I have fished on Chautauqua Lake each summer since I was five, but as I fished the lake in late summer of this year, I felt as though I no longer knew the lake. The lake has changed so much that it felt as if I were fishing on an entirely different lake.
In the late 1970s, I caught quite a ...
One of the benefits of writing this column is that readers let me know when they observe unusual, unpredictable natural phenomena. For instance, when a brood of 17-year periodic cicadas emerges, I hear about it on day one.
About two weeks ago readers in Pennsylvania, Ohio, and West Virginia ...
At this time of year, we both admire trees for the spectacularly colorful show they provide to our landscape and curse them for the constant supply of leaves they drop on our lawns. But trees add value to our lives, to our homes and to our waterways that we may not always appreciate. Fall ...
“Does anyone want to go outside to see a Black Saddlebag?”
Statements of this kind are frequently heard around the offices at Audubon. We stop work at our desks, jump up with our cameras, and head outside. Being aware of what is going on outside is a major part of our jobs, so it is ...
On Sept. 5, 1975 CBS aired a documentary entitled The Guns of Autumn. It was a controversial anti-hunting program. A few weeks later CBS aired Echoes of the Guns of Autumn, a more even-handed follow-up to the subject. As autumn approaches 44 years later, let’s revisit the subject.
Over the ...
“Zitch, Zitch, Zitch”
The sound echoed through the darkness lurking outside of the window. “What is that?! I can’t sleep!!” My son came downstairs, grousing about the insect racket outside.
My first thoughts were that this was the sound of a healthy, diverse habitat. It was ...