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.”

  • Things Seen On Hotel Room Windows

    The presence of several spider webs suggested that even on the 21st floor, there was good eating. I saw two moth species, two beetle species, a caddisfly, flies, and quite a few mud-dauber wasps, although most of them weren’t stopping on the windows. This, like the second picture above, is a Yellow Poplar Weevil/Odontopus calceatus.…

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    Things Seen On Hotel Room Windows
  • Mammal Monday: Foxy

    One gets to be a little myopic living in a place. For instance, I was not even aware there was an Eastern Fox Squirrel/Sciurus niger out there. They’re found in most of the eastern half of the country, excepting New England and New York/New Jersey, the places I’m most familiar with. I spotted these in…

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    Mammal Monday: Foxy
  • Milkweeds

    You were probably wondering, during Milkweed Madness earlier this week, where the Monarchs were. Me too. I haven’t spotted any larvae yet. Adult above is slurping up some Butterfly Milkweed/Asclepius tuberosa nectar. This male was going for Common Milkweed/A. syriaca. I tend to see more activity on syriaca than tuberosa. Tuberosa is more photogenic, and…

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    Milkweeds
  • An Unexpected Lifer

    An inland sea: Lake Michigan from Saugatuck Sand Dunes State Park, Michigan. I’d seen this water body from Chicago, but it’s been a while, and never from this vantage point, which is looking westward. South. North. Look at those dune heights in the distance! Or right behind me. Now, looking back over the water. I…

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    An Unexpected Lifer
  • Odes

    Saw some new Odonata, damselflies and dragonflies, while traveling. American Rubyspot above. Dot-tailed Whiteface. Dusky Dancers. Stream Bluets. Ebony Jewelwing. Not a new species for me, but I see them rarely. Blue-fronted Dancer: another species I don’t see in Brooklyn. This one was next to the Allegheny River in Pittsburgh. I think this is another…

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    Odes
  • Red, White, and Black

    The edges of the Grand River in Grand Rapids were dominated by Red-winged Blackbirds. And it was fledgling season. Who’s the boss? These bruisers have drawn blood from a friend, but I’ve found Northern Mockingbirds and, especially, Arctic Terns to be more in your face when it comes to protecting their own.

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    Red, White, and Black
  • Raptor Wednesday

    The Grand River is now mostly rapid-less, quite a let-down to those like myself hoping that Grand Rapids would live up to its name. But every day, we saw Osprey hunting over the river. The photos above are from the 21st floor. It’s not often I see Osprey from the top! (Through rather dirty windows…

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    Raptor Wednesday
  • Milkweed Activity Continues

    Milkweed pollen comes in saddlebag-like structures called pollinia. These stick to pollinators: this Honeybee is laden with them and trying to get them off.

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    Milkweed Activity Continues
  • Milkweed Monday

    The milkweeds started to bloom while I was away. I caught up with them on Friday. There was a lot to catch up on. Various species of bees were of course sucking up the nectar. There were beetles. Ants. A moth. And more… coming soon!

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    Milkweed Monday
  • Red-shoulders

    Back to our morning Red-shouldered Hawk in Oberlin, Ohio. It wasn’t but a few minutes later when a distinctly Buteo-ish calling was heard in the parky square across the street. A hawk lifted off off the ground and landed on the art museum. Then it flew even closer. When I got my camera on the…

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    Red-shoulders