Stewardship

December 7, 2023

BIRD LORE: Finches are returning this winter

If you haven’t already done so, get your feeders filled and ready.  Winter finches are returning.  Moderate to good flights of some species are occurring now and more are possible.

November 24, 2023

Celebrating the holidays in an energy-friendly way

The holidays are a time of love, warmth, compassion, joy and reflection. However, the holiday season also brings an increase in energy use and household waste. Each year, from Thanksgiving to New Year’s Day, household waste in the U.S. increases by more than 25 percent.

November 22, 2023

BIRD LORE: The wild turkey

Thanksgiving is almost upon us, and it is time to acknowledge the splendor, as well as the goofiness, of the central character of the feast! Wild turkeys are very large and heavy game birds, native to North America.  This is probably part of what made them so attractive for the first Thanksgiving.

November 10, 2023

Forest Fridays: A bumper crop of red oak acorns

Throughout much of the Keystone State it’s been a banner year for red oak acorn production, so much so that walking through some parts of the forest feels like you’re treading on marbles. At Soldier’s Grove across from the state capitol, there’s nary a square inch of surface that doesn’t contain a red oak acorn. The same can be said for my family’s camp in southern Huntingdon County. 

November 7, 2023

BIRD LORE: One way to help birds this winter

I confess: I am a reluctant cleaner of bird feeders. For years I imagined that keeping feeders filled with fresh, dry seed, periodically removing dropped seed and shells from the ground underneath, and disinfecting them at the end of the season—to avoid attracting bears, I feed only in winter—was sufficient. After all, the cardinals and nuthatches kept coming, and they looked healthy to me!

November 1, 2023

Returning a lost species to the Wilds

The American marten was once a common native species within all of PA’s forests, which would have been the majority of the state at one time.  Lost through habitat destruction and unregulated harvest, the marten vanished out of the minds of Pennsylvanians generations separated from those that remembered them.  The Pennsylvania Game Commission, in association with a variety of partners, is considering their return. 

October 27, 2023

Forest Fridays: Toot toot, trumpets of the dead

As Halloween approaches and we head out to the woods for brisk hikes in search of game and spectacular views, keep an eye out for a brass band from the beyond. Look to the ground for small horns played by the departed from six feet under. Of course, I’m talking about Craterellus fallax, the trumpet of the dead (aka black chanterelle, Eastern black trumpet, or the horn of plenty).

October 26, 2023

How to give your jack-o-lantern back to nature

Send that jack-o-lantern back to nature! Pumpkins and their seeds can be nutritious snacks for birds and backyard critters. Your local wildlife will love this seasonal treat. If you want to share your pumpkins and jack-o-lanterns with wildlife this season, consider these tips to be sure they are safe for wildlife and the environment.

October 20, 2023

Fossil Fri-YAY! – The Brachiopod

The most common fossils found in Pennsylvania are of the phylum Brachiopoda, coming from the Greek “brachion” meaning ‘arm’ and “podus” meaning ‘foot’, and  better known as brachiopods (BRAK-ee-oh-pods). These marine invertebrates were among the first in the Earth’s oceans during the Cambrian period, 550 million years ago. They reigned as the most common shelled marine invertebrates on the planet for the next 300 million years during the Paleozoic (meaning “ancient life”)  Era, which ended with the Permian Extinction just before the rise of the dinosaurs. During the Paleozoic, brachiopods were commonly found in warm, shallow waters – indicating that Pennsylvania was underwater at least once during the geologic past.

October 6, 2023

Forest Fridays: Fall in the forest

The waning productivity of the garden, heavy morning dew, and slight blush of color in the forest are indicating fall is here, to the delight of many autumn enthusiasts. But why do we love the fall so much? Perhaps it’s engrained in us to celebrate what is typically the “season of abundance”. Maybe it’s the unspoken idea that the hardest work of the growing season is over and it’s now time to enjoy it. For some, it’s the gorgeous fall color, the sweet smell of the leaves, and seasonable temperatures that make it so enjoyable.