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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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    • Welcome!
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News, Notes and Photos from the Field (Craig and Pamelia's Blog)

The robin spends part of each day huddled in a small apple tree.

One Robin in Winter

January 7, 2013

The wind chills here on the Maine coast have been dipping into the minus double digits. When we spotted a lone robin (a bird we don't often see in early January) with its feathers puffed up, plucking berries off a holly bush just a few feet from our front door, we grew worried. There aren't many visible berries left. Robins don't eat bird seed. Their preferred food (worms, larvae, caterpillars, beetles and other insects) isn't available right now. How would this robin survive the brutally cold days ahead?

We read up on robins and their winter behavior. Those who end up in northern New England at this time of year (having migrated from even farther north, generally) are said to travel in flocks, searching the countryside for berries on trees and shrubs, filling up on that fuel, and then moving on like nomads. According to the Massachusetts Audubon website (which says that it receives hundreds of messages about robin sightings each winter, some of which report hundreds of birds in a flock), "There isn't much one can feed robins in the winter. They are very adept at finding their preferred food and rarely visit feeding stations. During severe weather, robins may eat bread, raisins, and pieces of apples placed on the ground; but it is more likely that squirrels will find these treats first."

That was reassuring, except that this was one robin, on its own, looking vulnerable, and the reading on the thermometer (never mind the wind chill) was zero degrees. I remembered that we had an old apple sitting on the dining table. So I cut up the apple and set out the pieces near that holly bush. Within a few minutes, the robin was on the ground pecking at it.

Hmmmm, we thought. Do we have any raisins in the house? Nope. "What about frozen blueberries," Pamelia said. "And pieces of suet?"

The front-walk feast we set out for the robin.

By the next morning, after a trip to the store, we had added frozen blueberries, dried cranberries and cherries, suet crumbs and dried mealworms to the mix—and the robin started coming to feed three times a day.(Just for the record, we got the mealworms at Agway, not the grocery store.)

A satisfied diner.

My perspective on extreme cold weather and how hard it is on wildlife—especially small birds—was altered several years ago by Bernd Heinrich's book Winter World: The Ingenuity of Animal Survival. Here's what Bernd (who checked in the other day and told us that the weather at his cabin in western Maine has been bitterly cold) writes about chickadees and their daily battle to maintain enough body fat and energy to survive when the temperature plummets:

"[C]hickadees are already close to an energy edge at [32 degrees Fahrenheit), far from the lowest temperatures they might encounter during any winter night...[Researcher Susan Chaplain's] chickadees did not have sufficient caloric reserves in fat to make it through a night at [32 degrees F] if they continued to regulate the same body temperature at night as during the day. However, she discovered that...they stretched their fat reserves by lowering their body temperature to [86 to 89.6 degrees Fahrenheit from] the [107.6 degrees] of normally regulated body temperature....Nevertheless, even with the caloric savings from [self-induced] hypothermia, the chickadees' fat reserves in the morning were insufficient to last them through another day and night, such as could occur during a severe blizzard. To survive such commonly occurring emergencies or temperatures much lower than [32 degrees F] would require them to have a special shelter at night where air temperatures are higher and and convective cooling minimized and considerable energy would be saved."

These mealworms seemed like the perfect protein booster for the robin.

So it's tough out there for songbirds. That's why we try to be conscientious about keeping our feeders filled and, on occasion, sharing our apples, dried fruit and frozen blueberries with avian visitors. We're curious to see how long our robin stays around. Any bird reports to share from your area?

Best Bird Photos of 2012 Just got the latest issue of Audubon, which features the winners of the magazine's annual photography contest. The grand champion was the cover photo below of a Northern flicker, taken by Alice Cahill. If you'd like to see others, check out this link to the Audubon website: http://www.audubonmagazine.org/multimedia/2012-photo-awards-top-100-0

Top 100 Science Strories of the Past Year (Cont.) Having give you numbers 100 through 70, we now continue our countdown of Discover magazine's rankings of the most important events in science in 2012:

discover cover

69: The development of a drug that, by repairing a flawed protein, can cure about 4% of patients suffering from cystic fibrosis—that is, those patients whose disease is caused by that one particular protein mutation. Progress is being made on a drug that would help about 50% of people afflicted with cystic fibrosis.

68: The donation of two satellite telescopes to NASA by a U.S. spy organization called the National Reconnaissance Office. Upon receiving the telescopes, NASA discovered that the spy organization is using optics far superior to any ever developed by NASA, including those in the Hubble telescope.

67: Research suggesting that tigers develop stripes because of two proteins that work alternately as "activators" and "inhibitors" and thus stimulate skin cells to create bands of different color fur.

66: A study that calls into question earlier research showing that eating an extremely low-calorie diet prolongs life. The new research, done on rhesus monkeys, compared a low-cal group with a group eating a moderate, healthful diet; both groups lived the same amount of time. It's worth noting, however, that the study found that the low-cal group had a lower rate of cancer and diabetes—and worth reiterating that the low-cal group was being compared to a group that was eating a healthful diet.

65: The discovery of three amazing types of animals: the first native spider family identified in North America since 1890 (the hooked-leg spider, found by cave explorers in Oregon); the world's tiniest frog (Paedophryne amanuensis, the size of a housefly and found by an LSU herpetologist who heard it chirping in a Papua New Guinea forest); and a carnivorous sea sponge (Chondrocladia lyra, spotted 11,000 feet deep in the Pacific off the California coast by scientists from the Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Center).

The hooked-leg spider.

64:The sighting of the most distant giant cluster of galaxies ever seen, dubbed El Gordo (the Fat One) and located about 7 billion light years away.

63: Encouraging progress in the fight against Alzheimer's disease through techniques such as stem-cell-based computer models and experiments on the workings of a damaging protein called tau.

62: A surge in cyber attacks, including attacks on Iran that appear to have emanated from the United States.

61: The revised assessment of the age of cave art using more advanced techniques. The new methodology revealed that some of the art is much older than previously thought. The illustration of a red disk in El Castillo cave in Spain was found to be 40,800 years old, making it, in Discover's words, "the oldest piece of European art by 5,000 years." The art is so old that there is now a debate over whether it was created by modern humans or by Neanderthals.

60: Improvement in masers, microwave-beam-producing devices that Discover calls "the laser's Cold War relative." Once too bulky to be practical, masers are now more compact and may lead to improvements in GPS systems, radio astronomy and devices used to test blood and the cleanliness of food and air.

Answer to the Last Puzzler No human ever looked at the sky through a telescope before 1608.

Today's Puzzler Louis Braille died 104 years ago this week at age 43. Blinded by an accident while playing with an awl at age four, he went on to invent a system of writing and reading that uses a code made up of six raised dots. What inspired him to invent this code?

a) the pattern of holes made by a woodpecker in a tree on the grounds of his school b) his work sewing buttons on jackets at his school's workshop c) a visit to his school by a soldier who told him of a 12-dot code system used by soldiers to pass instructions to each other at night

By: Craig Neff
Tags Alice Cahill, Audubon photo contest, Bernd Heinrich, carnivorous sea sponge, cave art Spain, Discover magazine, hooked-leg spiders, mealworms, Monterey Bay Aquarium Research Center, oldest cave art, robins in winter, Susan Chaplain, tiger stripes, top science stories of 2012, Winter World, world's smallest frog
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Bernd, outside the detached studio/office at his home in Burlington, with a quick raven drawing he did for us to use in a how-to-draw-a-raven display at The Naturalist’s Notebook.

A Q-and-A with Bernd Heinrich

August 19, 2012

On Tuesday, August 21, Bernd Heinrich is coming to The Naturalist's Notebook. The world-renowned biologist, naturalist and writer will be giving a talk and book signing at 4 p.m. and will be around the Notebook earlier in the day as well. Working in conjunction with the Schoodic Education and Research Center (SERC) Institute, we have arranged for him to also give a talk and book signing at a larger venue—the Moore Auditorium at the SERC campus in Schoodic—at 7 p.m. on Monday, August 20.

Bernd's Aug. 20 talk at SERC will be entitled, "Decoding the Color Code of Bird's Eggs." Here's Bernd's description of it: "We all know that birds' eggs are decorated in amazing patterns of colors and designs. What do they mean? I will talk about the problems birds face in nesting, and how the color of their eggs is part of that adaptive biology."

His Aug. 21 talk at The Naturalist's Notebook will be more wide-ranging and casual, and he'll be happy to field questions about his life, his career, his books, his artwork, ravens, bumblebees and other topics. We are making Aug. 21 into our first annual Big Bang Day, with activities all day long, including an Olympic picnic on the Seal Harbor green at 11:30 a.m. with three-time Olympic runner Lynn Jennings.

But back to Bernd. He's a rare individual, in the best sense. To fully appreciate his work, his life and his approach to studying nature, you're best off reading some of his books. They will take you deep into the Maine woods, down into wintertime animal burrows, inside the tiny bodies of insects and to many other fascinating places. One of my favorites among his books is The Snoring Bird, the extraordinary story of his family and his life, from fleeing the Red Army in Germany in World War II to surviving in the woods for four years at war's end to coming to America (to western Maine) as a grade-schooler and building a new and very different life. As with all of his works, the book is visual, vivid and rich with detail. "I try to use the fewest number of words with the most meaning," Bernd told documentary filmmaker Jan Cannon in describing his writing. "In other words, vagueness is something I hate. It's got to be specific."

That specificity reflects Bernd's scientific exactitude and boundless curiosity. He wants to know not just what, when and where, but also why and how. Every answer raises a new question for him to pursue—and he will never run out of questions.

Whether or not you can make it to SERC or The Naturalist's Notebook this week to hear and meet Bernd—and to see the 80 original paintings and illustrations of Bernd's that we are displaying all season—I hope you'll take the time to sink into some of his writings. I asked him about his latest book (among other subjects) in a Q-and-A with him. Here are parts of that Q-and-A along with a couple of questions he answered in an interview with his publisher:

1) What was the genesis of your new book, Life Everlasting: The Animal Way of Death? It started as “Nature’s Undertakers,” and “Life Everlasting” was at first the subtitle, but as it developed it became more about life than about death, and so the Life of it came up to the front. The theme of the book is that all of life is interconnected—in a natural system there is no end, just transformations from one form into others.

I decided to write the book for several reasons. First, a friend who started to have doubts about his immortality asked me if I would be willing to help facilitate his passage into ravens [to be naturally recycled]. This prompted me to begin to doubt my own longevity in human form. At the time I was at my cabin [in western Maine] doing an observational study of burying beetles, who literally bury the carcasses of mice and birds. As fas as I know, we are the only other species that does something similar, although for a different purpose. I knew what the purpose was for the beetles. It made a lot of sense. But for humans? I wasn't so sure. Some societies do not and or had not practiced it. Then I thought of the almost total disconnect in our modern lives from any considerations of the natural world and how disastrous our cultural trajectory will be if we continue that way.

2) What was the most surprising thing you learned while researching the book?

I don't do much "research" by Internet. What I do learn there is by definition not new. The only thing that can be new is that which comes from original observation. And the most surprising observation that I made was how a species of burying beetle, which is bright orange and black when it is on the ground burying a carcass, is "instantly" (less than a second) yellow and black, and mimics about six species of bumblebees that have a similar color pattern. Of course this is not a real transformation, which is what the book is about. It's instead a fake transformation, one that helps to preserve the beetle in its present form on average a little longer.

3) What other observations did you draw upon?

I had a start with over 25 years of research with ravens; I still know a couple personally near my camp. As mentioned, I did an informal study of the beetles one summer, and then I saw all sorts of other animals getting in on the recycling act. I facilitated observations by putting out road-kill that was too large to be buried by the beetles. These ranged from squirrels to deer, and for something even larger, I found a moose in my woods that had been killed by the tick disease. And I reached back in my Africa experiences of seeing the often exciting quick dispositions of huge animal carcasses by lions, hyenas and vultures, and that got me to thinking of even bigger carcasses than elephants’—namely trees—which were right next to me at the cabin in the woods.

4) We have historically seen nature’s undertakers as repulsive—disgustingly living off life rather than giving new life. Yet we believed in everlasting life for ourselves, and/or in reincarnation. Where did these ideas come from?

I believe they came then, as now, from our direct observations of nature. We saw an egg turn into a bird, a grub into a beetle, a caterpillar into a butterfly, a tadpole into frog. Before we knew how that happened or even could happen, why would we not suppose that a prince could turn into a toad, or into anything else? There was no logic because we had no relevant facts, so there was no possibility for understanding either the constraints or possibilities.

5) You seem to approach life with endless curiosity and enthusiasm. How did you develop those traits?

I can only speculate, and my main thesis would be that I'm probably not much different from anyone else who has been brought up with very little except essentials, and who is then forced to concentrate on them instead of the extraneous that divert attention. Many are now diverted only by the extraneous! I had mentors who inspired me, because they gave me a vision of the beautiful and grand.

6) You're a scientist, naturalist, writer and artist.How do those pursuits reinforce each other in your work? Do you think of yourself primarily as one of them?

I see it more in terms of metamorphosis. I started off as a "nature boy" running free in the woods. This got me interested in life, so I became at heart a naturalist, and from that I became a biologist, that is, a life scientist. As a scientist I communicate about nature by writing and by art. I am a visual person, and when I see a wonderful story in nature, it is almost always at least in part in terms of the actors, not just what they do. I had found that if I trusted someone else to tell the story I saw, with their pictures, it somehow seemed not quite right.

7) How often do you draw or paint? How and where do you like to work on pieces?

I wish I could draw a lot more than I do now, which is seldom. Ninety-five percent of my time is spent trying to "see" the story. Right now, for example, I am trying to keep track of bird pairs and their nests: Three pairs of sapsuckers, two of blue-headed vireos, two of phoebes, one of broad-wing hawk. Sometimes at critical times I've had to spend most of the day watching a single nest and pair, to get enough connecting facts to see a pattern. Eventually I see the subject in a situation or pose that captures the visual aspect of the story. Then when I get back to my desk I use materials collected on site, and compose along with photographs if possible.

8) What do you enjoy most about drawing and painting?

It's kind of shamanic—I mean, here is something in nature, then it's in your mind as a surface reality, and next it's processed by the mind in an effort see it as it REALLY is, and then you CREATE it to show it. It's like preserving something, passing it on, to what could be the next person, maybe removed to another place, another time.

9) How would you describe your writing process? It tends to be episodic. I have a lot to do all the time, and so I try to get the most trivial things done first. I don't want to have something hanging over me, but instead want to feel free, to be inspired. I make the most rapid progress where I find passion. Since I usually have a number of things going at the same time, whenever I get bored with one, I'm apt to get inspired by the other. And when with neither, then I go run. This clears my head and I'm ready to sit down and relax.

10) Do you have a favorite among the books you've written?

I think it would be Racing the Antelope. (I like this title better than Why We Run, which was a title chosen for the paperback, for commercial reasons.) The Snoring Bird may be a toss-up choice.

11) Do you know yet what your next book or books will be about?

Another, titled The Homing Instinct, was already in draft form before I started writing Life Everlasting, but all of my current bird-watching (as opposed to just seeing different birds) will probably also become a book.

12) What writers have influenced your writing?

As a kid I read a lot of the adventure stories of people who explored the world. The author and writing style didn't matter to me as much as the content: What new things could they show? That was the draw. I later read a lot of John McPhee because he made the detail of "ordinary" things seem important, and hence interesting. I hesitate to start naming names, because that necessarily means a list of exclusions, and comparing apples to oranges.

13) How would you compare the young Bernd Heinrich who had just finished his Ph.D. at UCLA in 1970 with the Bernd Heinrich of today?

It is hard to be objective about oneself, although it is important that one is. I honestly am not aware of differences, except in the things I did, which are the result of circumstances.

14) What are the most valuable lessons you've learned in that time?

I've learned that just about everything that I have done, even if it didn't bear fruit, turned out to be either important and/or valued by me now, provided I'd put my best effort into it at the time. I learned that everything has consequences, and it's best to start early. I have planted trees, literally and figuratively, every time I moved someplace, and they please me and give me satisfaction now, as they did the whole time that they grew.

15) You've written that your father, who was the world's foremost expert on ichneumon wasps and one of the leading natural history specimen collectors in the great 19th century tradition, was left behind by the world of science in the mid-20th century when the focus shifted toward molecular studies and lab research. How has science evolved since you started your career?

I think there are phases, topics, or subjects, that are "in" and "out." I think mostly they are driven by methods that open up new ways of seeing more quickly and more easily. So the hard-to-do gets left till later. I don't think science "evolves" so much as it changes, much as art does, or other fashions.

15) How technologically plugged in are you? I started out thinking science involved mastering specific techniques. Then I found out that almost as soon as I learned "the" technique, it became obsolete; it had all been a waste of time. This biased me. I'm only now starting to learn to use a computer. I could not even type before. I've had to learn to type with two fingers and do it very poorly and slowly. I've only recently started using Google and been flabbergasted. I'm afraid that it will become an alternate world to the real one. The ultimate consequences are a complete unknown. And I doubt that they have been thought out beyond the next few steps.

16) Do you have an all-time favorite scientist or naturalist? Or science or nature book?

No. I see many differences, and it's the differences mostly that attract. I can no more compare any of those than whether I like an oriole better than a crow or an eagle.

17) Anyone who has read your books knows that you spend many hours in the field observing your subjects, sometimes sitting a whole day in a blind in sub-zero weather in the Maine woods near your cabin. I think you once wrote that in terms of hours, science is 99.9 percent dog work and .1 percent inspiration. What's going on in your head as you sit through those long stretches in the field when nothing is happening?

I am no longer doing it to the extent that it was necessary before, to get the required replication for scientific publication. At this point I am more of a naturalist and can be satisfied if I see the story, and not be required to convince everyone of it with fool-proof evidence. I did it before by giving myself the justification—here I am proving something that nobody in the history of the world has ever seen before. To go through it was like running a long-distance race: Every single step was important—it all meant a lot. Now information has become so specific, so minute, that we know more and more about less and less, and often it is easily available, and masked by false claims because of the avalanche of information available via electronics rather than meticulously written in refereed journals, that my previous grand imaginings seem almost trivial.

18) You're also a highly accomplished long-distance runner. How does running complement your work and other pursuits?

Running is a relief. It's like I imagine a yoga exercise might be for some. Provided it is not intense, I often think of things while running that just pop up. On the other hand, when it's intense, then the aftermath opens the floodgates to relaxation and thinking and doing.

19) You once set an American record by running 156 miles in 24 hours on the track at Bowdoin College. What inspired you to take on such an extreme physical and mental challenge? What stands out in your memory of it? How did you stay mentally fresh for so many laps?

I had the conviction at the time that I could do it—"it" meaning the American record—because I had experienced other long races and not just survived but sped up at the end. It seemed an absolutely trivial effort—just one day at the end of only two or three months of preparation. On the other hand, I had put 95 percent more effort into my science every day, over decades, and often "earned" hardly any recognition for it. To the contrary, I'd been singled out for derision [by certain political leaders opposed to government spending on what they deemed to be frivolous science] for "trying to find out how bees make honey" and "how ravens get dinner dates."

20) As a scientist, what are your greatest concerns about the future of the Earth and its species, including humans?

Ultimately it all boils down to too many people. A few bears can shit in the woods and it fertilizes the trees and makes them grow, and all benefit, etc. But you put a million of them into a square mile, and you've got a problem; we're heading that way.

21) Do you have any ideas on how to get people (especially kids) away from electronic screens and out into nature?

I wish I knew. Make someone do something and that’s what they’ll want to avoid above all else. Computer screens are here to stay, and nature is off-limits to many. The mantra is “do not touch, do not disturb, look only.” Who wants that?

22) If you could learn the answers to any three unanswered questions about science and nature, which questions would you most want answered?

It would be great to know what each of the very different calls that a raven makes, means. It would be fun to know how DNA is configured to make make a dove coo and a red-eyed vireo innately know how to find a piece of wasp paper to incorporate onto its nest, given it has never seen either that paper or a nest. I'd like to know how a logical mind "works," as opposed to many of ours, and how it all differs from that of a computer.

23) I can't end without one raven question. How can a person with an untrained bird-watching eye distinguish a crow from a raven?

From a distance? Forget it! You cannot tell in words. The person HAS to see both at the same time, or in a close interval and with excellent recall. Contact is essential. Given that, see the size difference, see the flapping flight of a crow vs. the gliding flight (usually) of the raven. See the "wedge-shaped" long tail of the crow vs. the shorter "square" tail of crow. From up close there are a dozen feather postures that can change over seconds in a raven. Ravens have a thicker beak (but some will say a crow beak is HUGELY thick!). Voice is hugely important, but of course which call? Ravens have some 60 or so very different odd calls, and can also improvise.

By: Craig Neff
Tags A Year In the Maine Woods, Bernd Heinrich, Bernd Heinrich interview, Bumblebee Economics, In a Patch of Fireweed, John McPhee, Life Everlasting, Mind of the Raven, One Man's Owl, Summer World, The Nesting Season, The Snoring Bird, Why We Run, Winter World
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Vermont is dairy country, and Bernd lives just up the hill from this idyllic scene.

A Trip to Vermont to See Bernd Heinrich

April 30, 2012

Bernd Heinrich is one of the world's foremost naturalists, biologists and science and nature writers. He is the subject of an inspiring documentary by filmmaker Jan Cannon called An Uncommon Curiosity. Having read many of Bernd's books (some of them New York Times bestsellers), including Mind of the Raven, Ravens in Winter, Winter World (about how animals survive in snow and cold), the Thoreau-esue A Year In the Maine Woods and The Snoring Bird (a can't-put-it-down account of the extraordinary, war-torn saga of his family, especially his father, Gerd, himself a great naturalist and a world-traveling museum-specimen collector), I often find myself trying to think like him when I walk through the woods—observing extra closely, looking for clues, posing questions to myself about what I see and hear.

One of the highlights at The Naturalist's Notebook this summer will be an August visit from Bernd. He will give a talk, sign books and take part in some fun activities that, in the tradition of the Notebook, combine nature, science and art. This week Pamelia and I drove to Burlington, Vermont, to talk to Bernd and look at his exceptional body of drawings and paintings of the natural world. We'll be presenting a major show of his work all summer.

Bernd, who is an emeritus professor of biology at the University of Vermont, welcomed us to his home outside Burlington.

Pamelia and I took a triangulated route to Burlington by way of southern New Hampshire, where we made another Notebook-related stop. After seven-and-a-half hours on the road—through the White Mountains and the Green Mountains and past lovely stands of birch, their new leaves billowing in ephemeral clouds of light yellow-green—we pulled into Burlington, one of the country's most progressive and environmentally minded cities, set on Lake Champlain. As we ate dinner that night, discussing how fortunate we were to be meeting with a naturalist known as (among other distinctions) the world's leading raven expert, I glanced up at a TV above the bar and saw an ad for a new movie: The Raven. Good omen.

Bernd's pet rats seemed delighted to meet us, as did a pair of friendly dogs.

Our five hours with Bernd the next day were memorable indeed. His home is set in beautiful countryside overlooking a beaver pond with a lodge in the middle. A goose nests on top of the beaver lodge. In his kitchen Bernd poured me a cup of coffee from a Mason jar on the stove and added milk and honey, a tasty combination I'd never tried before. (Bernd, the author of Bumblebee Economics, is also a beekeeper, though his bees mysteriously died over the winter, perhaps as part of the widespread colony-collapse phenomenon.) After chatting about birds for a while, we retreated to his detached studio, where Bernd started pulling out boxes and file folders full of wonderful sketches, drawings and paintings of plants, fungi and wildlife. Some dated back to his days as a PhD. student at UCLA and even to his childhood. "You don't know it until you draw it," Bernd said with a smile.

Bernd showing Pamelia and me art pieces in his studio.

I don't want to leak too much of what happened after that—you'll be able to see the results if you come to The Naturalist's Notebook this summer—but I will note that Bernd, ever the enthusiastic scientist, excused himself a couple of times to go watch sapsuckers. He has observed some fascinating behavior involving sapsuckers recently and he can't wait to figure out answers to some of the questions he has about the birds.

This illustration shows the skulls of a blue jay (upper left), a crow (lower left) and a raven, all members of the corvid family.

Some of his work, such as this painting of winter finches, still had the Post-it notes stuck on by his book publishers as instructions to printers.

A few of Bernd's books in the studio.

Bernd has some books on his shelves that you probably don't have on yours.

Bernd caught this mouse (with his drawing eye) at snack time.

This sapsucker pops its head out in one corner of a larger painting. Bernd has been doing his sapsucker research both at his home and at his beloved cabin in rural western Maine, where he also has conducted much of his raven research over the years.

Bernd wrote us naturalist's notes to go with certain pieces we took with us. Most of his pieces already have notes and observations written on them describing the species or behavior shown.

As we were getting ready to leave, we saw what Bernd said was the first white-throated sparrow he'd spotted this year.

You'll hear me say this more than once before the year is through, but take the time to read some of Bernd's books if you want to deepen your appreciation of the world around you. And come to the Notebook this summer if you'd like to see a show of truly remarkable naturalist art (and buy more of of his books). Thank you, Bernd, for giving us a day we'll never forget.

On our drive home, we passed through Rumford, Maine, where the falls were roaring after a day of heavy rain.

Fluke Sighting

Vermont may be New England's only landlocked state, but these whales' tales greeted us at the edge of Burlington. The black granite sculpture, made in 1989 and officially called Reverence, is meant as a statement on the fragility of the Earth. Ice cream buffs might be interested to know that it's located near Ben & Jerry's headquarters.

A fine forest fern fiddlehead face, unfurling—future fire fuel?

Fern Fact (er, Fun Fact) of the Day Part of Pamelia's research for a very colorful 2012-13 installation at The Naturalist's Notebook has taken her deep into the history of the Earth and the universe. This week, as often happens, she mentioned to me something amazing: Most of the coal in the world today comes from ferns that grew between 360 million and 300 million years ago, during the Carboniferous period, a time in our planetary history that saw amphibians and land plants prosper and that derives its name from a Latin term meaning "coal-bearing." Most of the land back then was warm and swampy, so that the continents were covered with forests of ferns. When these ferns died, they formed thick layers of dead plants, sank into the ground, and were transformed by heat and pressure into the form of carbon that we know as coal—and call, appropriately, a fossil fuel.

Answer to the Last Puzzler One reason that many birds' eggs evolved as oval shaped rather than round is that oval eggs don't roll off flat surfaces on which birds would lay them. (Try rolling an egg and you'll see that it doesn't move in a straight line, it traces a circle and comes back to where it started.) More birds survive if eggs don't roll off, fall to the ground and break. Any cook who's ever set an chicken's egg on a kitchen countertop should be grateful.

Today's Puzzler 1) How many octopus species are there?
a) 28
b) 289
c) 2,890

2) How tall is the tallest tree on Earth (a redwood)?
a) 298 feet
b) 379 feet
c) 415 feet

—Craig Neff and Pamelia Markwood

By: Craig Neff
Tags A Year In the Maine Woods, Ben & Jerry's, Bernd Heinrich, Bernd Heinrich art, Bernd Heinrich studio, Burlington Vermont, Burlington whales tails, coal Carboniferous period, Craig Neff, ferns, Green Mountains, Mind of the Raven, octopus species, Pamelia Markwood, sapsuckers, The Snoring Bird, White Mountains, white-throated sparrow, Winter World, world's tallest tree
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Harry Potter Sings About the Elements

February 1, 2012

There are 118 chemical elements in the periodic table.

Only 102 of those had been discovered in 1959 when singer-humorist-satirist Tom Lehrer decided to squeeze all of them into a catchy, rapid-fire ditty called The Elements, sung to the tune of the Major-General's Song from Gilbert and Sullivan's The Pirates of Penzance. If you can memorize the lyrics—yes, I'm hereby challenging you—you'll be halfway to an advanced knowledge of chemistry.

Only today did I happen upon a video of Harry Potter—that is, actor Daniel Radcliffe—singing The Elements on a BBC show. And quite well, I might add, if a bit too fast for a first-time listener to actually make out the names of bismuth, bromine and lithium, among others. If we were all still living at Hogwarts, of course, Harry's brainiac friend Hermione Granger would have been the one who had memorized the song.

Lehrer, whom Radcliffe calls "the cleverest and funniest man of the 20th century," was (and probably still is) an intellectual wizard. He earned a degree in math from Harvard at age 19, worked as a researcher at Los Alamos and taught at MIT. He gave up some of his edgier songwriting after Henry Kissinger was awarded the 1973 Nobel Peace Prize, a selection that Lehrer said made political satire obsolete. Anyhow, here is his original version of The Elements:

Football (Part II)

While we're on the topic of chemistry, you may recall that The Notebook successfully predicted the winners of the NFL conference championships games by analyzing the elements represented by each team's quarterback. Now we've reached the Super Bowl, with element number 12, magnesium, otherwise known as New England Patriots quarterback Tom Brady (uniform number 12) facing element number 10, neon, otherwise known as New York Giants quarterback Eli Manning (uniform number 10).

I'm encountering massive interference in my effort to predict a Super Bowl winner. Must be the recent solar eruptions, which caused the biggest radiation storm since 2005 (http://www.space.com/14319-huge-solar-eruption-sparks-radiation-storm.html). As you no doubt remember, Magnesium Brady and Neon Manning met in the Super Bowl three years after that 2005 radiation storm, and Neon won. But New England fans recall that the key play in that victory was a once-in-10-million-years event—an occurence that scientists say is exactly as statistically probable as a three-mile-in-diameter meteor hitting the Earth—on which a Giants player, David Tyree, caught a pass by pinning the ball against the top of his helmet. 

The fact remains that magnesium is a strong structural metal with explosive qualities while neon is a non-reactive gas that needs an outside spark of electricity to shine. You don't have to be scientist to know that neon tends to glow brighter in big cities like New York than in humbler metropolises such as Indianapolis, site of this year's Super Bowl. Blame the solar flares (or the almost palpable Go Pats! atmospheric pressure squeezing in on me here in northern New England) if our reading on this is wrong, but the electrons in front of me are spelling out M-a-g-n-s-i-u-m B-r-a-d-y.

Lobster Math

After seeing a news story that the Maine lobster catch last year exceeded 100 million pounds, Pamelia's brother Scott did some calculating and sent us a note:

A precious few of you may recognize this as Louie the Lobster, whom we freed on the little-known (so far) Notebook holiday we call Lobster Independence Day. We do eat lobster, but we also try to give a few big ones (the best breeders, sometimes decades old) a better fate.

"If 100,000,000 pounds of lobster were harvested in Maine last year, and if most lobsters are about 1 ¼ lbs., some larger, but the most of them are the 1 ¼ so, the average size may be about 1 ½ pounds. This means that roughly 66 million lobsters were taken from Maine waters last year. The population estimate for Maine in 2011 was 1,328,188 (people)... that means that just under 50 lobsters were taken for every resident!" It'll be interesting to see if next year's catch dips because too many were hauled in during 2011. In any case, it can be fun to more closely examine statistics cited in official reports and the media to see how the numbers really measure up.

Getting In Their Licks

It's winter, and life is hard for anything that lives outdoors here in New England. (Read Bernd Heinrich's fascinating book Winter World for a new appreciation of that.) So I can't blame the deer for lining up with the ducks, turkeys, squirrels, foxes and others for a turn at our scenically situated bird feeder. Is this happening to any of you?

Answers to the Last Puzzlers

1) The greatest altitude at which butterflies have been seen migrating is 19,000 feet.

2) The plant serviceberry got its name from American settlers because it blossoms at a time when the ground has thawed enough to allow burial services.

Today's Puzzlers

1) You don't have to sing the answer to this, but which element is the most common one in the universe?

a) carbon
b) nitrogen
c) hydrogen

2) Identify the animal shown below:

What is this?

3) Back to the elements. I've always been curious about bismuth, which makes me think of both Bisquick and German statesman Otto von Bismark. Which of these best describes bismuth, element number 83:

a) a dense metal that doesn't have many commercial uses but is the active ingredient in Pepto-Bismol
b) an alkali metal that makes up 40 percent of the Earth's crust and is prevalent in sea water
c) an inert gas produced by palm trees that for religious reasons is used to carbonate drinks in parts of the Middle East

By: Craig Neff
Tags 118 in periodic table, Bernd Heinrich, bismuth, Bisquick, butterfly migration altitude, Eli Manning, Harry Potter, Harry Potter singing, Henry Kissinger, Hermione Granger, Nobel Peace Prize, number of lobsters caught in Maine, Otto von Bismarck, serviceberry name, song The Elements, Tom Brady, Tom Lehrer, Winter World
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Even on a night that barely reaches freezing, a chickadee can burn up almost 60 percent of its body fat.

Cold and Colder

January 17, 2011

Let us praise the humble bird feeder. It keeps alive some of the small birds that try to tough out the harsh winter in places like northern New England. Here in Maine the state bird is the black-capped chickadee, a cute, perky, backyard regular that flits off and on the feeder as it dines on sunflower seeds. We don't tend to think about birds of any type as we curl into our cozy beds in the evening, but on any cold night, the chickadee outside our window is facing potential death.

Research has shown that, to survive a night of even modest cold (32 degrees Fahrenheit) a chickadee has to lower its body temperature by almost 20 degrees so it won't burn up all of its body fat before morning. Even in a state of semi-torpor, the chickadee shivers all night. It tries to find the warmest place it can to roost—"almost any tight cranny or cavity (as can sometimes be deduced from their bent tail feathers in the morning)," notes naturalist Bernd Heinrich in his fine book Winter World. Snowstorms and prolonged spells of extreme cold can be fatal if the birds can't get enough calories to rebuilt their fat stores.

All of which is a modest reminder, if you live in a cold place, to take the time to stomp through the snow to refill that feeder. And to resist the urge to trim trees and shrubs so severely that the birds have no protected place to nestle. And to feel fortunate to have a warm bed on a bitter night.

In Case You Missed It...

This is one of the seals that live in the colony we can see from our house.

• China—a country that has not been known for either free speech or the kindly treatment of animals—now has an animal-rights movement. More than 40 Chinese animal-rights groups released a statement opposing a new trade deal under which Canada will sell seal meat and seal oil in the world's most populous country. Because seal products have been banned in Europe out of concern that seals are killed inhumanely, Canada is trying to expand its sales in Asia. The leader of one of the objecting groups, noting that many Canadians themselves shun seal products, cited a Chinese proverb: "Do not give to others what you yourself do not want."

• The Golden Globe awards were a big night for environmental and animal-welfare figures. Best Actor winner Colin Firth was accompanied by his wife, Livia, who runs a popular shop in London named Eco-Age and promotes the wearing of what she calls "ethical and sustainable fashions." Last night she went so far as to wear a dress made of a type of silk that is produced without killing any silkworms. Her shop's offerings include the increasingly popular "ethical jewelry," which has more of an environmental component than I realized. As an eco-jewelry expert told The New York Times, "Customers don't realize that one wedding ring weighs 10 grams and causes three tons of toxic waste." Also at the awards ceremony, Claire Danes won the Best Actress globe for playing the remarkable Temple Grandin, who despite suffering from autism is a doctor of animal sciences, a professor and an author. Grandin, age 63, has made monumental contributions to both the understanding of autism and the humane treatment of livestock, to whom she feels a particular affinity because of the anxiety they can feel.

A dairy herd we passed in Point Reyes, California, on our birding trip.

• This being the holiday celebrating the life and teachings of the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr., it seems worth noting that the reverend King is now widely cited by those in the animal-rights movement (perhaps even in China, though I'm just guessing). I can't find the original source of this, but several websites attribute the following quotation to him: "One day the absurdity of the almost universal human belief in the slavery of other animals will be palpable. We shall then have discovered our souls and become worthier of sharing this planet with them." His wife and son apparently became vegetarians. Again, I don't recall him ever discussing non-human animals, but it's interesting to see him drawn into a realm that for some people can be as emotional and controversial as that of civil rights.

By: Craig Neff
Tags Bernd Heinrich, chickadees, Claire Danes, Colin Firth, Golden Globe Awards, livestock, Livia Firth, Temple Grandin, Winter World
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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