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.”

  • At The NYC Climate Strike

    A few signs from yesterday’s Climate Strike in NYC. Amidst the crowd at the edges of Foley Square, it was hard to get an overall picture of the size and shape of things, but school kids predominated. #ITMFA, a begging call to the Weimar Democrats. Another good sign: “The lifestyle you ordered is out of…

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  • Global Climate Strike

    Who, what, when, where. How to be an adult ally. Art by David Solnit.

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  • Cats!

    When a body meets a body coming through the… Apiaceae. Black Swallowtail caterpillar fit to pupate. The Asteroid, AKA Goldenrod Hooded Owlet. A reprise of the Common Buckeye caterpillar. Five were seen in the same small patch. The blue spines! Our old friend the Monarch. On the same day, two days ago, a female was…

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  • Raptor Wednesday

    Summer is quiet when it comes to raptors, unless you have American Kestrels breeding down the street.But now fall is in the air. This Red-tailed hawk perched on a #BrooklynKestrel landmark recently. One of the local falcons, now days generally heard more than seen, was not happy about it. The kestrel’s alarms calls got me…

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  • Hairy Nature

    Close up, nature starts looking really, really hairy. Take a look at the green shoots of plants, the exoskeletons of insects. Hairs and spines are everywhere.Common Buckeye larva.Bumblebees, it goes without saying.Other bees, too. Look at these bristly thighs, Writes Dennis Paulson in his natural history of Dragonflies & Damselflies: “Because a chitinous exoskeleton does…

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  • Climate Strike Prep

    This Friday is the beginning of a week of the Global Climate Strike. Some resources: Fridays for Future youth activism training program. NYC student organizing guide. Climate Strike educator toolkit. Climate Strike Arts Kit, from whence this David Solnit fire-extinguisher logo comes. People’s Climate Movement NYC. Petition for teachers, educators, & faculty. Here’s some history…

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  • Wilding

    Some good news! Isabella Tree’s Wilding: Returning Nature To Our Farm has been published. This is a revelatory story of a family’s abandonment to natural processes of their losing-proposition farm in the clay-laden Weald, some 44 miles southeast of London. Tree is a very fine writer. It’s worth reading this just for the great way…

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  • Nine-Spotted Lady Beetles

    Do you remember when the Flatbush Gardener released Nine-spotted Lady Beetle larvae in his native meadow garden? Coccinella novemnotata is the New York State insect, but it is almost non-existent now in the state. In fact, the species is hardly to be found anywhere in the east. Cornell’s Lost Ladybug Project has been working to…

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  • Tiger, Tiger, Burning Bright

    I’m missing the egg stage, but otherwise here’s the run: The first few instars of the Eastern Tiger Swallowtail mimic bird droppings. This one was on the nearly horizontal surface of a magnolia leaf, right out in the open. Finally saw one! The caterpillar is green in youth. Or is that middle age? Old age,…

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  • Webworm Days

    Fall Webworm caterpillars have been everywhere. This one was on a raised bed on the sidewalk next to the local high school last week, with barely a tree in sight. I don’t even remember where this was, back in July. Here’s yet another, along the 5th Avenue Green-Wood fence. Uh-oh! You see, everybody knows the…

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