It was on our windshield earlier this week …
Here’s a link to another (better) photo of this ilk (we just like to use the word “ilk”).
It was on our windshield earlier this week …
Here’s a link to another (better) photo of this ilk (we just like to use the word “ilk”).
The Gazette monthly newspaper’s September issue has a nice, anply illustrated story on River Barge Park in Carlstadt.
The story is on pages 18 and 19.The link is here.
Wildnewjersey.tv selected one of Roy Woodford’s Least Bittern shots from the Kearny Marsh as its photo of the week.
The link is here. (Congrats, Roy!)
Did you know that Passenger Pigeon trapping was the source of the term “stool pigeon”?
This from the New Yorker earlier this year:
More elaborate methods were used, of course—like luring the birds into nets with a live pigeon, which is the origin of the term “stool pigeon.” A demand for stool pigeons opened up a trade in live birds, and so did the later development of “trap shooting,” in which live birds were mechanically launched into the air for sportsmen.
So many birds died in transport to the shoots that huge numbers were needed. (The “clay pigeon” was devised by passenger-pigeon hunters to replicate the experience after the actual birds grew scarce.)
Environmental Writer Jim O’Neill had a sad but fascinating article in The Record earlier this week, about the demise a century ago (Sept. 1, 1914) of the Passenger Pigeon, once the most numerous bird on Earth.
The old lithograph from Frank Leslie’s Weekly above, courtesy of the Library of Congress, is of a Passenger Pigeon shooting match just outside of Jersey City in the 1860s. The two-day match involved the killing of hundreds of birds.
The link is here.
The article accompanying the lithograph follows. The match drew more than 10,000 people, according to the article.
Tomorrow: All about the phrase “stool pigeon.” Continue reading
To get an idea of what might be seen in the Meadowlands this month, we thought we’d take a look back at the blog highlights from September 2013.
Just click on the text to link to the post.
September 3: Tagged Egret in Harrier Meadow
September 6: S. Bergenite Story on Meadowlands’ Comeback
Sepember 11: WTC Cove in DeKorte Park Rededicated
September 12: Sept. 11 Twin Beams of Light from DeKorte Park
September 12: Orange-crowned and Bobolink at Mill Creek
September 16: Meadowlands Lightning and More (Michael Maddaloni photo above)
September 26: Cool New eBird Feature for Meadowlands
September 27: Mike Girone Disposal Road Raptor Report
George, the American White Pelican, has now been seen for the past 59 days in the Saw Mill Creek mudflats area of DeKorte Park — far out, as usual.
So far, nine folks have been eliminated from the “Guess When George the Pelican Leaves” contest, and more than 30 are still in contention.
The William D. McDowell Observatory in DeKorte Park is closed this week. We regret the inconvenience,