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.”

  • FroBee

    What’s in your Igloo? A sandwich? Beer? Body parts? Well, sure, you’re a doctor….. Well, as it happens: I had frozen invasive bees in mine. A researcher at the University of Ghent got in touch with me via iNaturalist and asked if I would collect Sculptured Resin Bees (Megachile sculpuralis) and European Wool-carder Bees (Anthidium…

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  • Odonata Update

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  • Eumenes mediterraneus

    This potter wasp is a recent introduction to the NYC region. (You may remember that I helped in confirming the identification). Is it benign, is it invasive? Probably too soon to tell. I’ve generally seen them gathering nectar, but like other wasps they’re carnivores, too. This one had a caterpillar of some kind.

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  • Raptor Wednesday

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  • Monarch Migration

    Yesterday was pretty extraordinary. Between 7:30 and 9:30 a.m., I watched just over a hundred Monarchs drift by our apartment windows, some as close a few feet, others as far as a third of an avenue block away. They’re awfully small at that distance, but still distinctively fluttering. Flight is meandering, but still swift and…

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  • Tremex columba

    We’re going in reverse order. About a month ago, I posted pictures of Long-tailed Ichneumenon Wasps. The female was ovipositing deep in a hickory tree. Her target: the larvae of this creature, a Pigeon Horntail, which I saw last week. The Pigeon Horntail lays her eggs in old wood. This happens to be another hickory,…

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  • Flies Beware

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  • Gall Update

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  • Cherry Tree Cut

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