away, atop the tall antenna at 5th/40th. A different male, I think, because of the much greater amount of russet on the breast (not just…

  • Hickory

    “Though I do not believe that a plant will spring up where no seed has been, I have great faith in a seed. Convince me that you have a seed there, and I am prepared to expect wonders.” ~ Henry David Thoreau Even as we discover invertebrates almost daily, we’re losing them. A lament. There…

  • The Tall One

    The tallest trees here in the east are usually Tuliptrees (Liriodendron tulipifera), sometimes also called Yellow Populars. The tallest tree in Green-Wood Cemetery is one. According to their new map, “Alive at Green-Wood,” it’s 110 feet tall. This is the “toy camera” setting of my camera, for a change of pace. Samuel Morse’s remains are…

  • Water, Water Everywhere

    A toponym is a place name, a notion of maps, signs, and our heads but rarely actually written onto the land itself. These names are packed with the histories of the peoples who did the naming. Rivers in particular hold onto ancient names, however filtered by later folk, as this nation so amply demonstrates. George…

  • Kentucky Coffeetree, Dusk

    Looking sinisterly like something out of Halloween, Gymnocladus dioicus in winter is one of the more unexpected street trees here in NYC. Because the leaf buds aren’t exposed, as in most trees, it can look dead. The heavy fruit pods persist, too, hanging pendulously overhead like strange ornaments. Here’s an interesting discussion about the species…

  • Timber!

    We caught Ted Levin talking about his book, America’s Snake: The Rise and Fall of the Timber Rattlesnake this week at the Linnaean Society. It’s a damn good book and deserves to be read far and wide. Too many people fear and loath snakes, an irrationality that leads directly to massacre. There are still bloody snake-killing…