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.”

  • City of Water

    Today: a couple of double-crested cormorant youngsters still on a nest on U Thant Island in the East River. Which, of course, isn’t a “river” at all. At best it’s a tidal strait. The Burmese U Thant, meanwhile, was the third Secretary-General of the UN (serving 1961-71); the island is a canon shot across the…

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  • “Meditation & water are wedded for ever”

    Purple sandpiper and blue mussels on the coast of Bay Ridge, Brooklyn, Winter 2010. Today is City of Water Day, when we are reminded that New York City is an archipelago. Only the Bronx, pronging south from Westchester Co., is a part of mainland North America. “Archipelago” is a Italian-rooted word for the island-speckled Aegean…

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  • Club Dead

    I didn’t get worked up about the killing of Prospect Park’s Canada geese. There are better ways of managing overpopulations of species that do too well in association with people, but otherwise I wasn’t particularly moved. I know other people were, to the extent of holding a vigil for the dead birds. But Canada geese…

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  • Local hymenoptera

    The sunflowers at Maize Field, at Bergen & Smith St., are swarming with pollinators these days. Nice comparison between a honey bee, on the left, and a wasp, on the right.

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  • Shy spiders

    In the excitement over our recent trip to Iceland, I have been neglecting home in the fairest of all boroughs. So here’s a little taste of Brooklyn to remind you where I spend most of my time. Yeah. Spiders in my back yard, the Back 40 (inches), are a constant. Jumping spiders, crab spiders, orb-web…

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  • Starfish

    The Icelandic beaches were remarkably bare of anything other than rocks, pebbles, and sand. We found, in order of frequency, some mussel, scallop, snail, and limpet shells. But our best sightings were a number of starfish that had been washed ashore.

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  • Snipe

    Everywhere except Reykjavik, on both ends of our Icelandic trip, we had sightings of the common snipe (Gallinago gallinago). This species is not to be confused with the related Wilson’s snipe, which we have in Brooklyn, and which was considered the same species until recently, making the confusion understandable. Above each of the farms we…

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  • Other Icelandic Animals

    White-tailed bumblebee (Bombus locorum), seen a number of places in Iceland, finally digitally captured in the small garden behind the Parliament building. Besides birds, Iceland doesn’t have a lot of other animals, including invertebrates. The number of bugs is growing, though, as the world warms. Moths were a common sight, in the long diurnal light.…

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  • Wildflowers

    I know a bank where the wild thyme blows, Where oxlips and the nodding violet grows, Quite overcanopied with luscious woodbine, With sweet musk roses and with eglantine. Iceland is full of desolate, hraun (lava) fields, some moss-coated, others bare as an outer planet. The southern sandurs, outwash plains, are dark deserts. But, with all…

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  • Icelandic birds

    The omnipresent common redshank (Tringa totanus), seen and most definitely heard throughout the island. Black-legged kittiwake (Rissa tridactyla), at Arnarstapi. Two chicks are usual. Black guillermot (Cepphus grylle) in Husavik harbor. Common eider (Somateria mollissima) with ducklings. The most common duck seen; many young, but few adult males, who must have been in eclipse. Black-headed…

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