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Red Fox and Cottontail

Posted on May 13, 2016

Red Fox and Cottontail

It is terribly ironic that just hours after my colleague, Audubon Connecticut Director of Bird Conservation Patrick Comins, uploaded some lovely cottontail photos to the Audubon Connecticut at Stratford Point page that I found our vixen Red Fox engaged in some hunting early this morning. I felt some eyes on me as I surveyed for avian migrants along Prospect Drive, and she was watching me from within our side of the fence. This is nothing abnormal, and the interaction was typical – a little curious stare down at one another before we both continue on. However, she then put her attention...

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Noble Proctor BioBlitz Challenge at Hammonasset Tomorrow

Posted on May 13, 2016

Noble Proctor BioBlitz Challenge at Hammonasset Tomorrow

Noble Proctor BioBlitz Challenge at Hammonasset on May 14, 2016 Please join family, friends, colleagues and students for a celebration of Noble Proctor’s life in the form of a BioBlitz Challenge at Hammonasset Beach State Park in Madison, Connecticut on Saturday, May 14, 2016 from 8AM to sunset. Our headquarters for the BioBlitz will be at the pavilion near Willard’s Island. A BioBlitz is a race to find every species of life possible – birds, mammals, plants, insects, and more. We will form teams to search the park and record all the species we can discover. At 1:00 PM, we will come together...

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Teaching the Teachers

Posted on May 12, 2016

Teaching the Teachers

Throughout the past few years of working for RTPI, I’ve heard the phrase “teaching the teachers” a number of times. From my understanding, at one time this meant equipping school teachers with the proper materials and knowledge to take their classes out into nature and teach their students place-based education. RTPI education staff traveled extensively to carry out teacher workshops and engage students in learning about the natural world. As the years have gone on, the approach to carrying out that phrase has shifted, but the focus has remained: passing our knowledge and...

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Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus)

Posted on May 12, 2016

Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus)

Let’s switch gears from the little migrant birds to the big resident birds with this Pileated Woodpecker (Dryocopus pileatus) as photographed last week during its breakfast. This meal, while being obviously tasty and delicious, also provides us a lesson in forest and yard management. Most of the time Pileated Woodpeckers can be found eating at dying, dead or fallen trees like this one as they hammer away for ants and various insects associated with decaying wood. If we removed all of the rotting wood from the forest or our yards what would they have to eat? Not much! If you can safely...

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Salamander Saturday; a Slithering, Slimy Success!

Posted on May 11, 2016

Salamander Saturday; a Slithering, Slimy Success!

Although the words slithering and slimy aren’t typically associated with good things, the opposite is true when you’re talking about celebrating all things salamander!                         Many thanks to all who joined us at RTPI to enjoy an array of displays and activities all centered on these fascinating and important creatures!               Visitors enjoyed viewing a variety of live salamanders on exhibit by Chris Duckett of Amtilia Outreach, taking a walk in the woods with RTPI...

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Prairie Warbler

Posted on May 11, 2016

Prairie Warbler

This male Prairie Warbler (Setophaga discolor) put on a sensational display for us last Sunday all while singing away and finding plenty to eat after his journey the previous night. It took a few hours to finally see the bird after hearing the rising, buzzy song repeatedly in the morning. The sun was shining brightly high in the sky by the time he came out into the open, giving the yellow warbler an even brighter glow while foraging in these willows. The Prairie Warbler is one of those species that perplexes me in the Chautauqua-Allegheny region. I feel like there should be more of them in...

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