April 2016 Nature Net News – Earth Day!
April Every Day is Earth Day Not every cause gets its own day. Okay, well maybe they do -- after all there is International Bacon Day (celebrated the Saturday prior to Labor Day), National Cheese Fondue Day (this month!) and National Pickle Day (November 14), just to name a few. But none carry the same political and historical heft of Earth Day. In 1970 the first Earth Day was observed by twenty million people (10% of the US population) with marches, rallies, concerts, and teach-ins designed to speak ...Continue Reading
March 2016 Nature Net News – Gearing up for Garden Season
March Gearing up for Garden Season Are these longer days making your green thumb twitch? Are you ready to get out into the soil to sow and witness the amazing emergence of roots and shoots? We know our friends at Community GroundWorks are enjoying this early spring preparation time and if you simply can't wait to get gardening, we are pleased to feature their sage advise on indoor gardening ideas. Read on for a guest blog entry from the Wisconsin School Garden Initiative Brief: Why Garden ...Continue Reading
February 2016 Nature Net News – The Backyard Bird Count
February Backyard Bird Count Just last week while walking the wee ones to school, I heard the happy song of chickadees calling "seeee-breeze" from the mid level branches just over our heads. It's a sound that lightens one's mid-winter heart as this mating song signifies that spring is indeed on its way. It's also a reminder that the annual Great Backyard Bird Count is about to begin - and it's time to dust off the binoculars and dedicate a bit of time to outdoor observation and citizen science. The ...Continue Reading
January 2016 Nature Net News – Conservation History
January Wisconsin Conservation History Cruising the streets of Madison, Wisconsin (and surely other Wisconsin communities) it's easy to find elementary schools donning famous names like Lapham, Thoreau, Van Hise, Muir, Leopold - all founding fathers of nature conservation as we know it today. Their work in the 1800s and early 1900s set the stage for preserving wildlife and wild places in Wisconsin and fairly earned them the right to have schoolchildren sing their names at every school assembly. As Wisconsin became a territory (in ...Continue Reading
December 2015 Nature Net News – Tracking
December Tracks in the Snow "Tracking an animal is opening the door to the life of that animal. It is an educational process, like learning how to read. In fact, it is learning how to read. Following an animal's trail may bring you closer to the animal physically, but, more important, it brings you closer to it in perception." So writes Paul Rezendes in "Tracking and the Art of Seeing." He believes that tracking animals strengthens our connection to them, ...Continue Reading
November 2015 Nature Net News – The Good Oak
November The Good Oak One of our favorite excerpts from famed naturalist Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac is entitled "Good Oak." It reads: "There are two spiritual dangers in not owning a farm. One is the danger of supposing that breakfast comes from the grocery, and the other that heat comes from the furnace. To avoid the first danger, one should plant a garden, preferably where there is no grocer to confuse the issue. To avoid the second, he should ...Continue Reading
October 2015 Nature Net News – Forestry
October Forestry The term "forestry" often evokes a myriad of images. From Smokey the Bear and Woodsy the Owl, to California's current wildfire crisis, mechanized timber harvests, and majestic old growth forests, the term forestry encompasses as many concepts and issues as it does emotions. The definition of forestry is "the science of planting and taking care of trees and forests; the process of establishing and managing forests." As humans we have long relied on timber and firewood as a basic and often readily available resource for energy, ...Continue Reading