by don | Feb 4, 2009
Last week I wrote about the spiraling cost of birdseed and about experimenting with different seed and protocol for those bird-feeding aficionados who, like me, are on a budget. The idea was to try and find a way to still enjoy birds and not wreck your budget....
by don | Jan 28, 2009
Anyone who reads this column regularly knows I am a fan of backyard bird feeding. The constant feathered activity just a few feet from the kitchen window is a constant reminder of the incredible diversity that spins around the sun with us on our big blue marble....
by don | Jan 21, 2009
It’s late January and it’s 15 degrees outside, snow is flying, the Alberta Clipper has the huge yellow buckeye swaying like the mast of a sailing ship but inside that yellow buckeye, a good 50 feet above ground in a cramped clawed out leaf-lined den, life will not be...
by don | Jan 14, 2009
May old woodpeckers be forgot and never photoshopped. A $50,000 reward has been offered for a definitive photo of an ivory-billed woodpecker. I’m thinking that photo might be worth a buck or two more. Should old woodpeckers be forgot and left to auld lang syne? For...
by don | Jan 7, 2009
Like ships that collide in the middle of the night, “midnight rules” and their undoing perpetuate and reinforce philosophical and ideological divisions in this country while enhancing partisanship and strengthening the hold and influence politicians and power brokers...
by don | Jan 15, 2003
Headlines on the front page of the Wall Street Bible, I mean Journal, Dec. 27 proclaimed: “Feeding Wild Birds May Harm Them And Environment, It Lures Pests, Causes Illness: Changing the Relationship Between Man and Nature – A booming Business in Seeds,” by James P....
by don | Jan 8, 2003
I couldn’t think of anywhere I would rather be. Stars blazed above me seemingly close enough to jump up and touch. A thin wispy cloud behind me was pelting me with fine, hard snow pellets. The wind had cranked up and was steady between 15 and 20 m.p.h. I knew my...