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.”

  • Trunk Foraging

    A female Downy Woodpecker/Dryobates pubescens on a Tuliptree/Liriodendron tulipifera. I heard a Red-bellied Woodpecker/Melanerpes carolinus above her… And caught a glimpse. A wee Brown Creeper/Certhia americana on a neighboring pine (above), flew to the woodpeckery Tuliptree to make it three foragers on the same tree at the same time.

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  • Raptor Wednesday Thursday Bonus

    A female American Kestrel going after a Coopers Hawk. This is definitely the Kestrel’s territory, but… For the second time, the Kestrel seemed uninterested in the Merlin perched in a European Beech near her regular Chapel hangout. This tree is also a regular Kestrel perch. (This was the forth time I’ve seen a Merlin in…

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  • Raptor Wednesday

    Gory edition. A young Red-tail with a rat. Long-memoried readers may recall last November, when another young Red-tail ate a pigeon on this same roof. That attracted crows, who came back for the remains left there. Unlike, say wings, all of rat is edible. This time, the hawk carried away the aft section of the…

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  • Wharf Rat

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  • Mushroom Monday

    Handily, or should we say footily, for field measurement, my boots are 12″ long. Armillaria mellea. Daldinia on tree stump. Wine Cup/Stropharia rugosoannulata The stem of one of these had a small slug eating their way through it. Another example why the urban foraging trend is such a bad idea: so many other lifeforms in…

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  • Birds

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  • PSAs

    New York’s shitty corporate tool of a governor is trying to pocket veto this one. (It was a bad day for America when the Republicans became fascists and the Democrats became Republicans.) *** When is an eagle a duck? A Medium post for Veterans Day

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  • Even Laster Monarch of the Year

    I assumed my last Monarch of the year was the one I saw on October 19. But this past Monday, November 6th, I found a male drinking Spotted Horsemint nectar in Janet’s Meadow in Green-Wood. (According to iNaturalist, one was also seen on Staten Island that day.)

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  • Fall Odes

    The last Odonata of the season should be Autumn Meadowhawks and Common Green Darners. Common Green Darners are a migratory species, so expect them to be passing through. I saw one being eaten by a Kestrel on Oct 24. This was one of half a dozen seen November 6th. I waited a while before I…

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  • Raptor Wednesday

    Once in late August and once in late September, I came across a Merlin in this European Beech. Here’s my once-in-late-October sighting. The tree happens to be a favorite American Kestrel perch as well. At precisely the same time as my October Merlin-in-the-Beech sighting, there was a female American Kestrel atop the chapel, approximately 250…

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