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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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Belatedly, Some Fall Colors
Sassafras. . A couple of Black Tupelos. (They make ’em bright in the trade.) Swamp White Oak The hazy pink of a grass.
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Still Pollinating
November 3rd, mid 40sF. Very little is still in bloom, but these late asters still provide food.
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An Impossible Task
Heavy with illustrations, this cultural history of birds will enliven any naturalist’s bookshelf. Of course, anything approaching a complete cultural history of birds would fill many volumes and be an on-going project. It would be in as many languages as there are—and ever have been. The human/bird connection goes back a very long way. Was…
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Rotted Circumstances
In March, 2022, I noticed some fallen Pignut/Carya glabra wood under a venerable tree. A rotted limb had fallen and broken into pieces. There was a little jewel in there. The other day I returned. The wood was still there. It’s a well-managed cemetery: they usually clear away such fallen wood and brush, but this…