Category

Nature Notes

Aquatic, Nature Notes, Wildlife

 Hellbenders and the Excitement of Late Summer

by Linda Martinson 

August is an exciting month as summer begins to wind down. For example, there are often some spectacular meteor showers in late July through August. The Perseids are one of the brighter meteor showers, and they occur every year between July 17 and August 24. This year they peaked (at night of course) between August 12 and 13. Our daughter is in charge of nighttime excitement at our house, and she put chairs out on the deck and woke us up to watch the sky on Saturday night, August 13. This year, however, the moon was full so the meteors were not so bright, but it was still exciting to bask in the full moon and catch glimmers of meteor flashes.

Read more
Birds, Nature Notes

Celebrating Convergences and Whippoorwills

by Linda Martinson

Convergences are notable. Some are simple; for example, waking up at 5:55 am and then sitting down to eat at 5:55 pm or that three people you know share the same birthday on April 13. There was, however, a very special convergence this year: a rare overlap of major religious observances in one week. On Friday, April 15, Jewish people celebrated Passover marking the exodus of Israelites from enslavement in Egypt; on the same day, Christians observed Good Friday to commemorate the crucifixion of Jesus before Easter Sunday; and over the weekend of April 15, Muslims continued the observation of Ramadan, a month of prayers and fasting memorializing the transmission of the Koran. And as I was working on this newsletter, we celebrated Earth Day!

Read more
Nature Notes, Plants, Wildlife

“Beginning to Feel Like Spring”

by Linda Martinson

Certified Blue Ridge Naturalist

Nothing like a Pandemic and a foot of snow to make you good and tired of winter, but a few days before the end of February, I heard the first calls of spring peepers in the evening and I felt a burst of Blue Ridge Spring happiness. Spring peepers do sound happy and thrilled to be alive…maybe because they are eagerly seeking mates. We have the northern subspecies of spring peepers (Pseudacris crucifer), widespread throughout the area wherever they have the right habitat. That would be, for example, moist fields; woods with creeks and marshes; and low grassy areas near ponds and wetlands. Spring peepers are small, about the size of a paper clip, so although the chorus of their calls is loud, the tiny frogs are seldom seen.

Naturenorth.com
Read more
Related posts
Coyotes: Just Going Along
March 3, 2020
Winter musing about weather, hibernating and opossums
January 30, 2020
Holiday Gift Ideas: Books about Smart Critters
December 15, 2018