What's Your Nature?

Become a Nature Up North explorer to share your encounters with wild things and wild places in New York's North Country. Post your wildlife sightings, landscape shots, photos from your outings, and even your organization's events!

Vengeful Veggies

It’s not unheard of for people to burn vegetables now and then, especially if you’re as easily distracted as I am. I’ll think, the spinach is on low heat, so there’s plenty of time to run out to the garden for chives. Thirty minutes later I’ll be weeding the tomato patch, chiveless, when the smoke alarm indicates the spinach is “done.” Oops.

While it sounds absurd to think a vegetable might burn us, it does happen, and this is peak season for it. The burn is chemical in nature, and the vegetable is wild parsnip, an invasive species whose population has exploded in recent years.

Wild Eats Episode 2: Juneberries

Amelanchier canadensis, a small shrubby tree native to our region, goes by many names: serviceberry, shadberry, shadbush, and juneberry. But my personal favorite is saskatoon berry. What a wonderful name for a fruit. It perfectly captures the pizzazz of these tiny reddish purple spheres, which are most commonly known as juneberries. This designation highlights its harvesting season, since the fruits develop and ripen in the month of June.

Goosin' Around: The 2016 DEC Wilson Hill Goose Drive

Every summer a roundup reminiscent of old western cattle drives occurs at the Wilson Hill Wildlife Management Area in Louisville. But there are several key differences -- rather than riding horses, the “cowboys” paddle canoes and kayaks, and rather than cows, their quarry is Canada geese. And rather than the open range, this roundup occurs in a shallow, expansive, cattail-lined wetland near the St. Lawrence River.

When Stress is the Problem, Nature is the Solution

Are you stressed out? Are you constantly staring at your computer screen? Do you have work-related tasks that seem to require every ounce of the focus and energy you can muster? If you answered yes to any of these questions, then you probably have experienced some sort of stress in your life due to the constant bombardment of directed attention tasks. What is directed attention? Directed attention tasks—such as working with Excel spreadsheets, writing an essay, analyzing data, staying attentive and engaged during meetings, or even reading this article—drain our mental energy.

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Wild Eats Part One: Dandelion Burgers

Some plants are so common that we forget to appreciate them. We see dandelions everywhere during the summer - their yellow flowers speckle the grass at local parks and poke out between the cracks of village sidewalks. Many people feel some hostility towards the plant, as dandelions stand in the way of a perfectly manicured lawn. Dandelions have a bad reputation, which is ironic because they were originally imported to North America for their culinary versatility and wide variety of medicinal benefits.

North Country Voices: Anna Knapp-Peck

Anna Knapp-Peck lives in DeKalb with her husband and two children. Originally from Vermont, she settled in the North Country after moving from Washington County with her family in 2007. They now reside on 90 acres of land that they call Zion Farm, surrounded by ducks, turkeys, dogs, cats, goats, chickens, horses, and Anna’s favorite – oxen. Her animals have been on America's Got Talent, in Capital One commercials, and in award winning movies.  Nature Up North intern, Lizz Muller, visited Zion Farm one morning and caught up with Anna while she did her chores.

Registration Open for the Nature Up North Teacher Workshop, August 3-4

Are you a St. Lawrence County teacher interested in incorporating more nature-based learning into your lessons? Do you want to increase opportunities for integrating outdoor learning with STEM content? Nature Up North is offering a workshop for local teachers on August 3rd and 4th during which we will discuss ways to improve STEM learning through hands-on and place-based teaching strategies that also encourage students to connect with the local environment.   

Pink Lady’s Slipper: Too Precious to Pick

Pink lady’s slipper, or Cypripedium acaule, is a wildflower that belongs to the Orchid family and is known for its beautiful, bulbous, slipper-shaped blooms. As a child growing up in Maine I was taught to never touch—and especially not pick—these precious flowers. I fondly think back to hikes with my Girl Scout troop and remember how coming across a pink lady’s slipper was like finding a hidden natural treasure. We would all gather around the plant and revel in its beauty and mystery.

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Outside of the Doghouse: Keeping Your Dog Safe and Healthy in Nature

Few activities bring more joy than watching dogs running around outside – leaping from rocks to logs, splashing in the water, and sniffing out nearby squirrels at the base of every tree they pass. It is impossible not to join, chasing them and throwing sticks for them to retrieve – their tongues hanging out of their smiling faces and tails wagging faster than the wings of a hummingbird. For thousands of years, dogs have remained our loyal and loving companions, and so there is nothing we want more than to keep our dogs healthy and happy.