Join the Bergen County Audubon Society next Tuesday (May 21) for a guided nature walk through DeKorte Park in Lyndhurst, the gem of the Meadowlands park system. They’ll be on the lookout for spring migrants, shorebirds and more.
The walk goes from 10 am to noon and meets at the Meadowlands Environment Center. For more info contact Don Torino at greatauk4@gmail.com or 201-230-4983.
Many thanks to Mickey Raine for this great variety of pics taken recently at Mill Creek Point Park in Secaucus. Egrets above, Forster’s Terns below, an awesome pre-sunset shot and a look at some of the playground activities that make the park a great place to bring the kids!
This past Saturday Spencer Lecky from Palisades Park Troop 379 and his fellow Scouts created a new Butterfly Garden at DeKorte Park and refurbished and stained four deteriorating park benches as part of Spencer’s Eagle Scout project. Thank you Spencer and your Troop members from the NJSEA for a tremendous job well done!
To create the Butterfly Garden, the Troop installed a rock border and weeded the area adjacent to a recently planted pollinator garden. They added a fresh coat of top soil and planted Asclepias incarnata, Swamp milkweed. Swamp milkweed is vital for butterflies like the Monarch, which is in serious decline.
Monarchs cannot survive without milkweed; their caterpillars only eat milkweed plants. Adding milkweed to the garden ensures a food supply for the life cycle of a Monarch as well as other pollinators.
Nice work by Dennis Cheesman today at DeKorte getting this shot of a rabbit in fine vertical form, along with a Warbling Vireo and a Mute Swan. Thanks Dennis!
My new boots arrived in a box left by the front door.
Didn’t have to go try them on, talk to a sales person or for that matter admire
an assortment of boots sitting on the wall display. Sadly very impersonal I guess.
But even so just like some ancient ritual I sat back and applied my waterproofing
to the leather, slowly taking my time to work it in really well.
I was reminded of how many times and on how many boots
I have performed this ceremonial task over the years. Of course there have been
countless other boots, some still sitting in my closet, unable to part with, and
others that I remember so fondly from back packing trips, some with blisters
and all so many years ago. Of course there were many other boots that were
stuck in the Meadowlands mud that had to be pulled out when my feet were not
even in them and still others from too many soggy birding trips that I will
never forget.
But that’s
how it is with birders and nature lovers. Inanimate objects take on their own personality.
Simple things that forever embrace a special memory when doing nothing more than
holding them in your hand.
Many friends still hang on to their old binoculars,
out of date, low on modern technical advantages but full of memories of family,
friends and birds. Hard to part with but they still hold an important place in
our hearts. Most now retired to a place of honor to a desk or shelf but
sometimes being picked up for a quick glance that will bring back the memories
of people and places that we love so much.
Old field
guides still proudly rest on the door of my truck. Wrinkled and bent pages,
loose bindings and many water stains of trips gone by. There are better, more up-to-date
field guides for sure. Like the Apps on my phone that will never hold a proper
memory or remind me of anything but problems learning how to use my new phone.
Holding an old field guide in your hand, maybe one
that your mom, dad or close friend also carried with them can be an almost
mystical experience when opened, instantly projecting you to a different place
in time. A time when you saw a life bird, sat on a fallen tree as a Red-tail
flew close by or when you were unknowingly on that very last field trip with
someone special. These books are to be treasured and cherished and always to be
held and read, never to be overlooked on a shelf or in a drawer to be forgotten.
Enjoying the natural world and especially birding in
the end is all about the friends we made, the birds we have seen and the people
and places we have come to love along the way. Memories are made to be
cherished and sometimes there are those simple things that help remind us and
guide us along life’s journey into the natural world.
If you have something that reminds you of special
times and people while out enjoying nature let me know what it is. I would love
to hear about it.
Many thanks to Mickey Raine for this series of recent beautiful Tree Swallow photos taken at Mill Creek Marsh. Mickey gives a great description of this amazing species:
The most adorable of all the creatures found in the area–the TREE SWALLOWS, those masters of aerial acrobatics as they zip in and out and swish/swoosh by in all directions with lightening speed for short bursts. The tiny insects flying about have no chance with these cuties … As adorable as they are, when posed in certain lights in such a way, they can seem quite regal with that Egyptian Blue capturing the attention of any onlooker.
Thanks to Dennis Cheeseman for this great photo of a Rose-breasted Grosbeak taken at DeKorte today, the first I can remember receiving for the blog. Dennis also got awesome shots of a beautiful Scarlet Tanager and Baltimore Oriole. Thanks Dennis!