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.”

birds

  • Kestrel

    American Kestrel (Falco sparverius) doing its hovering-hunting over grasslands. They face the wind, flare their tails, and stiffly beat their wings to hang still as they scan the ground below for movement or signs of prey. Remarkable to see. Especially when a NYPD helicopter is doing something similar nearby. Long-shot… like this raptor’s every drop…

  • King Eider

    Snowy Owls aren’t our only Arctic visitors. This is a male, or drake, King Eider (Somateria spectabilis). I saw my first ever earlier this month, when, after the Brooklyn CBC, we all hurried over to Beach 59th St. on the Rockaways. The other day another was spotted off Fort Tilden. This time I had my…

  • Cooper’s

    Cooper’s Hawk (Accipiter cooperii) in Prospect. The red-orange eyes are a mark of a mature bird; juvenile birds have yellowish eyes. This accipiter, or forest hawk, is named after William Cooper, one of the founders of the New York Academy of Sciences; the species was named and first described by the naturalist Charles Lucien Bonaparte…

  • Silhouette Bird

    A silhouette on a hazy day… a bird on the head of all-seeing Justice atop Brooklyn Borough Hall. My first thought: probably a pigeon, yet this looked too upright for that. My view from below on the street could account for that angle, of course, but there were, notably, no other pigeons in evidence. Ah-ha,…

  • Xmas with the Owls

    Some more pics, from the Snowy Owl Irruption of 2013-14. We may never see this many Snowy Owls again in Brooklyn (and throughout the NE and into the Great Lakes Midwest). While a bonanza for us, this massive irruption isn’t necessarily good for the birds. These are mostly juvenile birds, and juveniles of any species…

  • Xmas with the Owls

    In this extreme telephoto, the little white blob is a Snowy Owl. From a distance, they look rather like white plastic bags in the grasslands, not an uncommon sight, unfortunately. These two bipeds have walked up to within feet of the animal, which was on the edge of the runway. The bird was either incredibly…

  • Xmas with the Owls

    The amazing yellow eyes are fixed in bone rings, meaning the bird must move its head to see in different directions. The result is a remarkable 270-degree twisting of the neck to scan the surroundings. The lemon yellow is said to act like a filter to block the bright glare of sun off of snow.Note…

  • Xmas with the Owls

    Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays.

  • Xmas with the Owls

    The Snowy Owl invasion is astonishing. Fifteen were sighted in Brooklyn on the Christmas Bird Count on the 21st, an unprecedented number. We saw four this past Saturday. This particular bird was flushed by a couple walking across the grasslands, where they shouldn’t have been (but all the signs have disappeared). The flushing meant it…

  • Shameless Teaser

    We’ll be spending the whole week with Brooklyn’s Snowy Owls, Bubo scandiacus. Yes, never mind endless repeats of A Christmas Story (“You’ll shoot your eye out!”), Planet of the Apes sequels (“Damn them all to hell!”), It’s A Wonderful Life If You Have a Guardian Angel, and the National Concussion League, here at B&B it’s…