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Global Outdoors Blog
Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Crocus Geometer Moth
Mar 26

Mar 26 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Crocus Geometer Moth

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

Over the years, some moths have been called “jewels of the night”.  This is because they are nocturnal and fly under the cover of darkness, and many of them are very beautiful.

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Long-Legged Willet
Mar 19

Mar 19 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Long-Legged Willet

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching, Bird Watching

Willets are a somewhat drab, nondescript-looking shorebird.  They are fairly large, about the size of an American crow, with a wingspan measuring nearly 28 inches in length. 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Beneficial Paper Wasp
Mar 12

Mar 12 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Beneficial Paper Wasp

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

Wasps, hornets, yellow jackets, bees – most people don’t like them.  The reason is simple, too.  These insects are capable of delivering a very painful sting, and since they can fly through the air they can chase you! 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Surf Scoter, Sea Duck of the North
Mar 5

Mar 5 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Surf Scoter, Sea Duck of the North

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching, Bird Watching

Of all the duck species in North America, the Surf Scoter is one of the most unusual-looking.  It is a medium-sized sea duck, and the males are completely black except for small white patches on the back of their head, on their forehead, and at the base of their bill. 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Tobacco Hornworm Caterpillar
Feb 26

Feb 26 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Tobacco Hornworm Caterpillar

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

Gardeners who enjoy growing tomatoes have many things to worry about: are their tomato plants getting enough water?  Enough sun?  Too much water?  Not enough fertilizer?  But one thing almost all of these gardeners hate is the tobacco hornworm, sometimes called the tomato worm

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Exotic Egyptian Goose
Feb 19

Feb 19 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Exotic Egyptian Goose

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching, Bird Watching

Most people would think they need to go to Africa to see an Egyptian goose.  And at one time, that would be true.  The Egyptian goose is native to Africa, especially east Africa and southern Africa.

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Wood-Boring Pine Sawyer Beetle
Feb 12

Feb 12 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Wood-Boring Pine Sawyer Beetle

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

Most people don’t like beetles.  And it’s understandable, since most beetles fall into the “creepy-crawly” category.  But some beetles are very interesting.  Take longhorn beetles, for example.

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Shellfish-Loving American Oystercatcher
Feb 6

Feb 6 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Shellfish-Loving American Oystercatcher

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching, Bird Watching

The American Oystercatcher is a strange-looking, but very cool bird.  It is a fairly large shorebird (about the size of a crow), and it lives most of its life along saltwater beaches and shorelines. 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Tiny Least Skipper Butterfly
Jan 29

Jan 29 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Tiny Least Skipper Butterfly

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

Skipper butterflies are very small, and the Least Skipper is certainly one of the smallest of the skippers.  Least Skippers, also called Least Skipperlings, have a wingspan of only three-quarters of an inch to one inch. 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Stealthy Hermit Thrush
Jan 22

Jan 22 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Stealthy Hermit Thrush

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching, Bird Watching

Many birds are somewhat secretive.  The hermit thrush is one of those stealthy birds.  These inconspicuous birds tend to move around and hunt for insects in the brushy undergrowth of woodlands and along the edges of northern forests. 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Red-Eared Slider Turtle
Jan 15

Jan 15 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Red-Eared Slider Turtle

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

Turtles are common sights around ponds, lakes, and streams, and there are about 58 different species of turtles living in the United States today. 

Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Aggressive European Starling
Jan 9

Jan 9 Wildlife Watching Wednesday: The Aggressive European Starling

Tom Berg
Wildlife Watching

European starlings are one of many non-native bird species that can be found just about everywhere in America, and they range throughout much of Canada, too.  They were introduced into the United States from Europe in the 1890s, and today there are more than 200 million starlings in North America.

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Photo Gallery By John Kumiski

 

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