Category Archives: Nature

Boston Public Garden White Squirrel

The squirrel population at Boston Public Garden is quite high. At times, it feels as if there are two per square foot. Since visitors frequently feed the squirrels, they have become bold. When I visited Thursday morning, one came up, grabbed my leg with its paws, and then moved a couple feet away, staring at me. Among all the gray squirrels, though, one stood out.

White squirrel bounding with a peanut.

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Jamaica Pond: Baby Snapping Turtle

We walked around Jamaica Pond on Christmas Eve. Our unseasonably warm December weather continued. Boston hit a high of 69° F (about 21° C). Many plants in the area have been behaving as if it were spring. A cherry tree in Jamaica Plain was in full bloom. And a few plants near the boathouse were unfurling new leaves.

Plant bursting bud in December
Plant unfurling its leaves in winter.

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The Harvard Square Turkey

A wild turkey has been spotted around Harvard Square for at least a couple of years now. Probably the same bird making an appearance on Universal Hub back in 2012, it has also been written up in Spare Change News last year and the Boston Globe this year. The Harvard College Naturalists Club posted recently about a few sightings.

This turkey was not difficult to spot. I found her dawdling just outside Wadsworth House in Harvard Yard this week.

Harvard Yard Turkey

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Ward’s Pond: Signs of Spring

Yesterday, on a truly spring-like day with warm temperatures and bright sunshine, we took a walk around Ward’s Pond, a small pond in Boston’s Emerald Necklace. Signs of spring abounded.

Red maples were in bloom. And our migrant birds from the south were out and about. A very noisy flock of grackles was foraging in the leaf litter.

common grackle on a branch
Common grackle

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Bald Eagle on Jamaica Pond

Last weekend, as we were birding around Leverett Pond, we noticed a lot of commotion among the birds. Gulls took to the air and Canada geese and mallards walked off the ice into open water, huddling together. Soon afterward, we spotted a large dark bird flying overhead, our first bald eagle sighting in Boston.

Today, we noticed something similar on our walk around Jamaica Pond. This time, we spotted the bald eagle first as it approached the Pond. Then, we noticed that all of the gulls on the Pond had taken off and were flying helter-skelter.

Gulls scattering
Gulls scatter around Jamaica Pond in the presence of a bald eagle.

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The Coot is Back in Town

American coots migrate north for the summer. Their return is a sign of autumn. As of Sunday, at least one of them has returned.

American coot on Jamaica Pond
American coot on Jamaica Pond

The trees and shrubs around Jamaica Pond are slowly catching up to the coots, but remain green for the most part.

Waters and tree-line of Jamaica Pond
Waters and tree-line of Jamaica Pond

Pockets here and there, though, show clear signs of fall.

Fall color along Jamaica Pond
Fall color along Jamaica Pond
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Arboretum: Butterflies and Weevils

I saw this pair of Lixus weevils yesterday clinging to a plant stalk. They look like anteaters crossed with grasshoppers, only twice as ridiculous. They appear to be black yet covered with an orange or rust-colored powder. They continued to mate as I pointed the camera at them. The lower one, however, would slide around the stalk to hide from me.

Lixus weevils mating
Lixus weevils mating

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Arboretum: Nesting Orioles and Fledgling Robins

After a few cold, cloudy, rainy days, we took advantage of today’s brilliant sunshine to walk through the Arboretum. We spotted a Baltimore oriole nest in the Meadow hanging on a silver maple branch. A female oriole perched next to it and watched us.

Female Baltimore oriole near nest
Female Baltimore oriole near nest

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Arboretum: Swallowtails and Bulb Flies

I found two eastern tiger swallowtail butterflies (Papilio glaucus) on a mulch bed at the Arboretum last week. They appeared to be basking in the sun. At times, both would shiver their wings. I assumed one of these butterflies was a male and the other female but, judging from the lack of blue chevrons on their hindwings, they both appear to be male.

Eastern tiger swallowtail butterflies
Eastern tiger swallowtail butterflies

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