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The Naturalist's Notebook

Join a fun and fascinating exploration of nature and science—and visit our one-of-a-kind exploratorium-shop in Maine
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News, Notes and Photos from the Field (Craig and Pamelia's Blog)

You've Just Found a Stranded Seal, Whale or Dolphin. What Do You Do?

January 28, 2012

A week ago, for reasons unknown, hundreds of Atlantic white-sided dolphins were in danger of grounding themselves near Wellfleet on Cape Cod. Our friend and Notebook collaborator Virginia was on call. She has worked in the past with Allied Whale, a Bar Harbor-based marine mammal research group that, among other duties, assists stranded seals, whales and dolphins along much of the Maine coast. If needed, Allied Whale and volunteers like Virginia were ready to make the long drive to Cape Cod to pitch in.

Though some dolphins did run aground (see news video above), rescuers in Massachusetts were able to handle the situation. Nevertheless, Pamelia and I were so inspired by talking to Virginia that we answered our own marine mammal-rescue call. We spent an afternoon at the College of the Atlantic (to which Allied Whale is connected) at a workshop on rescuing stranded seals.

Those of you who have visited The Naturalist's Notebook may be excited to learn (as we did) that rescued and rehabbed seals are frequently released back into the Atlantic Ocean at Seal Harbor beach, just a few hundred yards from our friendly little shop and exploratorium. More broadly, the workshop gave us not only guidance in how to respond if we find a marine mammal in trouble (step one: call Allied Whale!), but also a better sense of how to identify types of seals. We also came away with an appreciation of the importance of pack ice and land to the survival of these animals, who need time out of the water to rest, give birth and nurse their young.

I'm not saying that Pamelia and I are now ready to star in an animal-rescue version of Coast Guard Alaska, but a few hours in a college lecture hall at least gave us a basic knowledge of how to respond if we encounter a marine mammal in trouble.

Take five minutes to watch the video below of the Cape Cod Stranding Network rescuing dolphins that ran aground near Wellfleet two years ago. It's well-narrated and gives you a glimpse of what rescuers do. 

Our workshop focused on the four types of seals found most often in Maine's waters: the harbor, gray, harp and hooded varieties. None of these is a fur seal; those don't live in the Atlantic Ocean. Harbor seals are fairly small (4 to 5 feet long) and are known as sea dogs for their facial resemblance to cute canines. We're lucky enough to have a colony of them across the bay from us and we see them regularly when we kayak or when they come to feed in front of our house. Gray seals, by contrast, are much bigger (up to 9 feet) and more aggressive. Because of their longer snouts they are sometimes unflatteringly called "horse-headed" seals or—even worse—"hooked-nose sea pigs."

I must pause to note that the lyrics to the Elton John/Bernie Taupin song Grey Seal are considerably kinder to hooked-nose sea pigs:

And tell me grey seal
How does it feel
To be so wise
To see through eyes
That only see what's real
Tell me grey seal

While we've momentarily detoured into music, no, I don't know why the popular British singer Seal—whose real name is Seal Henry Olusegun Olumide Adeola Samuel—was given that first name. His family comes from Nigeria and Brazil, not among the world's pinniped hotspots. I know you're probably more focused on the shocking news that Seal split this week from his wife, former Sports Illustrated swimsuit model Heidi Klum...but does anyone out there know why his parents named him for a pinniped?

(Pinniped: a fin-footed mammal. The three types are seals, sea lions and walruses.)

Back to business. Much of the workshop was devoted to harp and hooded seals, which are ice seals—meaning they need pack ice on which to rest and give birth. Because global climate change is affecting the ice cover in northern ocean waters, these mammals are among the species scientists need to watch closely. A lack of pack ice in the Gulf of St. Lawrence last winter virtually wiped out pup-bearing by mother harp seals.

Just two weeks ago, Science Daily ran a piece entitled "Harp Seals on Thin Ice After 32 Years of Warming." Here's the link:

http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2012/01/120104174810.htm

You should be aware, before you do anything with a seal, whether it's in danger or not, that messing with marine mammals is a federal crime. This year is the 40th anniversary of the Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972, which was passed largely in response to the clubbing of massive numbers of harp seals and the high rate of dolphins being snagged as "bycatch" in tuna nets. Congress found that every marine mammal species was in danger of being either depleted or rendered extinct by human activities. The act made it illegal to kill or capture any marine mammal or engage in "any act of pursuit, torment or annoyance which has the potential to either: a. injure a marine mammal in the wild, or b. disturb a marine mammal by causing disruption of behavioral patterns, which includes, but is not limited to, migration, breathing, nursing, breeding, feeding, or sheltering."

Nostril configuration can help distinguish gray seals (W shape) from harp seals (V shape). Because seals molt, change color while maturing, look different when dry or wet, and generally don't let you close enough to study their nostrils, identifying the type can be challenging even for experts.

In other words, don't harass seals. Don't even paddle your kayak into the middle of a seal colony because it might scare the animals. And if you come across a seal (or whale or dolphin) that you think is in trouble, don't try to take its pulse or drag it off the beach into the water. Study it from afar, then call experts such as those at Allied Whale. The truth is, a lot of reports of seals in "trouble" turn out to be cases of seals on the beach resting.

Though gray and harp seals are part of a group called earless seals, they have internal ears and hear well, at least underwater.

We learned all this and much more—that satellite transmitters are attached to seals with epoxy glue, for example, and that the milk that mother hooded seals feed their pups on those precious few days together on the ice pack is 85 percent fat to speed up the youngsters' growth. (Eat your heart out, Hagen Daz.)

This is the so-called beater stage for a harp seal pup, so named because the pups are just learning to swim and tend to thrash in the water.

One Adam 12, One Adam 12, we've got a situation with officers held at bay in Los Banos...

This stranded whale, which Allied Whale was called too late to help, didn't survive. When a whale is on land, away from the buoyancy of the water, its weight can quickly crush its internal organs. If it strands in warm weather, as this one did, its blubbery insides can rapidly cook and become an oily, gushy mess.

When our afternoon with the pinnipeds ended, Pamelia and I felt as though an ocean of knowledge had opened up to us. In this busy world, it might seem crazy to drop everything and spend an afternoon in an ice seal workshop. But we couldn't think of a better way to have spent four hours.

Caught in the Web

I can't help passing along a Facebook posting passed on to me by a San Francisco-area friend and former Sports Illustrated colleague. It was posted by a friend of his. And apparently by others before her. It's not clear who originally wrote it (this is the Internet, after all), but the whale incident it describes—and the reactions of the whale and the rescuers—really did happen, back in December 2005. The Naturalist's Notebook didn't exist back then or we would have told you about the whale sooner. Here's the post:

"If you read a recent front page story of the San Francisco Chronicle, you would have read about a female humpback whale who had become entangled in a spiderweb of crab traps and lines. She was weighted down by hundreds of pounds of traps that caused her to struggle to stay afloat. She also had hundreds of yards of line rope wrapped around her body, her tail, her torso and a line tugging in her mouth. A fisherman spotted her just east of the Farallon Islands (outside the Golden Gate ) and radioed an environmental group for help. Within a few hours, the rescue team arrived and determined that she was so bad off, the only way to save her was to dive in and untangle her. They worked for hours with curved knives and eventually freed her. When she was free, the divers say she swam in what seemed like joyous circles. She then came back to each and every diver, one at a time, and nudged them, pushed them gently around as she was thanking them. Some said it was the most incredibly beautiful experience of their lives. The guy who cut the rope out of her mouth said her eyes were following him the whole time, and he will never be the same. May you, and all those you love, be so blessed and fortunate to be surrounded by people who will help you get untangled from the things that are binding you. And, may you always know the joy of giving and receiving gratitude. I pass this on to you, my friends, in the same spirit."

We All Come From Fish All life on Earth originated in the sea, and the blog Bohemian Cyborg has shown us two wonderfully creative people whose inner fish has surfaced:

The fish people

Here's the link to Bohemian Cyborg: http://bohemiancyborg.tumblr.com/post/1614869430

If you want to learn a whole lot more about the origin of we creative creatures who paint fish on our faces, you might check out this title: Your Inner Fish: A Journey Into the 3.5-Billion-Year History of the Human Body, by Neil Shubin. We sell it at the Notebook and it's one of Pamelia's favorite books from the frontier of knowledge.

The Australian BowerbirdWe've shown you in the past the ultimate mimic of the animal world, the bowerbird, which can imitate everything from pigs to camera shutters to chain saws. This week our Nova Scotia correspondent, Rachel, sent word that the Canadian Broadcasting Company had given the bowerbird some love—by describing how males use optical illusions to help attract and seduce their mates.

A bower built from twigs by a male bowerbird. Note the shells, rocks and other objects placed in front of it to lure in a female.

Here's a link to a CBC story. It's fascinating, and touches not only on birds but also on optical illusions:

http://www.canada.com/entertainment/Male+bowerbirds+trick+females+into/6026596/story.html

Answers to the Last Puzzlers

1) The answer is a). In the 26,000-foot-deep Peru-Chile Trench, which runs along the west coast of South America, two of the Earth’s geologic plates meet, and one slides under the other. That collision of plates has pushed up the ground along the western edge of the continent, forming the Andes Mountains.

2) The answer is b). A typical raindrop falls at about 7 mph.

3) b). A googol is a 1 followed by 100 zeroes.

Today's Puzzlers

1) How many quills are there on a typical adult porcupine?

a) 300
b) 3,000
c) 30,000

2) All light travels at 186,000 miles per second. How long does reflected sunlight (which we call moonlight) take to travel from the Moon to the Earth?

a) a bit more than 1 second
b) almost 12 seconds
c) exactly 45 seconds

3) True or false: The word halcyon, meaning a peaceful, happy period ("halcyon days of youth"), comes from the Greek word for a kingfisher bird, which in Greek mythology was given the power to calm the weather and the seas while it laid its eggs.

By: Craig Neff
Tags Allied Whale, Atlantic white-sided dolphins, bowerbirds, Cape Cod Stranding Network, Cape Cod Times, College of the Atlantic, Elton John Grey Seal, ice seals, Maine seals, San Francisco whale untangled, Seal Harbor beach, stranded dolphins, stranded seals, stranded whales, Wellfleet
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A work of art and engineering, the Trench Bridge in the Netherlands, offers a baseball-dugout perspective on the water.

An Amazing Bridge

January 20, 2012

Two Notebook friends in the Netherlands sent along images of the unique and environmentally friendly bridge above, which allows visitors to cross a moat to reach Fort de Roovere, a 17th century Dutch defensive installation. Built of a sustainable wood product called Accoya (which is made of renewable soft wood but is said to be as durable as the sturdiest tropical hardwood), it's officially called the Trench Bridge but has been nicknamed the Moses Bridge because it parts the waters. It was designed by RO & AD Architects, a Dutch firm, which didn't want to spoil the historical look of the fortess with an above-water bridge. Indeed, if the moat is viewed from afar, according to our Dutch friends, the bridge vanishes from sight.

With the world's oceans rising, and half of the country's land less than a meter above sea level, the up-to-the-lip-in-water bridge also seems like a metaphor for the precarious coastal setting of the Netherlands in an age of climate change.

I need to ask my engineer brother why the sides of the bridge don't collapse from the weight of the water.

Meet Our Whales

I mentioned last month that whales make great holiday gifts. Hard to wrap, but they're beautiful, educational and inspiring. We just gave ourselves two of them.

Allied Whale and the Bar Harbor Whale Museum have an adopt-a-whale program that helps fund their research into these magnificent, at-risk mammals (whose distant ancestors walked on land, by the way). For the Notebook we decided to adopt two finback whales, a mother and a calf, who have been named Acadia and Schoodic. Finbacks can grow 60 feet long, which I think is longer than The Naturalist's Notebook building in Seal Harbor. Here is the description of our duo on the adopt-a-whale website:

"Acadia is recognizable to researchers by a nick in her dorsal fin in the shape of a half moon. She has been frequently photographed off the coast of Maine. Her calf, Schoodic, was born in 2003 and was named for Maine’s Schoodic Peninsula, part of Acadia National Park."

We'll keep you posted on our adoptees' latest whales' tales. If you'd like to look into adopting a whale of your own, go to http://www.barharborwhalemuseum.org/adopt2.php.

Our new mother and calf.

An Animated Collection A good book comes to life when you read it. But apparently books can be even livelier when left alone. After watching the video below, I might need to put a hidden camera on the more than 1,000 titles that are spending the winter at the Notebook. Perhaps they haven't been hibernating.

Is it just me, or do these rocks popping up through our ice make you think of dinosaur eggs hatching? O.K., it's just me.

Animal Humor

The Toronto Zoo has done a series of a funny animated ads. Whether you like or hate zoos, I think you'll enjoy the two clever clips below.

Answers to the Last Puzzlers

1) The inner core of the Earth is solid. The diagram below (courtesy of the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory) gives you a cross-section of our planetary home:

earthcore
earthcore

2) Loofah sponges are made from a fruit that grows on a subtropical vine.

Today's Puzzlers

Answers will appear in the next post.

1) Study the map below of South America. What happens in the 26,000-foot-deep Peru-Chile Trench?

a) Two of the Earth's geologic plates meet, and one slides under the other
b) A strong southward current pulls warm tropical water down to Antarctica
c) Nothing. It is the only section of ocean in which no form of life exists.

The trench runs along the west coast of South America, suspiciously close to the Andes mountains. Hmmm....a clue?

2) How fast does a typical raindrop fall?
a) 7 mph
b) 14 mph
c) 20 mph

3) We've all heard of Google. Have you heard of a googol? It's a large number whose name was invented in the 1930s by a mathematician's nine-year-old nephew. How big is a googol?

a) a 1 followed by 20 zeroes
b) a 1 followed by 100 zeroes
c) a 1 followed by 1,000 zeroes

Trivia note: Google's name is taken from the word googol and is meant to reflect the large quantity of information Google allows computer users to search.

By: Craig Neff
Tags Acadia, adopt a whale, Allied Whale, Andes formed, Bar Harbor Whale Museum, book animation, Earth inner core, finback, Fort de Roovere, Google name, googol, Moses Bridge, penguins rock paper scissors, Peru-Chile Trench, polar bear animation, raindrop speed, Schoodic, Toronto Zoo, Trench Bridge
2 Comments

One of Virginia's photos from her time at the Highland Farm Gibbon Sanctuary in Thailand. As a holiday gift, you can help fund the care of an orphaned or abandoned gibbon.

Charitable Thoughts

December 10, 2011

“Ninety-seven percent of all charitable giving goes to support human causes. The remaining three percent is split evenly between our pets and the whole of non-human nature." —Graeme Gibson, author of The Bedside Book of Birds and The Bedside Book of Beasts and council member of the World Wildlife Fund Canada

It's hard to decide which charitable causes to support when so many are so worthy. But I'll go way out on a limb of an endangered old-growth tree to say this: Our home planet deserves more than a 1.5% cut. Here are just a few of the many, many ways to give a holiday gift that helps nature. Click on the links to learn more:

Adopt a whale:
http://www.barharborwhalemuseum.org/adopt2.php

Sponsor an orphaned elephant (one of our favorites over the years):
http://www.sheldrickwildlifetrust.org/asp/fostering.asp

Help preserve ancient trees (a wonderful woman from the Michigan-based Archangel Ancient Tree Archive visited the Notebook this summer):
http://www.ancienttreearchive.org/#/en/Home

Adopt a tree to be planted:
http://www.adoptatreetoday.com/adoptatree.html

Adopt an acre of rainforest:http://adopt.nature.org/acre/costa-rica/gift.html

Adopt a tiger
http://www.worldwildlife.org/gift-center/gifts/Species-Adoptions/Tiger.aspx?cqs=CTTG

Help the Jane Goodall Institute protect chimpanzees:
transact?reset=1&id=21

Help care for an abandoned gibbon (our friend Virginia worked here as a volunteer—we'll be sharing more of her stories and photos in the future):
http://www.highland-farm.org/help/

Help rehabilitate an injured bird of prey:
http://www.arc4raptors.org/adopt

The Other World-Wide Web
I don't know of any sponsor-a-spider holiday gift programs, but maybe there should be one. Even if you suffer from arachnophobia, you'll find the Ted.com talk below interesting. You'll never look at a spider in quite the same way.

Always Leave 'Em Laughing
I was reading last night about kookaburras, the Australian birds (a type of kingfisher) known for their laughter-like calls, so I couldn't resist sharing the sense of hilarity:

By: Craig Neff
Tags adopt a gibbon, Allied Whale, Archangel Ancient Tree Archive, Bar Harbor Whale Museum, Daphne Sheldrick, donations to help nature, Graeme Gibson, how spiders make silk, Jane Goodall Institute, kookaburras laughing, Sheldrick Wildlife Trust, spiders, sponsor an elephant, The Nature Conservancy
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One attendee at Down East Pecha Kucha Night concisely summed up the essence of the fun, fast, brain-stimulating event.

Show 20 Slides, Talk for 20 Seconds Per Slide, Tell Us Something Fascinating. Go!

December 6, 2011

A few years ago, the town of Winter Harbor, Maine, nearly razed Hammond Hall. The lovely wooden building—home for a century to town meetings, potlucks, plays, even half-court basketball when a backboard and rim were nailed to the balcony—had gone neglected and was now too costly to maintain. Someone suggested the fire department burn it down as a training exercise.

Instead, concerned townspeople rallied, launched an arts organization that could use (and was willing to repair) the building, and rekindled, so to speak, the local love for Hammond Hall. They saved a structure and strengthened a community.

Meanwhile, halfway around the world, two Tokyo-based architects, Astrid Klein (who's Italian) and Mark Dytham (British), were inventing an engaging, quick-paced new format through which young architects could present their overlooked ideas to an audience. Klein and Dytham called the format Pecha Kucha (pronounced something like pa-chok-u-cha, spoken really fast), which is Japanese for "chit-chat." Using PowerPoint software, each presenter could show 20 slides and talk for only 20 seconds per slide. Total time: 6 minutes, 40 seconds. Before and after, the presenters and the audience could mingle, network and discuss the subjects in more detail.

Pecha Kucha became a trademarked franchise. It spread beyond Japan and outside the world of architecture. In scores of cities around the world, Pecha Kucha nights are now a forum for sharing smart, creative ideas and experiences of many types. People who attend them have a blast.

I somehow had never heard of Pecha Kucha until two weeks ago. Mary Laury, executive director of Winter Harbor-based Schoodic Arts for All, happened to visit The Naturalist's Notebook and invited Pamelia and me to an all-Maine Pecha Kucha night that her organization was hosting at Hammond Hall. We were intrigued.

And so we drove an hour up the coast on what would become a snowy evening and settled into our folding chairs at Hammond Hall. The high school cooking club had set up a table to sell homemade cookies and muffins. Show-and-tell artifacts from the nine presenters were spread across other tables around the edge of the room. The lights dimmed and the fun began.

The inspiring group of presenters included whale and seal researcher Gale McCullough, artist/inventor/sailor Steve Callahan—author of the 1986 bestseller Adrift: 76 Days Lost At Sea, the tale of how he survived for 11 weeks on an inflatable raft after something big, possibly a whale, ran into and sank his sloop in the Atlantic off Africa—and former Peace Corps volunteer Florence Reed, the founder of Sustainable Harvest International, a Maine-based program that in 14 years of work in Central America has planted three million trees, reduced slash-and-burn farming and improved the lives of poor families—all to help save the region's species-rich but rapidly disappearing tropical forests.

We gathered in cozy old Hammond Hall, which has been repaired and revived by Schoodic Arts for All.

While adrift, the author had to jerryrig ways to stay afloat and alive. His Pecha Kucha presentation was aptly entitled Survival: The Mother of the Mother of Invention.

One of the illustrations Steve did that was inspired by—but not meant to be a literal interpretation of—his time at sea. I love the ultra-dark starry sky.

Samuel Johnson once observed that when a man knows he is to be hanged, "it concentrates his mind wonderfully." Having to present vast amounts of information to an audience in just six minutes and 40 seconds can have the same effect. Each Pecha Kucha speaker was concise and insightful. Some, like Callahan, were lyrical; he spoke poetically of how his brush with death changed his approach to life and creating art. Others were humorous, most notably Blake Hendrickson, who is a creativity guru and a hilarious keeper of a herd of miniature moose. Yet others were visionary; a young whiz named Oren Darling described a future in which millions of us would have home 3-D "printers" (fabricating machines for which the technology already exists) with which we could manufacture our own chairs, tables, drinking cups and other objects as we needed them, thus radically changing the global economy and the dissemination of creative designs.

It was clear that we still have a lot to learn about the world. McCullough, the oceanographer, reminded us how recent it is that we have begun learning about many of the planet's largest creatures. Before 1975, scientifically speaking, "we knew almost nothing about whales," she said. Jacques Cousteau and the College of the Atlantic's Allied Whale research branch helped launch research efforts and increase awareness about cetaceans, and today we know that, for example, each whale has unique markings on the underside of his tail fins (his flukes) that enable scientists to track specific individuals over time. That has been crucial to studying migration patterns and other habits.

For researchers, the discovery of unique patterns on the underside of whales' tails was fluke luck.

Gail brought these huge and surprisingly heavy bones, which came from the fin of a finback whale.

Gail also showed us this small piece of baleen, the structure whales use to filter food such as krill from sea water.

Blake, a fount of creative inspiration, had the hall in hysterics with his deadpan presentation about the mini-moose—or mini-muse—who snuck into his house, invited in a hundred mini-moose friends, and took Hendrickson on an extraordinary adventure of imagination.

The many Maine mini-moose were mini-muses for Blake, and as you can see here, they also helped him plant a garden and harvest and cook the organic veggies.

In perhaps the most serious yet inspiring talk of the night, Florence described the devastating effects of slash-and-burn agriculture on Central American forests—and how Sustainable Harvest International has educated subsistence farmers about more Earth-friendly methods of growing their food.

One of Florence's initiatives provides families with simple stoves that reduce reliance on wood and save (mostly) women from inhaling the equivalent of five packs of cigarette smoke a day from open cooking fires.

From a presentation by young Nick Rucker , I learned that the pulp magazine industry was started by a Mainer named Frank Munsey. Nick has drawn inspiration from Munsey in his planned launch of an online equivalent of a pulp magazine, to be called Kaika.

Other presenters enlightened us about topics such as stone sculpting and furniture making, but only Shep Erhart of Maine Coast Sea Vegetables, who has been sustainably harvesting seaweeds for 40 years, fed us food as well as ideas. He brought along samples of his company's products, from chips to Kelp Crunch, all of them quite tasty.

Speaking of Food, You Might Be Buying Honey That's Not Honey
Thanks to Notebook friend Betsy for passing along this link about stores that are selling honey that has been so thoroughly filtered and cooked (and in some cases diluted) that it no longer legally qualifies as honey under the FDA's definition of that liquid gold. I'm not sure what you call honey that's not honey. High-fructose corn syrup? http://www.hellawella.com/some-not-so-sweet-news-about-honey/3527

Divide and Conquer
You might find this either useful or useless, but it's certainly fun. A friend reminded me last night of a math trick involving the number nine: If you want to find out if a number can be divided by 9, just add the digits of that number and see if the total can be divided by 9. Just look at the numbers that are divisible by 9. They all fit the rule:

18 (add 1 + 8 and you get 9, which can be divided by 9)
27 (2 + 7 = 9, again divisible by 9)
36 (3 + 6 = 9, again divisible by 9)
45 (4 + 5 = 9, again divisible by 9)
54 (4 + 5 = 9, again divisible by 9)
skip ahead to other random numbers that can be divided by 9...
108 (1 + 0 + 8 = 9, again divisible by 9)
279 (2 + 7 + 9 = 18, again divisible by 9)
44,919 (4 + 4 + 9 + 1 + 9 = 27, again divisible by 9)

By: Craig Neff
Tags 3-D printing, Adrift, Allied Whale, Astrid Klein, Blake Hendrickson, creativity, Florence Reed, Frank Munsey, Gale McCullough, Hammond Hall, Jacques Cousteau, Kaika, kelp crunch, Maine Coast Sea Vegetables, Mark Dytham, mini-moose, mini-muse, Nick Rucker, Oren Darling, Pecha Kucha, PowerPoint, pulp fiction, Schoodic Arts for All, seals, Shep Erhart, Steve Callahan, Sustainable Harvest International, Tokyo, whale flukes, whales, Winter Harbor Maine
3 Comments

Craig & Pamelia's Past Posts


Darwin's Past Posts

  • December 2015
    • Dec 14, 2015 Welcome to My First "Blog." I'm Writing It While Traveling 500 MPH Inside a Metal Bird. This 21st Century is Quite Fantastic Dec 14, 2015
  • January 2019
    • Jan 29, 2019 The Yellow Northern Cardinal, A Year Later Jan 29, 2019
  • March 2018
    • Mar 8, 2018 Guest Blog: Put Plastic in Its Place (Starting With Straws!) Mar 8, 2018
  • February 2018
    • Feb 19, 2018 A Yellow Northern Cardinal Feb 19, 2018
    • Feb 12, 2018 The Rare Iberian Lynx Feb 12, 2018
  • January 2018
    • Jan 9, 2018 Manatees Escaping Cold Water Jan 9, 2018
  • September 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Birds of Costa Rica and Panama Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Roseate Spoonbills in South Carolina Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 What's a Patagonian Dragon? Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 A Thrush from Bangladesh Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Zebras at the Waterhole Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 False Eyes of the Spicebush Swallowtail Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Mountain Goats in Wyoming Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 The Unseen Gray Tree Frog Sep 14, 2017
  • February 2017
    • Feb 21, 2017 Happy Presidential Species Week Feb 21, 2017
  • January 2017
    • Jan 28, 2017 A Primate Cousin Jan 28, 2017
  • December 2016
    • Dec 29, 2016 Think Small: What Would You Do to Help Toads, Frogs and Salamanders? Dec 29, 2016
  • November 2016
    • Nov 22, 2016 How the Historic Supermoon Looked from All 50 States Nov 22, 2016
    • Nov 3, 2016 Maine on Mars! And a Visit to NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab Nov 3, 2016
  • October 2016
    • Oct 29, 2016 Good News for the Antarctic Oct 29, 2016
    • Oct 28, 2016 Supermoon As Seen Across America Oct 28, 2016
    • Oct 26, 2016 Rare Sight: Two California Condors Oct 26, 2016
    • Oct 8, 2016 The Yellow-Billed Cuckoo Oct 8, 2016
    • Oct 8, 2016 Blue-Gray Gnatcatchers Oct 8, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 18, 2016 Swimming With the Eels Jun 18, 2016
    • Jun 2, 2016 Great Photos of 17-Year Cicadas Emerging Jun 2, 2016
  • May 2016
    • May 21, 2016 Happy 90th, Sir David Attenborough May 21, 2016
    • May 11, 2016 Amazing Acorn Woodpeckers: Packing 50,000 Nuts Into a Single Tree May 11, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 24, 2016 Little Blue Heron on the North Carolina Coast Apr 24, 2016
    • Apr 19, 2016 Q-and-A With Bernd Heinrich About "One Wild Bird at a Time" Apr 19, 2016
    • Apr 10, 2016 Migrating Songbird Fallout On Machias Seal Island (Guest Post By Lighthouse Keeper Ralph Eldridge) Apr 10, 2016
    • Apr 9, 2016 How Much Do You Know About Air? An Interactive Quiz Apr 9, 2016
    • Apr 8, 2016 What Does Catastrophic Molt Look Like on Elephant Seals and Penguins? Apr 8, 2016
    • Apr 6, 2016 How a Pileated Woodpecker Works Apr 6, 2016
    • Apr 5, 2016 Fort Bliss Soldiers Protect a Pair of Owls Apr 5, 2016
    • Apr 2, 2016 A Jane Goodall Birthday Quiz Apr 2, 2016
  • March 2016
    • Mar 31, 2016 April Fools' Day and the Stories Behind Eight Animal Hoaxes Mar 31, 2016
    • Mar 27, 2016 Burrowing-Owl Mural in Arizona Mar 27, 2016
    • Mar 24, 2016 Burrowing Owls in Florida Mar 24, 2016
    • Mar 23, 2016 Welcome to Spring Mar 23, 2016
    • Mar 22, 2016 A Pause to Think of Brussels Mar 22, 2016
    • Mar 22, 2016 Black Vultures and Armadillos Mar 22, 2016
    • Mar 13, 2016 50-Foot Waves, the South Shetland Islands and Antarctica Mar 13, 2016
    • Mar 3, 2016 Naturalist's Notebook Guest Post: Photographing the Endangered Spirit Bear Mar 3, 2016
  • February 2016
    • Feb 24, 2016 Bernd Heinrich and the Case of the Dead Woodpecker Feb 24, 2016
    • Feb 5, 2016 Come Along On a One-Day, Three-Stop Antarctic Wildlife Adventure Feb 5, 2016
  • January 2016
    • Jan 26, 2016 Antarctic Adventures (Cont.): Grytviken and Jason Harbor Jan 26, 2016
    • Jan 23, 2016 Bats at the Mine Hill Reserve Jan 23, 2016
    • Jan 12, 2016 From Our Mailbag... Jan 12, 2016
    • Jan 6, 2016 Malheur Wildlife Refuge, the Militia and the Audubon Society Jan 6, 2016
    • Jan 6, 2016 Our Visit to the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, Site of the Militia Takeover Jan 6, 2016
  • December 2015
    • Dec 30, 2015 10 Nature Tips for a Fun 2016 Dec 30, 2015
    • Dec 22, 2015 Stuck at Sea In the Antarctic With A Rescued Bird, A Paintbrush and a Stowaway Dec 22, 2015
    • Dec 15, 2015 Don't Mess With a Fur Seal Dec 15, 2015
    • Dec 13, 2015 Time-lapse Painting a Chinstrap Penguin on a Ship in the Antarctic Dec 13, 2015
    • Dec 12, 2015 "One Minute With King Penguins" (a Naturalist's Notebook video) Dec 12, 2015
    • Dec 9, 2015 On a Beach With 200,000 King Penguins and Southern Elephant Seals Dec 9, 2015
    • Dec 6, 2015 Eight Things to Do If You Hit 30-Foot Waves On the Way to Antarctica Dec 6, 2015
    • Dec 2, 2015 Antarctic Diary: The Falklands' Endemic Birds and the Value of Sitting Still Dec 2, 2015
  • November 2015
    • Nov 29, 2015 "Prepare to Have Your Mind Blown": Ashore on the Falkland Islands Nov 29, 2015
    • Nov 28, 2015 Setting Sail for the Antarctic Nov 28, 2015
    • Nov 27, 2015 The Road to Antarctica: First Stop, Argentina Nov 27, 2015
    • Nov 26, 2015 A Thanksgiving Wish Nov 26, 2015
    • Nov 22, 2015 How the Two of Us Ended Up On an Adventure In Antarctica Nov 22, 2015
  • October 2015
    • Oct 25, 2015 Common Mergansers on Our Maine Bay Oct 25, 2015
  • August 2015
    • Aug 11, 2015 Dahlias Aug 11, 2015
    • Aug 6, 2015 What Does a Chickadee Egg Look Like? (A Specimen from Bernd Heinrich) Aug 6, 2015
  • June 2015
    • Jun 17, 2015 Our Northeast Harbor Summer Jun 17, 2015
  • April 2015
    • Apr 26, 2015 Our First London Marathon: From Dinosaurs to Prince Harry Apr 26, 2015
  • March 2015
    • Mar 28, 2015 Our Two Amazing Weeks with a Bobcat Mar 28, 2015
  • February 2015
    • Feb 23, 2015 10 Things You Missed at the Schoodic Institute's First Winter Festival Feb 23, 2015
    • Feb 17, 2015 Do Baboons Keep Dogs as Pets? Feb 17, 2015
  • January 2015
    • Jan 30, 2015 Why Is Maine Losing Its Seabirds? Jan 30, 2015
  • July 2014
    • Jul 16, 2014 Our Full Day-by-Day Schedule of Summer Workshops and Events Jul 16, 2014
  • May 2014
    • May 17, 2014 The Forest Where 3 Billion Birds Go Each Spring May 17, 2014
  • April 2014
    • Apr 17, 2014 Big Waves and Big Ideas Apr 17, 2014
  • March 2014
    • Mar 17, 2014 13.8 Billion Cheers to a Notebook Friend Who Just Helped Explain the Universe Mar 17, 2014
  • February 2014
    • Feb 22, 2014 Day 21 in Russia Feb 22, 2014
    • Feb 19, 2014 Day 18 in Russia (and Quite an Owl Sighting) Feb 19, 2014
    • Feb 16, 2014 Day 15 in Russia Feb 16, 2014
    • Feb 14, 2014 Day 13 in Russia Feb 14, 2014
    • Feb 11, 2014 Day 10 in Russia Feb 11, 2014
    • Feb 9, 2014 Day 7 in Russia Feb 9, 2014
    • Feb 6, 2014 Day 4 in Russia Feb 6, 2014
    • Feb 3, 2014 Day 1 in Russia Feb 3, 2014
  • January 2014
    • Jan 1, 2014 Pictures of the Year Jan 1, 2014
  • November 2013
    • Nov 20, 2013 Our Holiday Hours and the Road to 2014 Nov 20, 2013
  • July 2013
    • Jul 11, 2013 The Notebook Expands to Northeast Harbor Jul 11, 2013
  • June 2013
    • Jun 4, 2013 The Notebook Journey Jun 4, 2013
  • May 2013
    • May 29, 2013 Images From a Turtle Pond May 29, 2013
    • May 25, 2013 What Is a Boreal Forest and Why Is It Important? May 25, 2013
    • May 20, 2013 The Best Snowy Owl Story Ever May 20, 2013
    • May 14, 2013 Escaping on a Maine Trail May 14, 2013
    • May 2, 2013 Porcupine Couch Potatoes and a Vernal Pool Adventure with Bernd Heinrich May 2, 2013
  • April 2013
    • Apr 19, 2013 Illuminated Frogs' Eggs, Duck "Teeth" and More on that Boston Photo Apr 19, 2013
    • Apr 13, 2013 How to Become an Astronaut, Or Have Fun Trying Apr 13, 2013
    • Apr 8, 2013 Listen: Vernal Pool Wood Frogs Apr 8, 2013
    • Apr 7, 2013 Angry Birds (Or the Battle to be the Alpha Turkey) Apr 7, 2013
  • March 2013
    • Mar 31, 2013 'Chuckie's Back Mar 31, 2013
    • Mar 29, 2013 The Beautiful Earth, From Space Mar 29, 2013
    • Mar 27, 2013 The Excavating Chickadee and the Canine Taste Tester Mar 27, 2013
    • Mar 17, 2013 96 Hours in Cambridge: Harvard Rhinos, NASA Satellites, Glass Flowers and More Mar 17, 2013
    • Mar 7, 2013 Science, Music and Fun at Dartmouth Mar 7, 2013
    • Mar 2, 2013 Physic-al Comedy Mar 2, 2013
  • February 2013
    • Feb 28, 2013 Why Is Pamelia Painting a Billion Stars? Feb 28, 2013
    • Feb 16, 2013 Elephant Seals, Migrant Monarchs, Shadow Art...And a Ladder Accident Feb 16, 2013
    • Feb 6, 2013 Welcome to Pixar, Berkeley and the Fun Frontier of Astronomy Feb 6, 2013
    • Feb 1, 2013 The Notebook Heads to California Feb 1, 2013
  • January 2013
    • Jan 23, 2013 Coming to Acadia and Bar Harbor: The 2013 Family Nature Summit (and More) Jan 23, 2013
    • Jan 17, 2013 Hunger Games: A Sharp-Shinned Hawk, Two Goshawks and A Poor Red Squirrel Jan 17, 2013
    • Jan 10, 2013 Fishing Boats, Sea Creatures and Four Seconds of Human History Jan 10, 2013
    • Jan 7, 2013 One Robin in Winter Jan 7, 2013
    • Jan 3, 2013 Happy 2013—Our Big Bang Year Jan 3, 2013
  • December 2012
    • Dec 29, 2012 Closing Days of 2012 Dec 29, 2012
    • Dec 22, 2012 Woodpeckers, Science Stories and What Minus-41-Degree Air Does to a Bucket of Water Dec 22, 2012
    • Dec 11, 2012 Sunlight in the Darkest Month Dec 11, 2012
  • November 2012
    • Nov 25, 2012 An Icy World Nov 25, 2012
    • Nov 16, 2012 Fox Cam, the Birds-of-Paradise Project, Election Notes and Our Holiday Schedule Nov 16, 2012
    • Nov 8, 2012 Greetings from Russia and the Black Sea Nov 8, 2012
    • Nov 3, 2012 Where We're Going Nov 3, 2012
  • October 2012
    • Oct 30, 2012 Our Interactive Timeline Installation at the TEDx Maine Conference at Bates College Oct 30, 2012
    • Oct 19, 2012 Just a Thought... Oct 19, 2012
    • Oct 14, 2012 A Harp With No Strings Oct 14, 2012
    • Oct 10, 2012 The Isle of Skye Oct 10, 2012
  • September 2012
    • Sep 29, 2012 Illusions from Scotland Sep 29, 2012
    • Sep 25, 2012 The Notre Dame Sparrows Sep 25, 2012
    • Sep 21, 2012 A Notebook Road Trip Begins Sep 21, 2012
    • Sep 16, 2012 Loons and Lead Sep 16, 2012
    • Sep 12, 2012 Bates, Birds, Bones, Bugs, Bats and Bottle-Cap Art Sep 12, 2012
    • Sep 6, 2012 The Night the Ocean Twinkled Sep 6, 2012
  • August 2012
    • Aug 27, 2012 What a Week Aug 27, 2012
    • Aug 19, 2012 A Q-and-A with Bernd Heinrich Aug 19, 2012
    • Aug 17, 2012 Up Next: A Bird Walk and Talk with Jeff Wells Aug 17, 2012
    • Aug 13, 2012 Next Up: Big Bang Week Aug 13, 2012
    • Aug 9, 2012 More Olympic Shots Aug 9, 2012
    • Aug 3, 2012 Q-and-A with Olympic Medalist (and Avid Naturalist) Lynn Jennings Aug 3, 2012
  • July 2012
    • Jul 30, 2012 A Walk in the Park Jul 30, 2012
    • Jul 28, 2012 Green Olympics Jul 28, 2012
    • Jul 24, 2012 Off to the London Games Jul 24, 2012
    • Jul 19, 2012 It's Done Jul 19, 2012
    • Jul 11, 2012 What's a Dog For? Jul 11, 2012
    • Jul 7, 2012 A Tree Grows in Manhattan (But What Kind?) Jul 7, 2012
    • Jul 5, 2012 The Tarn and the Office Jul 5, 2012
    • Jul 2, 2012 Building a Better Robot: A Guest Blog By David Eacho Jul 2, 2012
  • June 2012
    • Jun 27, 2012 The Peanut Butter Jar and the Skunk Jun 27, 2012
    • Jun 25, 2012 A New Season Begins Jun 25, 2012
    • Jun 22, 2012 Spaceship Clouds (And Other Sightings) Jun 22, 2012
    • Jun 16, 2012 Eye Pod and Egg-Laying Turtles Jun 16, 2012
    • Jun 13, 2012 Binocular Bird, Olympic Fish, Debuting Dog Jun 13, 2012
    • Jun 9, 2012 The Wildflower Detective Jun 9, 2012
    • Jun 5, 2012 Glimpse of What's Coming Jun 5, 2012
    • Jun 2, 2012 Up for June Jun 2, 2012
  • May 2012
    • May 28, 2012 How to Extract Iron From Breakfast Cereal With a Magnet May 28, 2012
    • May 25, 2012 Tribute to a Friend May 25, 2012
    • May 15, 2012 How an Abandoned Navy Base Became a Mecca for Scientists, Naturalists, Artists, Educators... and Porcupines May 15, 2012
    • May 12, 2012 Happy Bird Day May 12, 2012
    • May 8, 2012 Time and Tide to Get Outside May 8, 2012
  • April 2012
    • Apr 30, 2012 A Trip to Vermont to See Bernd Heinrich Apr 30, 2012
    • Apr 21, 2012 Our Nest Eggs Apr 21, 2012
    • Apr 17, 2012 Up Cadillac Mountain Apr 17, 2012
    • Apr 15, 2012 A Shell In Wonderland Apr 15, 2012
    • Apr 14, 2012 Rube Goldberg in the 21st Century Apr 14, 2012
    • Apr 12, 2012 Woodpeckers in Love Apr 12, 2012
    • Apr 7, 2012 Take Two Hikes and Call Me In the Morning Apr 7, 2012
    • Apr 4, 2012 Great Blue Heron Eggs and Nest Apr 4, 2012
    • Apr 2, 2012 Jon Stewart, Chemistry Buff (And Other Surprises) Apr 2, 2012
  • March 2012
    • Mar 26, 2012 Painting Science and Nature Without a Brush (And a Super-Slo-Mo Eagle Owl) Mar 26, 2012
    • Mar 22, 2012 Inside the MDI Biological Lab Mar 22, 2012
    • Mar 19, 2012 Through the Lens Mar 19, 2012
    • Mar 17, 2012 500 Years of Women In Art In Less Than 3 Minutes (and Other March Madness) Mar 17, 2012
    • Mar 14, 2012 The Barred Owl and the Tree Lobster Mar 14, 2012
    • Mar 10, 2012 Observe. Draw. Don't Mind the Arsenic. Mar 10, 2012
    • Mar 8, 2012 Crow Tracks In Snow Mar 8, 2012
    • Mar 7, 2012 Hello...Sharp-Shinned Hawk? Mar 7, 2012
    • Mar 4, 2012 The Grape and the Football Field Mar 4, 2012
    • Mar 1, 2012 Leonardo Live (A da Vinci Quiz) Mar 1, 2012
  • February 2012
    • Feb 28, 2012 What Do Dogs Smell? Feb 28, 2012
    • Feb 25, 2012 The Mailbag Feb 25, 2012
    • Feb 22, 2012 Moody Maine Morning Feb 22, 2012
    • Feb 20, 2012 Who Was That Masked Naturalist? Feb 20, 2012
    • Feb 14, 2012 Biking on Siberian Pine Feb 14, 2012
    • Feb 13, 2012 Of Farm, Food and Song Feb 13, 2012
    • Feb 9, 2012 The Truth About Cats and Birds Feb 9, 2012
    • Feb 7, 2012 Just the Moon Feb 7, 2012
    • Feb 4, 2012 Tweet-Tweeting, A Porcupine Find and Algae for Rockets Feb 4, 2012
    • Feb 1, 2012 Harry Potter Sings About the Elements Feb 1, 2012
  • January 2012
    • Jan 30, 2012 Painting On Corn Starch (Or How to Have Fun with a Non-Newtonian Liquid) Jan 30, 2012
    • Jan 28, 2012 You've Just Found a Stranded Seal, Whale or Dolphin. What Do You Do? Jan 28, 2012
    • Jan 23, 2012 Art + Science + Vision = Microsculpture Jan 23, 2012
    • Jan 20, 2012 An Amazing Bridge Jan 20, 2012
    • Jan 18, 2012 Ice, Football and Smart Women Jan 18, 2012
    • Jan 12, 2012 Where a Forest Once Stood Jan 12, 2012
    • Jan 10, 2012 The Blue Jay and the Ant Jan 10, 2012
    • Jan 7, 2012 How Do You Mend a Broken Toe? Jan 7, 2012
    • Jan 3, 2012 Marching Back to the Office Jan 3, 2012
  • December 2011
    • Dec 31, 2011 Happy 2012 Dec 31, 2011
    • Dec 21, 2011 8 Hours, 54 Minutes of Sun Dec 21, 2011
    • Dec 17, 2011 Sloths Come to TV Dec 17, 2011
    • Dec 10, 2011 Charitable Thoughts Dec 10, 2011
    • Dec 6, 2011 Show 20 Slides, Talk for 20 Seconds Per Slide, Tell Us Something Fascinating. Go! Dec 6, 2011
  • November 2011
    • Nov 26, 2011 Science-Driven Fashion (As Envisioned in the 1930s) Nov 26, 2011
    • Nov 23, 2011 Day at the Zoo Nov 23, 2011
    • Nov 19, 2011 Otherworldly Dry Ice Art Nov 19, 2011
    • Nov 15, 2011 Gymnastic Gibbons Nov 15, 2011
    • Nov 12, 2011 Cockles and Starlings Nov 12, 2011
  • October 2011
    • Oct 19, 2011 Off to England Oct 19, 2011
    • Oct 5, 2011 Double-Double Total Rainbows Oct 5, 2011
    • Oct 1, 2011 Welcome to October of the Year...13,700,002,011? Oct 1, 2011
  • September 2011
    • Sep 23, 2011 The Seal Harbor Roadblock Sep 23, 2011
    • Sep 17, 2011 Birds, Dark Skies, Doc Holliday and the New Honey Champion Sep 17, 2011
    • Sep 11, 2011 Sea Dogs and Seahawks, 'Novas and 9/11 Sep 11, 2011
    • Sep 2, 2011 Crazy Sneakers and Changing Seasons Sep 2, 2011
  • August 2011
    • Aug 29, 2011 Wild and Windy Aug 29, 2011
    • Aug 27, 2011 Hurricane Irene Aug 27, 2011
    • Aug 24, 2011 Come to Our Thursday Night Talk: Saving the Chimpanzee Aug 24, 2011
    • Aug 21, 2011 How to Draw a World Map in 30 Seconds Aug 21, 2011
    • Aug 18, 2011 Coming to the Notebook On Saturday: An Eco-Smart Gardening Workshop and a Greenhouse on Wheels Aug 18, 2011
    • Aug 14, 2011 Quite a Week, Grasshopper Aug 14, 2011
    • Aug 7, 2011 The Sweet 16 Is Here Aug 7, 2011
    • Aug 3, 2011 Thuya Garden Aug 3, 2011
  • July 2011
    • Jul 29, 2011 Maine Summer Jul 29, 2011
    • Jul 23, 2011 Guest Blog: Harvard's Michael R. Canfield On What Naturalists Carry Jul 23, 2011
    • Jul 20, 2011 Earth News Is Here Jul 20, 2011
    • Jul 18, 2011 Margaret's Workshop Jul 18, 2011
    • Jul 14, 2011 Lost in Space? Jul 14, 2011
    • Jul 13, 2011 Shadows Jul 13, 2011
    • Jul 11, 2011 An Extraordinary (And Inspiring) Young Birder and Artist Jul 11, 2011
    • Jul 7, 2011 Margaret Krug Workshop Jul 7, 2011
    • Jul 4, 2011 Venturing Inside the Notebook Cave Jul 4, 2011
    • Jul 2, 2011 Stand Back—Volcano! Jul 2, 2011
  • June 2011
    • Jun 29, 2011 Look What Landed Jun 29, 2011
    • Jun 26, 2011 Sign Up for Workshops Jun 26, 2011
    • Jun 23, 2011 "The Inspired Garden" and Other Fun Jun 23, 2011
    • Jun 20, 2011 We're Open Jun 20, 2011
    • Jun 13, 2011 Notebook Countdown Jun 13, 2011
    • Jun 3, 2011 New Summer Program: Earth News for Kids Jun 3, 2011
  • May 2011
    • May 27, 2011 Amazing Bird Fallout May 27, 2011
    • May 24, 2011 Signs, Sightings and Bird-Friendly Coffee May 24, 2011
    • May 18, 2011 Science Winners, Butterfly Chasing and Chickens In a Vending Machine May 18, 2011
    • May 11, 2011 Movie Preview: Wings of Life May 11, 2011
    • May 6, 2011 Teenage Scientists and Ambitious Ants May 6, 2011
  • April 2011
    • Apr 29, 2011 Maine Morning Postcard Apr 29, 2011
    • Apr 27, 2011 Vegetable Orchestras and Birds Who Imitate Saws and Power Drills Apr 27, 2011
    • Apr 23, 2011 What's On the Other Side of the Earth? Apr 23, 2011
    • Apr 19, 2011 Exploring at Night Apr 19, 2011
    • Apr 15, 2011 Decoding da Vinci Apr 15, 2011
    • Apr 12, 2011 Jumpin' Jake Apr 12, 2011
    • Apr 8, 2011 Sweet Incentive Apr 8, 2011
    • Apr 6, 2011 Life In Slow Motion Apr 6, 2011
    • Apr 2, 2011 CSI: Maine Apr 2, 2011
  • March 2011
    • Mar 31, 2011 Ninety Seconds on Mercury Mar 31, 2011
    • Mar 29, 2011 Aristotle's Robin and Joe Torre's Heron Mar 29, 2011
    • Mar 26, 2011 The Play's the Thing Mar 26, 2011
    • Mar 23, 2011 Blue Birds and Blue Devils Mar 23, 2011
    • Mar 19, 2011 How a Nuclear Plant Nearly Was Built Next to Acadia National Park (Part I) Mar 19, 2011
    • Mar 16, 2011 Inside an Ant City Mar 16, 2011
    • Mar 12, 2011 Earthquake Artists and the Countdown to Pi (π) Day Mar 12, 2011
    • Mar 9, 2011 The Rhino Who Painted (and the Elephants Who Still Do) Mar 9, 2011
    • Mar 5, 2011 From Bumblebees to Michelangelo Mar 5, 2011
    • Mar 1, 2011 The Chipmunk Who Thought He Was a Groundhog Mar 1, 2011
  • February 2011
    • Feb 26, 2011 The Creature in the Fridge Feb 26, 2011
    • Feb 23, 2011 Evolution in Bar Harbor Feb 23, 2011
    • Feb 21, 2011 Bearing Up in New York City Feb 21, 2011
    • Feb 19, 2011 Ahoy! Sea Turkeys Feb 19, 2011
    • Feb 15, 2011 Music, Moscow and the Mailbag Feb 15, 2011
    • Feb 11, 2011 The Valentine Heart Feb 11, 2011
    • Feb 8, 2011 RIP, Barred Owl Feb 8, 2011
    • Feb 4, 2011 Groundhog Fever, Pluto, and the Hidden Chemistry of the Super Bowl Feb 4, 2011
    • Feb 2, 2011 Snow Joking Around Feb 2, 2011
  • January 2011
    • Jan 31, 2011 Of Mice and Moon Jan 31, 2011
    • Jan 29, 2011 Yellow Journalism? A Look at the Color of the Sun, the Super Bowl and Nat Geo Jan 29, 2011
    • Jan 26, 2011 Final Hours of a Duck Jan 26, 2011
    • Jan 24, 2011 How Cold Is It Where You Are? Jan 24, 2011
    • Jan 22, 2011 Rabbits' Luck Jan 22, 2011
    • Jan 20, 2011 Numbers, Doodling and Football Jan 20, 2011
    • Jan 19, 2011 Birds and the "Scary Movie Effect" Jan 19, 2011
    • Jan 17, 2011 Cold and Colder Jan 17, 2011
    • Jan 16, 2011 London's Olympian Fish Plan Jan 16, 2011
    • Jan 15, 2011 Whooping Cranes and Swimsuit Sands Jan 15, 2011
    • Jan 13, 2011 Iodine Contrast Jan 13, 2011
    • Jan 10, 2011 Bart Simpson and Acidic Words Jan 10, 2011
    • Jan 8, 2011 North Pole Shift, Whiz Kid Astronomer... Jan 8, 2011
    • Jan 6, 2011 Margaret Krug in American Artist Jan 6, 2011
    • Jan 4, 2011 James Bond and the Genius Jan 4, 2011
    • Jan 2, 2011 Water Hazard Jan 2, 2011
  • December 2010
    • Dec 31, 2010 The 2011 Crystal Ball Dec 31, 2010
    • Dec 28, 2010 Danger, Will Woodpecker! Dec 28, 2010
    • Dec 27, 2010 The Blizzard Theory Dec 27, 2010
    • Dec 23, 2010 Green Acres Dec 23, 2010
    • Dec 20, 2010 Naturally Frosted Dec 20, 2010
    • Dec 15, 2010 Let's See...How Many Turtle Doves? Dec 15, 2010
    • Dec 11, 2010 Real Dog Sledding Dec 11, 2010
    • Dec 11, 2010 Just Follow the Arrows Dec 11, 2010
    • Dec 9, 2010 Light Show Dec 9, 2010
    • Dec 6, 2010 Foxes in the Snow Dec 6, 2010
    • Dec 1, 2010 Ready for December Dec 1, 2010
  • November 2010
    • Nov 25, 2010 Turkey Day Trot Nov 25, 2010
    • Nov 21, 2010 We're Open Again Nov 21, 2010
    • Nov 10, 2010 Last Days in California Nov 10, 2010
    • Nov 9, 2010 Day at the Museum Nov 9, 2010
    • Nov 7, 2010 Land of the Giants Nov 7, 2010
  • October 2010
    • Oct 31, 2010 Oregon to California Oct 31, 2010
    • Oct 28, 2010 Checking Out Oregon's High Desert Oct 28, 2010
    • Oct 27, 2010 Boise and Birds Oct 27, 2010
    • Oct 26, 2010 A Day in Utah Oct 26, 2010
    • Oct 25, 2010 Blowing Into Idaho Oct 25, 2010
    • Oct 24, 2010 Welcome to Montana Oct 24, 2010
    • Oct 19, 2010 Big Cats Playing With Pumpkins Oct 19, 2010
    • Oct 17, 2010 Last Blooms Before the Frost Oct 17, 2010
    • Oct 12, 2010 The End of Our Regular Season Oct 12, 2010
    • Oct 8, 2010 Coming Saturday: Arthur Haines Oct 8, 2010
    • Oct 6, 2010 India's Pollinator Problem (and Other News) Oct 6, 2010
    • Oct 5, 2010 October at Eagle Lake Oct 5, 2010
    • Oct 3, 2010 Happy Bird Day Oct 3, 2010
    • Oct 2, 2010 Did a Mushroom Lead to the Word "Berserk"? Oct 2, 2010
  • September 2010
    • Sep 30, 2010 A Budding Naturalist at Age 14 Sep 30, 2010
    • Sep 25, 2010 A Rays Runaway Sep 25, 2010
    • Sep 23, 2010 Good Morning, Maine Sep 23, 2010
    • Sep 13, 2010 Whole Foods' Smart Move Sep 13, 2010
    • Sep 13, 2010 Three Months Later: The Great Sun Chips Bag Composting Test (And More) Sep 13, 2010
    • Sep 11, 2010 Stargazing and Other Fall Treats Sep 11, 2010
    • Sep 8, 2010 Big Numbers Sep 8, 2010
    • Sep 7, 2010 Maine. The Magazine Sep 7, 2010
    • Sep 4, 2010 The 2010 Honey Champion Sep 4, 2010
    • Sep 1, 2010 Newspaper Story on Pamelia and Her Tidal Photos Sep 1, 2010
  • August 2010
    • Aug 31, 2010 Disneynature's Pollinator Movie Aug 31, 2010
    • Aug 30, 2010 Migration Time Aug 30, 2010
    • Aug 28, 2010 What Happened to My Lunch Aug 28, 2010
    • Aug 25, 2010 Look Who Crawled In Aug 25, 2010
    • Aug 21, 2010 Scandal at the Sweet 16 Tournament: Did Fritz the Dog Influence the Outcome? Aug 21, 2010
    • Aug 12, 2010 Back to Work Aug 12, 2010
    • Aug 1, 2010 Next Stop: London Aug 1, 2010
  • July 2010
    • Jul 29, 2010 The Climbing Grey Fox Jul 29, 2010
    • Jul 28, 2010 Tonight's Maine Moon Jul 28, 2010
    • Jul 26, 2010 11 Things I Learned While Hanging Out at The Naturalist's Notebook This Week Jul 26, 2010
    • Jul 21, 2010 Straw Meets Potato (A Science Experiment) Jul 21, 2010
    • Jul 19, 2010 Attack of the Hungry Gull Jul 19, 2010
    • Jul 18, 2010 Photos From the Workshop Jul 18, 2010
    • Jul 17, 2010 Show Time Jul 17, 2010
    • Jul 15, 2010 An Exciting Spell in Maine Jul 15, 2010
    • Jul 13, 2010 Do You Get Things Like This In the Mail? Jul 13, 2010
    • Jul 9, 2010 New Muppet Species Found Jul 9, 2010
    • Jul 7, 2010 10 Things That Happened at The Notebook This Week Jul 7, 2010
    • Jul 4, 2010 Great Piece on Gulf Disaster Jul 4, 2010
    • Jul 1, 2010 Bar Harbor Times Article Jul 1, 2010
  • June 2010
    • Jun 29, 2010 Go Climb a Mountain Jun 29, 2010
    • Jun 25, 2010 Don't Swat That Mosquito! It's Part of an Artwork that Has People Buzzing Jun 25, 2010
    • Jun 21, 2010 Bangor Daily News Feature Jun 21, 2010
    • Jun 20, 2010 Happy Father's Day Jun 20, 2010
    • Jun 18, 2010 Another Fine Mess Jun 18, 2010
    • Jun 11, 2010 Sneak Peek at the Notebook Jun 11, 2010
    • Jun 2, 2010 The Sun Chip Composting Test Jun 2, 2010
  • May 2010
    • May 31, 2010 Memorial Day Animal Picnic May 31, 2010
    • May 28, 2010 Tadpole Buddies, a Plant Genius and My Lonely Yellow Warbler May 28, 2010
    • May 24, 2010 The Gorilla Connection May 24, 2010
    • May 22, 2010 Amazing Green Apartment: 344 sf, 24 rms May 22, 2010
    • May 20, 2010 Nice Notebook Review May 20, 2010
    • May 19, 2010 Oil and Sea Turtles Don't Mix May 19, 2010
    • May 16, 2010 Good Way to Start the Day May 16, 2010
    • May 14, 2010 DNA, DMC and UFO? May 14, 2010
    • May 13, 2010 The Chiusdino Climber May 13, 2010
    • May 10, 2010 The Notebook in Italy: Our Tuscan Top 10 May 10, 2010
  • April 2010
    • Apr 26, 2010 Quick Hello From Italy Apr 26, 2010
    • Apr 22, 2010 Happy Earth Day Apr 22, 2010
    • Apr 20, 2010 Utter Horsetail! Apr 20, 2010
    • Apr 18, 2010 Elephant Meets Dog Apr 18, 2010
    • Apr 17, 2010 Maine Movie Night: Earth Disaster! Apr 17, 2010
    • Apr 15, 2010 Panda-monium (and Maine in Blue) Apr 15, 2010
    • Apr 14, 2010 Another Problem Caused By Deforestation Apr 14, 2010
    • Apr 13, 2010 Planting and Painting Dahlias (and Other April Adventures) Apr 13, 2010
    • Apr 11, 2010 Photos from a Maine Walk Apr 11, 2010
    • Apr 10, 2010 A Simple, Sound Nature Tip Apr 10, 2010
    • Apr 2, 2010 The Highly Evolved Dog Apr 2, 2010
  • March 2010
    • Mar 30, 2010 On Weather, Longfellow and Jamie Oliver Mar 30, 2010
    • Mar 27, 2010 Olympics' Green Legacy Mar 27, 2010
  • February 2010
    • Feb 6, 2010 Moon Snail in Maine Winter Feb 6, 2010
  • January 2010
    • Jan 30, 2010 Pluto Revisited Jan 30, 2010
    • Jan 20, 2010 Snow Cat Jan 20, 2010
  • December 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 A view of nature... Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 The Natural League Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 Seal Harbor Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 The Natural History Deck Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 The Coolest Shop... Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 Bees and Honey Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 The Farm Room Dec 20, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 The Naturalist's Room Dec 20, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 The Notebook Dec 20, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 Grand Opening! Dec 20, 2009