This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
At winter's end in 1947, driven by the devastating loss of a son killed in World War II, naturalist Edwin Way Teale and his wife Nellie followed the dawning spring season northward in an amazing 17,000 mile odyssey from the Everglades to Maine. He wrote about the adventure in the best-selling book North with the Spring. Its sequel Wandering Through Winter won the Pulitzer Prize, and Teale became the most recognized nature writer of his day.
Retracing Teale's route, writer John Harris reveals a vastly changed natural world. In Returning North with the Spring, he stops at the very places where Teale once stood, paddling through Everglades National Park, the Okefenokee wildlife refuge, the Great Dismal Swamp, and trekking across the Great Smoky Mountains, the New Jersey Pine Barrens, and Cape Cod. He is stunned to see how climate change, invasive species, and other factors have affected the landscapes and wildlife in the years since Teale saw them.
Yet Harris also discovers that many of the vulnerable sites Teale described have been newly "rewilded" or permanently protected by the government. He looks at current restoration projects, models of sustainable residential development, efforts to control invasive species, and environmental success stories such as the alligator, the bald eagle, and the black bear. Along the way, he meets an array of ecologists, naturalists, and beloved authors who join in his adventure by sharing their memories and experiences of the natural environment in Eastern North America.
Homage to the past, report on the present, glimpse into the future--this book honors what has been lost in the years since Teale’s famous journey and finds hope in the small tenacities of nature.
This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
Some of our most beloved and familiar birds in CT are in the blackbird family, a large and diverse group of birds with some unique species. In this webinar, Conservation & Education Coordinator Joe Attwater will go over this fascinating group of birds and which ones you can expect to see in the state.
This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
$5 Members, $10 Non-Members
Join Sanctuary Manager/Naturalist Lori Lichtenauer for an early spring bird and nature walk. The spring equinox is an important marker for the beginning of spring in which the day and night length are the same. You may find early spring ephemeral wildflowers, the early arriving migratory birds, and much more! As migratory birds start to trickle in, you will learn some key tips on identifying early migrants and the risk and rewards of migrating early. There is no better way to celebrate the first day of spring by enjoying the beautiful natural environment at Deer Pond Farm.
Register here for the March 20 bird and nature walk.
This program meets at Deer Pond Farm, 57 Wakeman Hill Road, Sherman, CT 06784.
Andy Rzeznikiewicz will bring you to see displaying American Woodcock. They do their courtship flights just before dark. It is very important that you do not wear bright colored clothing or hats. Drab colors are recommended. Each outing is limited to 7 participants. Registration required. Email arzeznikiewicz@ctaudubon.org or call 860-928-4948 to register. Fee: $10 CAS members; $20 non-members.
This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
This exhibition is of written and visual works inspired by summer 2024 residencies at Trail Wood in Hampton. Featured artists and writers are Lizzie Abelson, Beth Clary, Susie Dorr, Greg Kniseley, Tom Lagasse, and Ray Larrow. Experience nature through their eyes. Free admission.
Most of North America's shorebird species winter in South & Central America, heading north to breed in the high Arctic. Some of these birds winter in CT, while others started their southbound journey in mid-late summer. Join us as we look for many of our shorebird species at some of the best spots around southeastern Connecticut and learn how you can help these charismatic birds.