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.”

  • Lobster Claws

    The emptied husk of a dog day cicada (Neotibicen). This is the final form of the underground nymph stage of these annual cicadas, which spend four to five years underground sucking on plant roots, counting the days. They’re “annual” because there’s a brood or cohort every year. This is split open and hollow inside now,…

    See more

  • Revenge of the Monarch

    This is the whole point, right? A new butterfly, hiding under a leaf next to her chrysalis husk. She’ll dry off, harden up, get ready for the world. And what a world! Is this the generation that is Mexico-bound? I’m guessing so since it’s already mid-September. How does she know? Remarkably, these long-distance, south-bound migrants…

    See more

  • Planet of the Monarchs

    Yes, please! A veritable orgy of caterpillars. I counted 47 in Green-Wood on the morning of September 5th. I have never seen so many, anywhere.I went early to avoid the heat, but phew, it was still pretty beastly. Obviously, I can’t survey the milkweed further in this tight little meadow. There are probably more caterpillars…

    See more

  • There’s No Such Thing As A Seagull

    Tell it to Chekhov. Anyway, I ran across this dead… Laughing Gull?First year bird. I’m going for Laughing by length of the bill and the black feet. Monarchy returns tomorrow. *** There’s a big primary election today in New York. The results may determine the state’s ability to resist Trump’s assault on America. Governor, Lieutenant…

    See more

  • Realm of the Monarchs

    A brand new female. Will she make it down to Mexico?We’re celebrating Monarch’s all this week. But don’t let my anecdotal enthusiasm delude you. Monarchs in a frightful state. *** AFSC’s guide to civil disobedience.

    See more

  • Chrysalis

    The pupal stage of the Monarch is suspended a cremaster attached to a silk base.Isn’t it amazing? Begs the question why we think we need religion and other fantasies when life is so interesting.In a morning of ferocious heat, I counted 19 caterpillars and three pupae or chrysalises in a patch of milkweed and other…

    See more

  • Monarch Monday

    Some of the dozen Monarch caterpillars (Danaus plexippus) seen feasting on swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata) in the Bronx recently.  This was my highest ever count to this date, although to be fair I’m much better at spotting them now. Good to see some action on one of the other milkweeds besides A. syriaca.In Queens a…

    See more

  • Monarchy Nears

    Prepare for a week of Monarchs! Plant more milkweed! There are around 25 caterpillars in the patch pictured, and they have done an epic job of defoliating these plants down to the bone. All that milkweed energy is going into metamorphosis. (Unless it’s going into a Spined Soldier Bug!)

    See more

  • The Experiment

    For more than a century now, the planet has been under chemical attack. At first, we directed this attack at insects, then at humans, then again at insects, and now again, by default, at humans. It was war, literally and figuratively. Now it is war of another sort, a profit-driven war against life itself. I…

    See more

  • Jump Off

    The meadows are a-twitching with these big Differential Grasshoppers (Melanoplus differentials). *** DC phone numbers for Senators who are on the fence about Kavanaugh. Why yes, some of these are Democrats: Not in their state? They take money from every state, and around the world too, and they make laws for the nation, so not…

    See more