Don Scallen
Don Scallen is the author of Nature Where We Live: Activities to Engage Your Inner Scientist from Pond Dipping to Animal Tracking and Spotted Salamanders and Their World, and the monthly blog "Notes from the Wild."
Milkweed and Monarchs
The monarchs’ table was set, but alas, they wouldn’t come to dinner.
The Raven
Ravens are renowned for their ability to solve complex puzzles to obtain tasty tidbits of food.
Imperilled Turtles
May/June is the time that turtles emerge from a long winter’s dormancy to bask in the sun. Unfortunately fewer and fewer of them appear every spring.
Wood Frogs
Usually wood frogs choose ponds that hold water only temporarily – a roll of the dice that can lead to the death or salvation of their progeny.
Cougars
Something strange is going on, and the phenomenon is not confined to the Headwaters.
Swifts and Swallows
These birds fly with grace and verve, flitting over fields and wetlands and high above towns and villages.
Snowy Owl Rescue
The winter of 2013-14 has seen a “the largest movement of snowy owls in four or five decades” into southern Canada and the United States.
Snow Buntings
Look for snow buntings every winter, across the windswept fields of Dufferin, Wellington and other open country settings in southern Ontario.
A Bee or not a Bee? That is the question.
Our understanding of the natural world is often rather muddled. Calling a yellow-jacket a bee is like calling a fox a woodchuck.
Red-backed salamander
Red-backed salamanders are abundant, outnumbering all of the reptiles, rodents and birds that share their forest habitat.
Goldfinches
Don’t worry about deadheading your perennials after they flower – allow them to go to seed and provide succor to goldfinches and other birds.
Pollinator Friendly Gardens
When I walk into my yard I am greeted by a gloriously diverse menagerie of tiny winged creatures.
Monarch Butterfly – RIP 2026
Most of us are old enough to remember when monarchs were a frequent sight in meadows and gardens.



