Forest Society Blog - News & Features
Search filters
Results
Forest Journal: "Mothing" For Beginners
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.
- Tags:
- Wildlife
Something Wild: The Wheel
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.
- Tags:
- Wildlife,
- Something Wild
Apples, Acorns Aplenty!
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.
- Tags:
- Stewardship,
- Wildlife
Bank Swallows nest along Merrimack River
A reminder about protecting nesting wildlife habitat at the Merrimack River Outdoor Education and Conservation Area.
- Tags:
- Wildlife
Wildflowers in Our Backyards
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.
- Tags:
- Conservation Easements,
- Wildlife
A Miraculous Month of May for Bird Watching
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."
- Tags:
- Wildlife