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Colorful complex black and orange pattern of Virgin Tiger Moth suggests a stained glass window pattern

Forest Journal: "Mothing" For Beginners

Carrie Deegan | July 26, 2020

The moths we have here in New Hampshire range in size from the 5-7” Cecropia Moth (Hyalophora cecropia), fully as large as an adult hand, to “micromoths” so tiny that you’ll need a hand lens just to see that they are actually moths.

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Wildlife
Hammock suspended between two apple trees in late summer sunlight

Something Wild: The Wheel

Dave Anderson | July 22, 2020

Naturalist Dave Anderson cites many mid-summer milestones including reduced bird songs, common ditch-weed flowers, and shooting stars which reveal the summer season passing faster than expected.

Green apples glisten with morning dew.

Apples, Acorns Aplenty!

Dave Anderson | July 12, 2020

Foresters, wildlife biologists and homeowners are watching a strong year for the development of the forest foods that will ripen into autumn apples, acorns and even a good pine seed crop in New Hampshire forests. Fruit trees and oak forests with acorns are THE supermarkets of the forest.

Bank Swallows nest along Merrimack River

A reminder about protecting nesting wildlife habitat at the Merrimack River Outdoor Education and Conservation Area.

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Wildlife

Wildflowers in Our Backyards

Stacie Hernandez | May 26, 2020

Spring ephemeral is the term used for many of New Hampshire's wildflowers that show off in the spring and then move on to a different life cycle where they wither away back underground after going through a reproductive phase. The short definition is growing over a short amount of time.

An oriole feeds a chick in a nest.

A Miraculous Month of May for Bird Watching

Dave Anderson | May 21, 2020

Birds are always spectacular in May. Now, more of us are actually watching and listening carefully. To quote Hall of Fame Baseball legend Yogi Berra: “You can observe a lot by watching."

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Wildlife