2025

Turn On Your Love Light

Dusk is the deepest part of twilight, that fleeting time of not quite dark when magic feels possible. At dusk this June you could catch magic in a mason jar like you did at the age of six. Remember? Optimism can be hard to come by, but this year the fireflies did their part. Our […]

Turn On Your Love Light Read Post »

Frogs and Salamanders and Other Herps at Allanach-Wolf Woodlands

Earlier this Spring we joined a special Joshua’s Trust hike at Windham’s Allanach-Wolf Woodlands. This expansive 120-acre JT property hosts a rich ecosystem of forest, swamps, and waterways. A paved drive allows easier access to nature, but there are also walking trails winding through the woods and around stream-fed Lake Marie, where geese and ducks

Frogs and Salamanders and Other Herps at Allanach-Wolf Woodlands Read Post »

Yesterday and Today

Early June; it’s the cusp of summer. As soon as I come over the hill and squeeze through the thick mountain laurel, I pick up the chorus of voices. From above, The Eastern Pe-wee (Pee-a-wee), the Pine Warbler, whose fast chirps defy mnemonics. And the Gray Tree Frog, whose trill sounds like a sedated Red-bellied

Yesterday and Today Read Post »

Let’s Talk Turtles

When was the last time you came across a Wood Turtle? How about a Box Turtle? I usually suggest a hike. This time, take a drive. During the next several weeks we can all participate in a valuable rescue service.   You’ve probably read that Galapagos Tortoises live for over two hundred years. Did you

Let’s Talk Turtles Read Post »

Luxury

It wasn’t until I went looking for the heron rookery that I realized it had been too long since I walked in the woods alone, for what I might call “spiritual reawakening.” You might call it peace. You might not call it anything. But to me, this winter felt longer and more bitter than it

Luxury Read Post »

The Sky Was Falling

John Hankins, in the Joshua’s Trust blog, described our then new Madeline Regan Preserve in Tolland thusly: “a ridge-top trail runs along a glacial esker ridge that parallels the Connecticut Path. From the top of the ridge, you can look down 70 or 80 vertical feet into what looks to be a glacial kettle hole,

The Sky Was Falling Read Post »

Scroll to Top