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.”

Fieldnotes

  • Woven Nests

    Probably the most common bird nest come across is the American Robin’s, which is big for a song bird’s, and characteristically made with a mud base and a lining of grasses. Of course, birds don’t want you, or any other predator, to find their nests, so the leafless season is best for discovering them. Of…

  • American Crow

  • Prospect Park

    Came across this recently. The thing that struck me on the list was the 300-year old Black Oak on Elephant Hill. That must have been a hell of a tree. I assume it’s the black oak noted as kaput in 1990 by Carsten Glaeser when he updated M.M. Graff’s Notable Tree list of 1972. I’d…

  • A Cooper’s Strikes

    Most of the time, hawks miss. In my years of birding, I’ve never seen an accipiter or falcon successfully take bird prey in the air. Until today. And from the passenger seat of a moving car, no less. Earlier, while walking, I saw a Cooper’s hawk zooming around in the strong winds we’re having here…

  • A Neighborhood Giant

    One of my favorite local trees is on Warren Street. It is growing out of a yard instead of the sidewalk. Usually, when they do host trees, these little front yards of brownstone row houses have smaller ornamental fruit trees or understory specialists like dogwood that can thrive under the taller sidewalk trees. This one,…

  • Anniversary

    This blog was launched on this day in 2010. To celebrate, I thought I would revisit two of the most wildly popular posts of the last two years: I spot a rare visitor to Prospect Park.A boatload of us watch a humpback whale within sight of NYC’s skyscrapers. One of my personal favorites among my…

  • Threatened and Endangered

    The news that the Red Knot has been put on New Jersey’s Endangered list got me wondering what else was on the list, which of course got me thinking about the region. Here then are the tri-state area’s separate lists: New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection Division of Fish & Wildlife’s Endangered and Threatened Wildlife.…

  • Raccoon

    Road kill, Flatbush Avenue and Floyd Bennett Field. This raccoon’s jaw shows you the teeth that lets this omnivore eat practically anything, from your garbage to turtle eggs. In our region, cars are the animal’s only “predator.”

  • Prospect Park

    It’s warm enough for turtles to be basking on the Lake, Lullwater, and Pools. Not many, but a smattering were to be seen soaking in the sun along the water course.On a birch, this cocoon is more seasonally appropriate, weathering the not very weathery winter. While I’ve been seeing flies all month already, this was…

  • Pink, Yellow

    Another flowering quince in the ‘hood. This one is on the north-facing side of the street, so it doesn’t get nearly as much sun as this south-facing one I photographed at the beginning of the month. And the crocuses are popping up. This patch was on Union Street.