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.”

  • Horseshoe Crabs

    I wrote about the Atlantic horseshoe crab, Limulus polyphemus last week, before I got a chance to head out to the city shore to look for some this year. So that was theory, this is practice, at Plumb Beach. And practice can be hands-on. If you should happen to see a horseshoe crab wrong-side up…

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  • Silk Moth

    About 11:45 this morning, I noticed some activity at the pupa I found in Prospect Park and brought home to see if it would hatch out. It’s a giant silk moth of some kind, not sure which yet. Above you can see one of the feathery antennae, which has unfurled after being forced out of…

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  • Armchair Naturalist

    Printed on the back of my MetroCard (the local public transit system’s swipe fare card, which replaced the token of happy memory) as part of the “Train of Thought” program: “Within five miles of where you live, there are enough strange things to keep you wondering all your life. Probably in your dooryard may be…

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  • In the Back 40

    The first blossom of my grape tomatoes. Come pollinators! And some kind of leaf miner enjoying the sunflower. Meanwhile, the neighbor’s Japanese knotweed is now a good two feet higher than the fence. Machete time. (TimeOutNY, the consumption [consumptive?] guide to the city, recently pictured the next backyard over from knotweed central.) It’s an evil…

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  • Lady Beetle Sex

    (Must be blog sweeps week…) The multicolored Asian lady beetle, or lady bug, Harmonia axyridis. An introduced species, these are highly variable in terms of color and number of spots. Note the W or M (depending on your point of view) shape on the pronotum; most of this species seems to have these. They seem…

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  • In Prospect

    On the “thumb” of the Peninsula.

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  • Robin’s Nest

    I was a little surprised there were no eggs here, since the green suggests it’s a fresh nest. Those green pieces do give it a homey touch. Robins incorporate mud into their nest, as well as found things like scraps of plastic, which, unfortunately, the park does not lack.

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  • In Praise of Prospect Park

    Today is officially “It’s My Park Day.” But it isn’t mine, or yours; it’s not even ours. After all, we’re justing passing through this life, this borough. If we do our job, the park will long survive us. This is a reminder that Prospect Park, indeed, all our urban parks, are combinations of the natural…

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  • Limulus Polyphemus

    Spring, the new moon: The littoral of the city is filling with mating Atlantic horseshoe crabs. The males of Limulus polyphemus, sometimes several at a time, are clamoring aboard the larger females, who come ashore at high tide to lay their eggs at the wrack line. A female may lay 90,000 eggs in a season.…

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  • Field Notes: Nesting

    It’s breeding season. Canada geese in Green-Wood and Jamaica Bay have made their nests right next to paths and roads; they are becoming entirely too familiar with the most dangerous biped. In Prospect Park, red tailed hawks, mourning doves and robins are already feeding their hungry babies. Young robins waiting their next mouthful. Double-decker. Last…

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