urbpan: (wading)


A sunfish (perhaps a pumpkinseed or a bluegill) guards his nest.
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urbpan: (Default)


My father and I went to the Fannie Stebbins Wildlife Refuge in Longmeadow Mass. today. It's a large protected wetlands near the Connecticut River and the Mass/CT border. It's kind of amazing that we've never been there before--my dad just found out about it from a friend--Dad has lived within a couple miles of the place for the past 33 years.
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Boston has a category of public land called "Urban Wilds." By expanding the range of landscape experiences beyond that of the dense built environment and manicured Boston parkland, urban wilds form an essential part of the city's open space system. The only one of these that I am aware we have been to is Belle Isle Marsh. Yesterday we went to Allandale Woods. We've passed it dozens of times, and one day Alex wondered aloud "what are those woods?" I found them on the map and found the somewhat concealed parking area.
Read more... )
urbpan: (Default)


Charlie stands on some of the last remaining ice in Boston, on Ward's Pond.

More Olmsted Park )
urbpan: (Default)


I saw movement in the shore of the icy pond, and pulled out a tadpole.

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Yup, it was snowy out there. It was easy to take a lot of pictures. I edited myself down a bit, but there are still probably too many, too much the same. We did make a fun animal discovery, so click to continue if you love collembolans. Read more... )
urbpan: (Default)


After dropping Rebecca off to take the SATs, we took advantage of the early hour and headed to Hammond Pond Reservation.
More photographs, including moderately gory dead animal )
urbpan: (morel)
Wow, what an unexpectedly wonderful day for urban nature!  As most of you know, I work at a zoo in a major northeastern city.  I was in an area that used to be a waterfowl exhibit that's now closed, treating the water features for mosquitoes (biological controls, insect growth regulator, and pheromone traps).  Almost immediately I encountered the garter snake (Thamnophis sirtalis) pictured two posts ago.  It slithered over a stick, so I was able to pick it up without it biting me, or worse, musking on me.  It struck as fiercely at me as a timber rattlesnake, despite being a pencil-sized predator of slugs.

I delved further into this jungle of concrete and weeds, and found a mallard family with four nearly grown chicks.  They were clearly shocked to see a human in their sanctuary.  It was surely safer for them in an unused part of a zoo, a hundred feet from thousands of people and cars, then it was in any of the nearby city parks.  I found one of my pheromone traps, blown by the wind into the artificial pond, and fished it out.  A plastic container the size of a large mayonnaise jar, it had an amazing array of life within it.  Four water boatmen had swam into it, hunting smaller insects.  I could make out the tiny swimming forms of water mites, and even copepods carrying double saddlebags full of eggs.  I dumped out the creatures into the pond and brought the empty trap back to storage.

On the way I walked through a landscape decorated with huge white spheroids, ranging from the size of softballs to those the size of deflated soccer balls.  These are giant puffballs, Calvatia gigantea.  If they were allowed to grow to maturity their insides would turn into billions of spores, which would puff out of tears in the mushroom's leathery hide when struck by raindrops.  I harvested two of them, for research purposes for the mushroom classes I'm teaching at Drumlin Farm in the fall.  Some of my research will include slicing up one of the mushrooms, frying it and eating it.  I must ask, [personal profile] lizblackdog and [personal profile] gwenhyffar, how do you cook and season these beasts?

Finally, as I went back to my storage area, I moved some equipment and turned up a yellow, white, and black striped caterpillar.  Such a striking and beautiful thing, but it was on a piece of metal.  "You belong here, little one," I said, as I lifted it up and placed it on a milkweed plant growing out of a crack in the asphalt.
urbpan: (Charlie Swimming)

As you all know, Charlie loves to swim.  And now that the weather is nice, I want to take him swimming every day.  I can't really do it, but I've managed to get him in the water at least every weekend in June.  After being frustrated by our usual options, I took him behind a factory in Natick, at the recommendation of someone in the [profile] b0st0n community.  Although the parking lot was filled with no trespassing, will tow, police take notice, etc. signs, there were a couple other groups of people there, around the bend in the pond from me, fishing.  Except for feeling like the cops were going to run me off at any minute, this was a good choice.  As it turns out, this is part of Lake Cochituate, a historically important and surprisingly large body of water.  The waves seen above are the aftermath of a passing motorboat.
urbpan: (Me and Charlie in the Arnold Arboretum)

We went to the Quincy Quarries reservation today, a former granite quarry that is now public land managed by the department of conservation and recreation. There was cool stuff to photograph before we even left the parking area.

But wait, it gets much better. )
urbpan: (Default)

Today we blundered upon Ames Nowell State Park, in Abington. The woods there are full of stone fences.

Read more... )
urbpan: (vernal pool)
This is the first in a series of short videos in which nothing happens.



  

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