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."
Jack in the Pulpit
These plants can switch genders throughout their lives in response to growing conditions.
March Madness
The next day spring peepers, chorus frogs and wood frogs heralded the early spring from sylvan pools.
Spring’s Croaking Chorus
Ten species of frogs and toads share our landscape, a rich assemblage of hopping amphibians for such a northerly clime.
White-Tailed Deer
There are probably more deer now than there were before European settlement.
Butternut Canker
Most of our butternuts are dead or dying, stricken by a fungal disease called butternut canker.
Friends of Ontario Snapping Turtles
Help the turtles by signing a petition being circulated by Friends of Ontario Snapping Turtles.
Cardinals
Cardinals appear at feeders most frequently at dusk and dawn. Perhaps during the twilight hours they are less visible to predators.
Cedar Waxwings
A lovely shrub that waxwings find irresistible in late fall and early winter is a native holly called “winterberry”.
Foul-Weather Friends
Birds are drawn to feeders like Saturday morning coffee drinkers to Tim Hortons. The presence of birds in the winter landscape is life-affirming.
Norway Maples
Our rural roads and historic schoolhouses may have ended up as dull as suburbia in the fall.
Exotic Species aka Mantis and Honeybee
What has our impact been on native North American wildlife? I think we know the answer to that.
Meetings with Remarkable Trees
We revel in their beauty, relax in their shade and are calmed by the soothing sound of their leaves soughing in the wind.
Wrens
Both male and female wrens generate a potpourri of chatter – a profusion of messaging rivaling the texting of human teenagers.
Micro – cosmos in your yard
Many new point-and-shoot cameras have a macro focus function, allowing you to take close-up photos of miniature creatures.
Caterpillars & Butterflies
Most butterfly caterpillars will mature and form chrysalides within two or three weeks.



