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.”

  • Wavy-backed

    The caterpillar of the Wavy-lined Emerald Moth (Synchlora aerata) sticks bits of plant material to itself. I’ve seen this before, but only on instars half this size. Nice to be able to get some feet in these shots. FYI: some green lacewings stick clumps of lichen to their backs. Try as I might, though, I…

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  • Sunset Park

    Different views from the roof. Jersey City, Manhattan to Midtown, and Downtown Brooklyn making a continuous urban skyline. And Green-Wood Cemetery. Went up when I heard an American Kestrel calling. A female. A Laughing Gull passed, silently. Three-four-five Chitterwizzles, or Chimney Swifts, were overhead, too.

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  • Vine Wasps Continued

    Eumenes potter wasp. Remarkably, even with this striking pattern, can’t get this one down to species. And that’s a wasp curator on iNaturalist talking. Leucospis affinis, a parasite of mason bees. Note that she carries her ovipositor flipped up and across her back. I’ve never seen this before. This is an impressive appendage, which can…

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  • Vine Wasps

    Back to this one block stretch of 7th Avenue, were the yellow trumpet vine is in bloom. The variety of wasps crawling all over the buds sucking up sweet nectar was most impressive: European Paper Wasp (Polistes dominula), all over the place as usual. Remember, orange antennae are unique for this species in the pantheon…

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  • Raptor Wednesday

    Screeching Blue Jays and Northern Mockingbirds pulled me off my route. They were yelling at this young Red-tailed Hawk. The Mockingbirds were clipping the raptor’s back as they dived at it. When the buteo flew, two Mockingbirds followed. It looks like there are Cooper’s Hawk fledglings in Prospect Park again this year. (That’ll make for…

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  • Seventh and Vine

    Trumpet vine (Campsis radicans) is in bloom. Look out! In addition to caveats about the plant growing like Topsy, gardening literature notes that this is a great attractant for hummingbirds. I wonder if this holds true for this yellow-flowered variation? We’re not rich in breeding hummingbirds here in Brooklyn. But we have a few insects.…

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  • Aigrettes of Wrath

    A Great Egret grooming. And loosing its long breeding plumes. People used to kill for these things. Game Warden Guy Bradley, for one, was gunned down by feather-hunters in 1905 in Florida. (The late Peter Matthiesen’s Shadow Country trilogy is a harrowing view of Florida’s psychopathic history.) The plumes, called aigrettes, were used to decorate…

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  • Spider

    A jumping spider amongst the leaflets of a hickory. I thought this big, bold specimen would just sing out its species identification, but no. You got me. Turns out there’s a good bit of variation within some spider species.

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  • R for Robin

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  • Flying Now

    Swift Feather-legged Fly. Common Whitetail female. Red-spotted Admiral. Nessus Moth. Or rather, flying things, since it’s hard to get a good picture of insects in flight. We can try, though. Dusky-winged Hover Fly. Spot-winged Glider — the spot on the hindwing is sometimes even subtler. Cuckoo leafcutter bee. Meanwhile, an Asian Tiger Mosquito attempts to…

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