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The Naturalist's Notebook

Join a fun and fascinating exploration of nature and science—and visit our one-of-a-kind exploratorium-shop in Maine
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    • Welcome!
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    • A Year in the Maine Woods
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    • In a Patch of Fireweed
    • Insect Thermoregulation
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News, Notes and Photos from the Field (Craig and Pamelia's Blog)

The terrified onlookers had no idea what was about to happen...

Stand Back—Volcano!

July 2, 2011

The event had drawn curiosity-seekers and teachers and artists and a newspaper reporter and a retired chemist and a naturalist who lives near Mt. St. Helens. It was being photographed in 3-D. Our Volcano Night eruption on the deck of The Naturalist's Notebook was more eagerly anticipated than I had expected. Only as I approached the soon-to-be cauldron of fire did a worrisome thought enter my mind:

What if this doesn't work?

Eli the volcanologist had primed the audience by reading aloud a list of fascinating facts about volcanoes. ("The largest known volcano is perhaps Mount Olympus on the planet Mars. It is 17 miles tall and 320 miles wide.") Now came the science of creating a volcanic reaction inside a molded plastic mountain we had acquired in a kit made by the Smithsonian Institution.

Eli's declamation on volcanoes added to the anticipation.

And now things started going wrong. Had we read the instructions earlier, we would have known that we were supposed to combine 11 ounces of room-temperature club soda with five of the volcano tablets that came with the kit. Unfortunately for us (but perhaps fortunately for the village of Seal Harbor, which was in danger of being buried in lava if this eruption got too big), all we had was a bottle of ice-cold sparkling water from Poland Springs, Maine.

"Club soda has sodium in it," one of my volcano-making associates noted as we stared at the empty plastic mountain. "I don't think there's sodium in sparkling water. The reaction might not work."

"Let's add salt," suggested another team member.

And so this is what happened: We poured in an unmeasured volume of sparkling water. We opened a jar of the Maine sea salt that we sell and I pushed some big crystals of it down the volcano hole atop the mountain. Since the kit had suggested adding five volcano tablets, I added...11. I put my ear to the top of the mountain and heard rumbling. Or was it just fizzing?

To the shrieks of disapproval from more cautious members of the crowd—"Don't do it!"—I leaned over the mountain and stared down the hole. Scientist have died this way. But the moment demanded courage. I looked into the Hole of Destruction and saw bubbling reddish water. It was not rising. It was not erupting.

"Add more water!" I was advised. I did. It only diluted the magma, which was looking more and more like a Shirley Temple being served in a Polynesian restaurant.

"Do you have vinegar and baking soda?" asked a crowd member. I turned to Pamelia and said, "Do we have any of that nice balsamic vinegar in the fridge upstairs?"

"That won't work!" came a voice from the crowd.

One of our associate volcanologists, moving as if molten lava were chasing her down a mountain, dashed to Dennis's Coffee House next door. She emerged with two boxes of baking soda and a plastic cup of cider vinegar.

Meanwhile, someone had looked more closely at the packet of volcano tablets from which I had pulled the 11 eruption-inducing pills. "These are from 1998," she said.

I grabbed the volcano, took it beneath the deck and dumped out the Shirley Temple. A moment later, back up on the deck, I poured baking soda down the hole. Someone said I needed to shoot for a two-to-one ratio of baking soda to vinegar. Or was it a two-to-one ratio of vinegar to baking soda? No matter. Lacking any measuring device, I simply dumped things down the hole.

And then, at last, came the moment. I put a funnel in the top of the mountain, poured in the vinegar and—WHOA! Instantly a frothy mess foamed up into the funnel for about three seconds, then subsided. It was perhaps the lamest volcanic eruption ever witnessed.

"At least Seal Harbor is still standing," I said.

And so a science experiment became an adventure and a comedy act. And the result was that we all started talking about the science of volcanoes (tabletop and otherwise) and vowing to create a truly massive eruption next year. And we all had fun. And the event was, in its own strange way, a great success.

Once it was clear that the building wouldn't be destroyed by lava, visitors could relax and enjoy Rocco Alberico's interactive artworks and...something you'll read more about soon...the Cave!

Answer to the Last Puzzler:
Which is heavier, gold or lead?
Answer: Gold is almost twice as heavy.

Today's Puzzler:
Who has more teeth, a shark or a crocodile?

By: Craig Neff
1 Comment

The latest work to spring from the fertile imagination of Rocco Alberico—as well as new, one-of-a-kind endangered species gold jewelry pieces from fellow New York artist Anne Woodman—will debut at the Notebook this Thursday from 4 to 8 p.m. Come on over!

Look What Landed

June 29, 2011

New York artist Rocco Alberico has built an international following for his unique multi-media constructions, with shows in New York, Berlin, Valencia, Miami, Los Angeles and other cities. A graduate of the prestigious Cooper Union, he was a top graphic designer in the magazine world (and the award-winning art director of Sports Illustrated For Kids, where I worked with him) before deciding a decade ago to focus on his own fine art.

Rocco will be unveiling two dazzling, humorous, inventive pieces at The Naturalist's Notebook on Thursday, June 30, from 4 to 8 p.m. He'll be there with his equally talented wife, playwright Wendy Yondorf, as part of an extravaganza we're calling Volcano Night. The event will highlight not only Rocco and his pieces but also wonderful New York jewelry maker Anne Woodman, who was hugely popular at the Notebook last year and is back to show new work, including one-of-a-kind endangered-species designs. Oh, yes, and at 7 p.m. we are going to set off a small volcano outside the Notebook. It'll be the only volcano in Maine this year. We hope.

Take Me to Your Leader (Part One), which is on display in our Seal Harbor Observatory room.

This is the second year in a row that the Notebook has been fortunate enough to display some of Rocco’s pieces. We interviewed him about the two works he's showing this summer, playfully entitled Leave it to Beaver and Take Me to Your Leader (Part One). The former is a 66-inch-tall, water-tower-shaped piece with two dioramas, two 3-D viewers, fish wearing dentures, a sinister motorized hay bale on a railroad track, the Big Dipper and oh so much more. Take Me to Your Leader (Part One) is a wall-hung, outer-space-inspired construction containing dioramas and a praxinoscope, a 19th-century animation device.

Q: When did you start making these unique, architectural multi-media constructions?
Rocco: In art school. The first ones were simple and quite small—and similar in shape to the very tiny Cape Cod house I grew up in on Long Island. As a kid I had developed a love of dioramas. I had a slot-car race track in the basement of our house, and I spent hours landscaping in miniature. I could never afford the expensive plastic trees and hand-painted figures, so I made due with twigs and lichen. I was obsessed with making everything look real.

Here's Rocco outside the Notebook last year with his homemade 3-D camera, which never fails to attract crowds when he's hiking with it in Acadia National Park.

Here's Rocco outside the Notebook last year with his homemade 3-D camera, which never fails to attract crowds when he's hiking with it in Acadia National Park.

Q: Describe your creative process for making a piece. And what inspired Leave It to Beaver?Rocco: My creative process is not very linear. In fact, it’s rather erratic and chaotic. Inspiration for a particular piece can come from anywhere—personal experience, something I might read or see on TV, nature, travel, etc.

I may start out with an idea for a 3-D image or diorama and built a piece around that. For example, when I began working on Leave It to Beaver the only thing I knew was that I wanted to build a water tower out of popsicle sticks based on the shape of the wooden water tanks I see on rooftops of buildings in New York City. (I love their conical roofs and spherical bottoms.) I also knew that I wanted to include some kind of track that would run around the circumference of the structure with some kind of sinister vehicle riding around in circles.

The sinister motorized hay bale, comin' around the bend.

I built the basic construction first but wasn’t quite sure what I wanted to put inside it. I had a 3-D image that I thought might be appropriate (the Big Dipper with a gloved hand pointing to a birch tree) and I knew the general theme had something to do with water. I also knew I wanted to include a strong reference to beavers. I’m constantly taking pictures of beaver lodges and dams, and they’re my favorite animals. I got the idea for the beaver lodge/fortress diorama while kayaking on Island Pond in Harriman State Park in New York’s Hudson Valley.

I love nature and the outdoors but somehow feel it’s out to get me. It seems to be a general theme that has emerged in my work.

Q: Where do you work?
Rocco: In a small room in the back of our apartment in Manhattan. It’s crammed with art supplies, tools, my computer and tons of stuff I’ve collected over the years. I do a lot of my wood cutting and sanding in a small bathroom outfitted with an exhaust fan. I’m slowly taking over the rest of the apartment.

Q. Does Wendy, who is tremendously creative herself, serve as a muse or sounding board?
Rocco:
She is a great sounding board for me. I’ll usually show her finished elements of a piece to get her reaction. If she doesn’t get it, I almost always take her suggestions. For example, when I finished the lethal motorized haystack that runs around Leave It to Beaver, it initially had two sharpened spikes in front. She really liked the vehicle but asked why there were two pencils sticking out of it. I tried to explain the “pencils” were spikes but she just not buying it. A few days later I changed the spikes to the rake-like configuration you see now.

Rocco's love of fishing (but failure to catch many) may have inspired him to give these guys dentures.

Q: What’s the story behind Take Me to Your Leader (Part One)? Rocco: As a kid in the ‘60s I was always fascinated by the prospect of life on other planets. I was an avid follower of NASA and the space program and was transfixed when Neil Armstrong took that first step on the Moon. At about this time I ordered a copy of Flying Saucers: Serious Business, by Frank Edwards and became absolutely convinced that we were being visited by beings from another world. I read everything I could get my hands on regarding UFOs and even built a UFO detector that I saw in a magazine. I fantasized about being abducted by aliens and learning their secrets.

When I was in college I read a book called From Outer Space by a UFO contactee by the name of Howard Menger. He claimed to be in contact with a group of benevolent space brothers from a distant planet and said he would often accompany them on their forays throughout the solar system. At one point he said he was taken to the Moon and presented with a hydroponically grown Moon potato. The story was an obvious hoax and I thought it might be fun to create my own UFO hoax, which I did for a book project in a photography class.

The idea/theme of alien visitation has stayed with me, although now I’m a total skeptic. I’m now interested in the mythology and the religious undertones of the things like the UFO phenomena. My UFO is shaped like a funnel and is based on the base of a municipal water tower in Long Island, where I grew up. I liked the shape because it’s very similar to the space capsules used in the Mercury space program. For the animation in the praxinoscope, I built a small model and photographed it against a background photo in different positions so as to give the impression of the funnel-shaped object flying around in a circle. This is the first piece in a series that I’ve been working on.

Q: Any idea yet what your next piece might be?
Rocco:
I’m not sure yet but I do have an idea for a tall building with “arms.” That’s very anthropomorphic and I’d also like to do something around the theme of volcanism. I’ll still keep working on my other series as well.

Sneak Preview:
Anne Woodman deserves (and will get) her own blog post, but here's just a sample of her work—one of her new endangered species pieces. Come to the Notebook for much more:

Book Spotlight:
Here's Eli Mellen with a lot at another of the 1,000-plus natural history titles we have at the Notebook: Living on the Wind: Across the Hemisphere with Migratory Birds, by Scott Weidensaul

Rachel Carson opened the public's eyes to the richness, fragility and interconnectedness of the oceans as a singular ecosystem. In much the same way Saul Weidensaul's book Living on the Wind serves to illustrate the highly interconnected nature of the entire Earth's tenuous and miraculous ecosystems. He does this through the lens of bird migration from one hemisphere to another. By following the course of these migrations Weidensaul shows that ecosystems and bioregions that are often viewed as independent of one another can also be seen as highly connected nodes of a much larger ecosystem. They are linked by the birds' migratory pathways. And that is the deeper value of Weidensaul's superb book: In looking at birds, it offers a new way of looking at the planet. –Eli Mellen

Answer to the Last Puzzler:
What is the chemical symbol for tin?

a) Au
b) Tn
c) Sn
d) Espn

Answer:
c). The Sn comes from the Latin word for tin, stannum.

Today's Puzzler:
Anne Woodman's jewelry is made of gold. Which element is heavier, gold or lead?

By: Craig Neff
Tags 3-D photography, Anne Woodman jewelry, beaver art, Cooper Union, dioramas, Eli Mellen, endangered species jewelry, Flying Saucers: Serious Business, Leave It to Beaver, Living on the Wind: Across the Hemisphere With Migratory Birds, Mount Desert Island, Neil Armstrong, Rocco Alberico, Scott Weidensaul, Sports Illustrated For Kids, Take Me to Your Leader (Part One), UFOs, Wendy Yondorf
3 Comments

Sign Up for Workshops

June 26, 2011

There it is, at last—a sign hanging above our front door at 16 Main Street in Seal Harbor, Maine. We found the sign—painted with the name of a funeral home—at an antique shop last winter. Pamelia and Haley transformed it, I gave it a coat of polyurethane and Spencer the sign guy hung it sturdily enough that it won't blow down next January when a Nor'easter blows through.

Now that our sign's up, it's time to sign up. That is, let us know if you, your children or a friend of yours might be interested in any of our upcoming workshops and programs. Here is a quick rundown on four of them:

• July 16: Create a Field Notebook, with Margaret Krug.
Margaret, an artist and renowned art historian, teaches at Parsons The New School in New York, writes for American Artist magazine and is the author of An Artist’s Handbook. Participants will use a variety of drawing media to create nature-based field notebooks and explore line, value, composition, volume, movement, perspective, the element of time and abstract motifs. Workshop is limited to 12 participants, age 16 or older, and runs from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. (including an instant art show and reception at the end of the day). Cost: $125 plus $25 materials fee.

Last summer the participants in Margaret's workshop ventured down to Seal Harbor beach and elsewhere to find inspiration and images.

• July 18: First day of Kathy Coe's three-times-a-week children's art classes.
Kathy, a brilliant oil portraitist and sensitive teacher, has led our kids' art program for three years. Each workshop this summer will have a theme linked to nature or science. Schedule: Mondays 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Tuesdays 1 to 4 p.m.; Thursdays 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Cost: $25 per workshop, plus $5 for materials. Participants can drop in for just an hour of the workshop if they wish. If you would like a day-by-day schedule of the workshop themes, let us know.

Kathy holds her classes on our beautiful deck unless the weather turns bad.

• July 20: Kickoff of Earth News, our be-a-reporter program for kids and teens. Participants get to play TV reporter, write fun stories and create images for a blog and a newsletter and learn what it’s like to be a real journalist. Led by Sports Illustrated's Craig Neff and College of the Atlantic film students Julie Olbrantz and Eli Mellen. Every Wednesday morning, 10 to noon, starting July 20. Free.

• July 22: First day of Kathy Coe's once-a-week portrait and drawing workshops for adults and teens. These will held every Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. Fee: $60.

• August 13: Drawing and Water-Based Screen Monoprints, led by the Fashion Institute of Technology's Cynthia Gallaher and master printmaker Roni Henning. The workshop will run from 9:30 a.m. to 6 p.m., including an instant art show and reception at the end of the day. Limited to eight participants. Cost: $125 plus $20 for materials. Cynthia will give a free talk the night before.

Follow the blog for more on other summer events, including sketch/photo walks, Geology Day, our Sweet 16 Honey Tasting Tournament, literary agent Regina Ryan's "So You Want to Write a Book" talk, a visit by a mobile greenhouse and much more.

Two of the one-of-a-kind endangered-animal pieces that Anne Woodman will be showing this Thursday at our next special event.

And don't forget that we're holding a special event this Thursday, June 30, from 4 to 8 p.m. at which New York artist Rocco Alberico will unveil two of his amazing multi-media constructions and Anne Woodman, also a New York artist with a strong Maine connection, will introduce new, one-of-a-kind jewelry pieces, some of them inspired by endangered species. Oh, and a volcano is going to erupt outside the Notebook at 7 p.m. Seriously.

At our book signing and kickoff party on Friday night, author Judy Paolini gave a terrific talk on the 24 New England artists whose gardens she and photographer Nance Trueworthy explored in The Inspired Garden. Note in the background that the Arizona Diamondbacks are currently atop the standings of The Natural League—the group of nine major league baseball teams with names taken from nature.

Book Spotlight
Here's Eli Mellen on another of the more than 1,000 titles in The Naturalist's Notebook collection: Napoleon's Buttons: How 17 Molecules Changed History by Penny Le Couteur & Jay Burreson

The intriguing title of this engaging book brings to mind the proverbial rhyme:

For the want of a nail the shoe was lost.
For the want of a shoe the horse was lost.
For the want of a horse the rider was lost.
For the want of a rider the battle was lost.
For the want of a battle the kingdom was lost.
And all for the want of a horse-shoe nail.

Napoleon's 1812 invasion of Russia failed in part because of extremely cold weather that disintegrated the tin buttons on his soldiers' uniforms through a chemical process called "tin pest." That molecular weakness of tin caused Napoleon's soldiers to freeze and gave Le Couteur and Burreson their catchy title. The two authors, who are chemists, chronicle how 17 different chemicals each changed the world in their own tiny-molecular way. Their book offers compelling examples of how the smallest changes can have the most profound consequences, presenting an enlightening perspective on both world history and chemistry. An excellent summer read.

Music From a Garden Hose?
Thanks to Melanie, the gifted young cellist from Connecticut, for passing along this follow-up to our recent post about people who turn carrots and other vegetables into musical instruments. Here Linsey Pollak, an Australian musician, performs on a garden hose he has transformed into a contra bass clarinet; he also cleans the cobwebs out of your ears with a feather duster clarinet.

Answer to the Last Puzzler:
The prefix paleo means ancient, very old, pre-historic.

Today's Puzzler:
What is the chemical symbol for tin?

a) Au
b) Tn
c) Sn
d) Espn

Birthday:
William Thomson, better known as Lord Kelvin, the Belfast-born mathematical physicist and engineer who established the scale of temperature that bears his name, would have turned 187 years old on Sunday. Unless you live in outer space, you probably don't need a Kelvin thermometer outside your kitchen window. Zero on the Kelvin scale is absolute zero (minus-459.7 Fahrenheit). Ice melts at 273 degrees Kelvin and water boils at 373.16 degrees Kelvin.

By: Craig Neff
Tags American Artist, An Artist's Handbook, Anne Woodman, Arizona Diamonbacks, chemical symbol for tin, children's art classes, Cynthia Gallagher, drawing, Earth News, endangered species, Fashion Institute of Technology, feather duster clarinet, garden hose clarinet, Jay Burreson, Kathy Coe, Linsey Pollak, Lord Kelvin, Margaret Krug, Napoleon's Buttons, Napoleon's invasion of Russia, Parsons The New School, Penny Le Couteur, Rocco Alberico, Roni Henning, The Natural League, tin pest, water-based screen monoprinting
1 Comment

Julie took her artist's hand and created this illustrated sign welcoming people to our busy beehive.

"The Inspired Garden" and Other Fun

June 23, 2011

The Notebook is rolling–or maybe I should say buzzing, like the bees in Julie's drawing above. On Friday, June 24, from 4 to 7 p.m. we'll be holding our season kickoff party and hosting two special guests. Author Judy Paolini and photographer Nance Trueworthy, both of whom live in Maine, will be on hand to sign their book The Inspired Garden: Twenty-Four Artists Share Their Vision. The Notebook tossed a few questions at Judy and Nance about the book:

Q: What sparked the idea?
Judy: Artists often create extraordinary gardens because they use the same elements and principles they use to create their artwork. With attention to form, texture, composition, color, etc, the garden can become a work of art.

Q: What did you hope to convey to readers?
Judy: How these particular artists transfer their knowledge, skills and vision from the studio to the garden. And how the non-artist can utilize their ideas in their own gardens.

Q: How did you go about selecting the artists?
Judy: We looked at the art first. We chose only full-time working artists [from New England]. It was not important that we personally liked the work, although in all cases we did. We reviewed photos of their gardens and visited the local ones to see if they conveyed that same level of skill and vision.

Q: You write about how artists create gardens from an aesthetic perspective rather than a horticultural one and aren't afraid to break the rules. What did you learn from talking to the artists and seeing their gardens?
Judy: Artists aren't afraid to experiment with concepts like color combinations, scale and using exotics as annuals.

Q: How avid a gardener are you and how did you get into it?
Judy: Nance Trueworthy got me going with gardening nearly 20 years ago. I am in the process of eliminating as much lawn in my yard as possible, which is quite a task as about half an acre was lawn when we moved here. I concentrate on trees, shrubs and perennials, using annuals in pots only.

Q: Has your book changed your own view of gardens and gardening?
Judy: Absolutely! One of the most significant insights I took from the book is from Kay Ritter, who states, "After a while every gardener realizes that foliage is the backbone." Because I don't plant a lot of annuals, I now look at foliage first because that is what will be the feature in the gardens most of the season. Perennial blooms don't last long and I want to love my gardens all season.

Judy (left), the author of The Inspired Garden, with Nance, the photographer (who's also a gifted maker of nature-inspired pearl and gemstone available at the Notebook).

Q: How long did you work on the book?
Judy: It took five years from proposal to publication. Because New England has a short growing season it took two summers to see all the gardens. We visited most of them together, Nance shooting as I interviewed the artists.

Q: Nance, what are the challenges of photographing gardens?
Nance: That would be bright mid-day sunshine and [bad] weather. Rain breaks down the flowers and bright sun blows out details on the plants. The best light to shoot gardens is bright overcast light, which brings out great details.

Q: What gear did you use for the book?
Nance: A Nikon camera and various lenses—18mm to 105mm mostly and close-up adapters for the close shots.

Q: Any interesting experiences while shooting it?
Nance: Yes, a frightful moment when Judy spotted a snake sitting in a small pine tree in a garden we were shooting in New Gloucester, Mass. I freaked out and ran, but she took close up shots with her little camera.

Q: What's your own garden like?
Nance: I am a huge gardener. When I bought my house, there was only grass and a little hosta in the back yard. The first thing I did was hire someone to till the soil and I put in a big English cottage garden full of roses, peonies, iris, blue hydrangea and many other things, including some weeping cherry trees, hanoki pine and other pine trees and boxwood.

Another Book Spotlight:

The superb new book by Michael Canfield of Harvard University Press. Look for a guest blog from Mike in this space soon.

The superb new book by Michael Canfield of Harvard University Press. Look for a guest blog from Mike in this space soon.


Notebook team member and chief literary critic Eli Mellen has begun writing a series of quick takes on some of the 1,000-plus books we have at The Naturalist's Notebook. The first book he chose is a brand new one that is already a Notebook favorite:

Field Notes on Science & Nature, edited by Michael R. Canfield This book offers a glimpse into the notebooks kept by some of the most influential and respected naturalists and scientists of the last century. Complete with high-resolution reproductions of their notebook pages, this collection will offer any budding naturalist or notebook keeper a lifetime's worth of inspiration.

In his introduction, the eminent biologist and writer E.O. Wilson has this to say, "If there is a heaven, and I am allowed entrance, I will ask for no more than an endless living world to walk through and explore. I will carry with me an inexhaustible supply of notebooks, from which I can send reports back to the more sedentary spirits (mostly molecular and cell biologists). Along the way I would expect to meed kindred spirits, among whom would be the authors of the essays in this book."

Answer to the Last Puzzler:
Which of these are the temporary names given to the two newly discovered chemical elements:

a) unbelievium and underwearium
b) ununquadium and ununhexium
c) unexpectoramus and unforseenium

The answer is b)—ununquestionably.

Today's Puzzler:
The prefix paleo appears in several natural history terms, such as paleolithic and paleontologist.
What does paleo mean?

a) related to dinosaurs
b) lacking sunlight
c) ancient

Birthdays:
British writer George Orwell (Animal Farm) would have been 108 this weekend and painter Robert Henri would have been 146. Henri was part of an American art movement called the Ashcan School, which focused on realistic portrayals of daily life in poor city neighborhoods—a visual cousin of the muckraking journalism of the early 1900s.

Work by Robert Henri

Work by Robert Henri

By: Craig Neff
In Uncategorized Tags beehive sign, Field Notes on Science and Nature, George Orwell, Judy Paolini, Michael Canfield, Nance Trueworthy, new element, paleo, Robert Henri, The Inspired Garden, ununhexium, ununquadium
Comment

Our first visitors of the season arrived 20 minutes before our 10 o'clock opening and quickly found Millie the milkable cow, part of our installation on the 10,000-plus-year history of agriculture and how farming has reshaped the planet.

We're Open

June 20, 2011

Down East Maine is very...east. We're almost far enough east to be in the Atlantic time zone. So around the summer solstice (officially 1:16 p.m. on Tuesday, June 21, this year), we watch the sun rise quite early. Today it appeared at 4:48 a.m., giving Pamelia and me five hours and 12 minutes of sunlight to finish preparing for our own change of season: The opening of season three at The Naturalist's Notebook.

Things are flying in our astronomy room, which includes our own Hubble telescope (or perhaps I should say telly-scope) and a look at the creation in outer space of the chemical elements that make up our bodies.

Not that the Notebook is completely ready, mind you. We'll continue to work on it all summer. We are already having fun finding mistakes and typos in the displays that ARE done, such as our 7-foot-tall history-of-farming board game. One of the game cards had this seemingly easy multiple-choice question:

What do farmers do with their sheep?

a) Shave off their wool
b) Buy them birthday gifts
c) Play golf with them

We discovered that we had listed the answer as c), which conjures an image of the sheep golfer, dressed in plus fours and a Titleist visor, pausing to chew down the tall grass around the ball he has just sliced into the rough.

We hope that over the summer, the number of visitors will keep climbing, particularly up our math staircase.

We've already had a botanist and biologist in the Notebook this morning, one of whom was brave enough to try on our mad scientist glasses and wig. As I write this, one of our team members is creating a giant green man out of paper to go with our installation on the makeup of the human body. We're awaiting the delivery of two amazing, high-end insect art pieces created with old watch parts (and old insect parts too). It's a fun opening day.

Spin the wheel and take your chances as you maneuver through our oversized, homemade board game. If you've ever golfed with your sheep, you get an extra wheel spin.

But it's time to return to work. I hope we'll get to see many of you here at the Notebook this summer. We're open 10 to 5, seven days a week, and we have the first of our special events on Friday, June 24, when author Judy Paolini and photographer Nance Trueworthy will do a signing for their book The Inspired Garden, about the unique gardens created by 24 New England artists. They'll be here from 4 to 7, and we're turning the event into a season kickoff party, so come on down (or up) if you're around. I'll be telling you more about Judy and Nance soon.

Wooster spent a night at the Notebook with Millie during our final preparations.

Answer to the Last Puzzler

Match the state with its state fish: Georgia: large-mouth bass Maine: landlocked salmon Maryland: striped bass Minnesota: walleye

Today's Puzzler:

Two new elements were added to the periodic table this month after three years of scientific. The elements are extremely radioactive and last for less than one second before they decay into other elements. The two don't even have official names yet. What are their temporary names?

a) unbelievium and underwearium
b) ununquadium and ununhexium
c) unexpectoramus and unforseenium

By: Craig Neff
Tags chemical elements, Down East sunrise, educational cow, Farm Game, flying skeletons, history of farming, Hubble telescope, Judy Paolini, math staircase, Nance Trueworthy, new elements in periodic table, que, Seal Harbor, sheep golfer, summer solstice, The Inspired Garden
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This beautiful Peg and Awl notebook (yes, it's an actual notebook) is but one of the many new things you'll find at our shop and exploratorium when it opens for the season on June 20.

Notebook Countdown

June 13, 2011

Life has been a tad busy lately. Either Pamelia or I (or both) have regularly been up at 4 a.m. to start work on the 10-to-the-27th-power preparatory tasks that must be done by The Naturalist's Notebook's season opening on June 20. The tasks range from the mundane (unpacking boxes of books and honey and bird-friendly coffee) to the unusual (standing on a stepladder trying to attach a skull to a flying skeleton) to the challenging (writing simple, concise display text about complicated science topics) to the interactive (communicating with the scores and scores of people with whom we are collaborating in one way or another, from artists to mathematicians to botanists to puzzle makers).

The fact that I unthinkingly typed "10-to-the-27th-power" just now reflects the state of my brain: The other day, in the course of my never-ending Notebook research, I learned that the number of atoms in a typical human body is seven times 10 to the 27th power. That's a 7 with 27 zeroes after it. Somehow I find that interesting to know.

Pamelia has been photographing a variety of Notebook still lifes for a brochure that we're (finally) finishing. Because The Naturalist's Notebook has such a variety of subjects, shopping and installations—Van Gogh meets genetic research and supernovas in a nature lab/art studio/fun house—no one photo can easily sum the place up.

We sometimes think we're crazy for attempting to combine so many ideas and people and installations and items, but the Notebook seems to have created a fascinating energy field that has drawn people of all ages to it. We often describe the Notebook as a walk-in magazine, which it is; but because we interact with visitors and collaborators so much, every day, Pamelia also calls our season "16 weeks of live theater." Unscripted theater, I might add. The element of surprise ought to be in life's periodic table, as prominently placed as hydrogen and oxygen are in chemistry's periodic table.

Surprise is its own form of atomic energy.

Hmmm...what's going on here? Could a Notebook installation be in the works? Friends Jowill Woodman and Betsy Loredo and Notebook whiz Haley Harwood were brushing up on their art skills the other day.

Guess what? I have to go. Three College of the Atlantic students and one visiting friend from Nova Scotia are joining us shortly for a whirlwind of creative activity inside the little century-old building at 16 Main Street in Seal Harbor, Maine. Good things are happening in there, and it's fun to be part of it.

Happy Belated Father's Day

As an early Father's Day gift a couple of weeks ago I took my dad to master carver Steve Valleau's one-day bird-carving workshop at the Wendell Gilley Museum in Southwest Harbor, Maine. This is my day's effort—a black-throated blue warbler, minus the finishing touches and the paint. Carving is a great way to sharpen your eye as a naturalist because you have to define each detail with such precision. Without Steve's help, of course, my bird would have been far more, uh, abstract looking.

Answer to the Last Puzzler:
State insect match-up:
1) Connecticut: praying mantis
2) Maine: honeybee
3) Delaware: ladybug
4) Pennsylvania: firefly

Today's Puzzler:
Match the state with its state fish:

1) Georgia
2) Maine
3) Maryland
4) Minnesota

a) Land-locked salmon
b) Large-mouth bass
c) Walleye
d) Striped bass

Birthday:
Stan Laurel, the English-born comic actor, would have turned 121 years old this week. Never mind that Pamelia and I sometimes feel like Laurel and Hardy as we bumble our way through Notebook preparations; Laurel deserves Notebook blog mention because he was creative, made the occasional science/nature film (who can forget Tree in a Test Tube (1942), done with U.S. Department of Agriculture to enlighten viewers about trees and wood products?) and remained approachable enough that in his final years, while he was living in an apartment in Santa Monica, Calif., his number was listed in the phone book. Strangers called and chatted with him all the time.

Stan Laurel ("Another fine mess you've gotten us into, Stanley")

By: Craig Neff
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Craig & Pamelia's Past Posts


Darwin's Past Posts

  • December 2015
    • Dec 14, 2015 Welcome to My First "Blog." I'm Writing It While Traveling 500 MPH Inside a Metal Bird. This 21st Century is Quite Fantastic Dec 14, 2015
  • January 2019
    • Jan 29, 2019 The Yellow Northern Cardinal, A Year Later Jan 29, 2019
  • March 2018
    • Mar 8, 2018 Guest Blog: Put Plastic in Its Place (Starting With Straws!) Mar 8, 2018
  • February 2018
    • Feb 19, 2018 A Yellow Northern Cardinal Feb 19, 2018
    • Feb 12, 2018 The Rare Iberian Lynx Feb 12, 2018
  • January 2018
    • Jan 9, 2018 Manatees Escaping Cold Water Jan 9, 2018
  • September 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Birds of Costa Rica and Panama Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Roseate Spoonbills in South Carolina Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 What's a Patagonian Dragon? Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 A Thrush from Bangladesh Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Zebras at the Waterhole Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 False Eyes of the Spicebush Swallowtail Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 Mountain Goats in Wyoming Sep 14, 2017
    • Sep 14, 2017 The Unseen Gray Tree Frog Sep 14, 2017
  • February 2017
    • Feb 21, 2017 Happy Presidential Species Week Feb 21, 2017
  • January 2017
    • Jan 28, 2017 A Primate Cousin Jan 28, 2017
  • December 2016
    • Dec 29, 2016 Think Small: What Would You Do to Help Toads, Frogs and Salamanders? Dec 29, 2016
  • November 2016
    • Nov 22, 2016 How the Historic Supermoon Looked from All 50 States Nov 22, 2016
    • Nov 3, 2016 Maine on Mars! And a Visit to NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab Nov 3, 2016
  • October 2016
    • Oct 29, 2016 Good News for the Antarctic Oct 29, 2016
    • Oct 28, 2016 Supermoon As Seen Across America Oct 28, 2016
    • Oct 26, 2016 Rare Sight: Two California Condors Oct 26, 2016
    • Oct 8, 2016 The Yellow-Billed Cuckoo Oct 8, 2016
    • Oct 8, 2016 Blue-Gray Gnatcatchers Oct 8, 2016
  • June 2016
    • Jun 18, 2016 Swimming With the Eels Jun 18, 2016
    • Jun 2, 2016 Great Photos of 17-Year Cicadas Emerging Jun 2, 2016
  • May 2016
    • May 21, 2016 Happy 90th, Sir David Attenborough May 21, 2016
    • May 11, 2016 Amazing Acorn Woodpeckers: Packing 50,000 Nuts Into a Single Tree May 11, 2016
  • April 2016
    • Apr 24, 2016 Little Blue Heron on the North Carolina Coast Apr 24, 2016
    • Apr 19, 2016 Q-and-A With Bernd Heinrich About "One Wild Bird at a Time" Apr 19, 2016
    • Apr 10, 2016 Migrating Songbird Fallout On Machias Seal Island (Guest Post By Lighthouse Keeper Ralph Eldridge) Apr 10, 2016
    • Apr 9, 2016 How Much Do You Know About Air? An Interactive Quiz Apr 9, 2016
    • Apr 8, 2016 What Does Catastrophic Molt Look Like on Elephant Seals and Penguins? Apr 8, 2016
    • Apr 6, 2016 How a Pileated Woodpecker Works Apr 6, 2016
    • Apr 5, 2016 Fort Bliss Soldiers Protect a Pair of Owls Apr 5, 2016
    • Apr 2, 2016 A Jane Goodall Birthday Quiz Apr 2, 2016
  • March 2016
    • Mar 31, 2016 April Fools' Day and the Stories Behind Eight Animal Hoaxes Mar 31, 2016
    • Mar 27, 2016 Burrowing-Owl Mural in Arizona Mar 27, 2016
    • Mar 24, 2016 Burrowing Owls in Florida Mar 24, 2016
    • Mar 23, 2016 Welcome to Spring Mar 23, 2016
    • Mar 22, 2016 A Pause to Think of Brussels Mar 22, 2016
    • Mar 22, 2016 Black Vultures and Armadillos Mar 22, 2016
    • Mar 13, 2016 50-Foot Waves, the South Shetland Islands and Antarctica Mar 13, 2016
    • Mar 3, 2016 Naturalist's Notebook Guest Post: Photographing the Endangered Spirit Bear Mar 3, 2016
  • February 2016
    • Feb 24, 2016 Bernd Heinrich and the Case of the Dead Woodpecker Feb 24, 2016
    • Feb 5, 2016 Come Along On a One-Day, Three-Stop Antarctic Wildlife Adventure Feb 5, 2016
  • January 2016
    • Jan 26, 2016 Antarctic Adventures (Cont.): Grytviken and Jason Harbor Jan 26, 2016
    • Jan 23, 2016 Bats at the Mine Hill Reserve Jan 23, 2016
    • Jan 12, 2016 From Our Mailbag... Jan 12, 2016
    • Jan 6, 2016 Malheur Wildlife Refuge, the Militia and the Audubon Society Jan 6, 2016
    • Jan 6, 2016 Our Visit to the Malheur National Wildlife Refuge, Site of the Militia Takeover Jan 6, 2016
  • December 2015
    • Dec 30, 2015 10 Nature Tips for a Fun 2016 Dec 30, 2015
    • Dec 22, 2015 Stuck at Sea In the Antarctic With A Rescued Bird, A Paintbrush and a Stowaway Dec 22, 2015
    • Dec 15, 2015 Don't Mess With a Fur Seal Dec 15, 2015
    • Dec 13, 2015 Time-lapse Painting a Chinstrap Penguin on a Ship in the Antarctic Dec 13, 2015
    • Dec 12, 2015 "One Minute With King Penguins" (a Naturalist's Notebook video) Dec 12, 2015
    • Dec 9, 2015 On a Beach With 200,000 King Penguins and Southern Elephant Seals Dec 9, 2015
    • Dec 6, 2015 Eight Things to Do If You Hit 30-Foot Waves On the Way to Antarctica Dec 6, 2015
    • Dec 2, 2015 Antarctic Diary: The Falklands' Endemic Birds and the Value of Sitting Still Dec 2, 2015
  • November 2015
    • Nov 29, 2015 "Prepare to Have Your Mind Blown": Ashore on the Falkland Islands Nov 29, 2015
    • Nov 28, 2015 Setting Sail for the Antarctic Nov 28, 2015
    • Nov 27, 2015 The Road to Antarctica: First Stop, Argentina Nov 27, 2015
    • Nov 26, 2015 A Thanksgiving Wish Nov 26, 2015
    • Nov 22, 2015 How the Two of Us Ended Up On an Adventure In Antarctica Nov 22, 2015
  • October 2015
    • Oct 25, 2015 Common Mergansers on Our Maine Bay Oct 25, 2015
  • August 2015
    • Aug 11, 2015 Dahlias Aug 11, 2015
    • Aug 6, 2015 What Does a Chickadee Egg Look Like? (A Specimen from Bernd Heinrich) Aug 6, 2015
  • June 2015
    • Jun 17, 2015 Our Northeast Harbor Summer Jun 17, 2015
  • April 2015
    • Apr 26, 2015 Our First London Marathon: From Dinosaurs to Prince Harry Apr 26, 2015
  • March 2015
    • Mar 28, 2015 Our Two Amazing Weeks with a Bobcat Mar 28, 2015
  • February 2015
    • Feb 23, 2015 10 Things You Missed at the Schoodic Institute's First Winter Festival Feb 23, 2015
    • Feb 17, 2015 Do Baboons Keep Dogs as Pets? Feb 17, 2015
  • January 2015
    • Jan 30, 2015 Why Is Maine Losing Its Seabirds? Jan 30, 2015
  • July 2014
    • Jul 16, 2014 Our Full Day-by-Day Schedule of Summer Workshops and Events Jul 16, 2014
  • May 2014
    • May 17, 2014 The Forest Where 3 Billion Birds Go Each Spring May 17, 2014
  • April 2014
    • Apr 17, 2014 Big Waves and Big Ideas Apr 17, 2014
  • March 2014
    • Mar 17, 2014 13.8 Billion Cheers to a Notebook Friend Who Just Helped Explain the Universe Mar 17, 2014
  • February 2014
    • Feb 22, 2014 Day 21 in Russia Feb 22, 2014
    • Feb 19, 2014 Day 18 in Russia (and Quite an Owl Sighting) Feb 19, 2014
    • Feb 16, 2014 Day 15 in Russia Feb 16, 2014
    • Feb 14, 2014 Day 13 in Russia Feb 14, 2014
    • Feb 11, 2014 Day 10 in Russia Feb 11, 2014
    • Feb 9, 2014 Day 7 in Russia Feb 9, 2014
    • Feb 6, 2014 Day 4 in Russia Feb 6, 2014
    • Feb 3, 2014 Day 1 in Russia Feb 3, 2014
  • January 2014
    • Jan 1, 2014 Pictures of the Year Jan 1, 2014
  • November 2013
    • Nov 20, 2013 Our Holiday Hours and the Road to 2014 Nov 20, 2013
  • July 2013
    • Jul 11, 2013 The Notebook Expands to Northeast Harbor Jul 11, 2013
  • June 2013
    • Jun 4, 2013 The Notebook Journey Jun 4, 2013
  • May 2013
    • May 29, 2013 Images From a Turtle Pond May 29, 2013
    • May 25, 2013 What Is a Boreal Forest and Why Is It Important? May 25, 2013
    • May 20, 2013 The Best Snowy Owl Story Ever May 20, 2013
    • May 14, 2013 Escaping on a Maine Trail May 14, 2013
    • May 2, 2013 Porcupine Couch Potatoes and a Vernal Pool Adventure with Bernd Heinrich May 2, 2013
  • April 2013
    • Apr 19, 2013 Illuminated Frogs' Eggs, Duck "Teeth" and More on that Boston Photo Apr 19, 2013
    • Apr 13, 2013 How to Become an Astronaut, Or Have Fun Trying Apr 13, 2013
    • Apr 8, 2013 Listen: Vernal Pool Wood Frogs Apr 8, 2013
    • Apr 7, 2013 Angry Birds (Or the Battle to be the Alpha Turkey) Apr 7, 2013
  • March 2013
    • Mar 31, 2013 'Chuckie's Back Mar 31, 2013
    • Mar 29, 2013 The Beautiful Earth, From Space Mar 29, 2013
    • Mar 27, 2013 The Excavating Chickadee and the Canine Taste Tester Mar 27, 2013
    • Mar 17, 2013 96 Hours in Cambridge: Harvard Rhinos, NASA Satellites, Glass Flowers and More Mar 17, 2013
    • Mar 7, 2013 Science, Music and Fun at Dartmouth Mar 7, 2013
    • Mar 2, 2013 Physic-al Comedy Mar 2, 2013
  • February 2013
    • Feb 28, 2013 Why Is Pamelia Painting a Billion Stars? Feb 28, 2013
    • Feb 16, 2013 Elephant Seals, Migrant Monarchs, Shadow Art...And a Ladder Accident Feb 16, 2013
    • Feb 6, 2013 Welcome to Pixar, Berkeley and the Fun Frontier of Astronomy Feb 6, 2013
    • Feb 1, 2013 The Notebook Heads to California Feb 1, 2013
  • January 2013
    • Jan 23, 2013 Coming to Acadia and Bar Harbor: The 2013 Family Nature Summit (and More) Jan 23, 2013
    • Jan 17, 2013 Hunger Games: A Sharp-Shinned Hawk, Two Goshawks and A Poor Red Squirrel Jan 17, 2013
    • Jan 10, 2013 Fishing Boats, Sea Creatures and Four Seconds of Human History Jan 10, 2013
    • Jan 7, 2013 One Robin in Winter Jan 7, 2013
    • Jan 3, 2013 Happy 2013—Our Big Bang Year Jan 3, 2013
  • December 2012
    • Dec 29, 2012 Closing Days of 2012 Dec 29, 2012
    • Dec 22, 2012 Woodpeckers, Science Stories and What Minus-41-Degree Air Does to a Bucket of Water Dec 22, 2012
    • Dec 11, 2012 Sunlight in the Darkest Month Dec 11, 2012
  • November 2012
    • Nov 25, 2012 An Icy World Nov 25, 2012
    • Nov 16, 2012 Fox Cam, the Birds-of-Paradise Project, Election Notes and Our Holiday Schedule Nov 16, 2012
    • Nov 8, 2012 Greetings from Russia and the Black Sea Nov 8, 2012
    • Nov 3, 2012 Where We're Going Nov 3, 2012
  • October 2012
    • Oct 30, 2012 Our Interactive Timeline Installation at the TEDx Maine Conference at Bates College Oct 30, 2012
    • Oct 19, 2012 Just a Thought... Oct 19, 2012
    • Oct 14, 2012 A Harp With No Strings Oct 14, 2012
    • Oct 10, 2012 The Isle of Skye Oct 10, 2012
  • September 2012
    • Sep 29, 2012 Illusions from Scotland Sep 29, 2012
    • Sep 25, 2012 The Notre Dame Sparrows Sep 25, 2012
    • Sep 21, 2012 A Notebook Road Trip Begins Sep 21, 2012
    • Sep 16, 2012 Loons and Lead Sep 16, 2012
    • Sep 12, 2012 Bates, Birds, Bones, Bugs, Bats and Bottle-Cap Art Sep 12, 2012
    • Sep 6, 2012 The Night the Ocean Twinkled Sep 6, 2012
  • August 2012
    • Aug 27, 2012 What a Week Aug 27, 2012
    • Aug 19, 2012 A Q-and-A with Bernd Heinrich Aug 19, 2012
    • Aug 17, 2012 Up Next: A Bird Walk and Talk with Jeff Wells Aug 17, 2012
    • Aug 13, 2012 Next Up: Big Bang Week Aug 13, 2012
    • Aug 9, 2012 More Olympic Shots Aug 9, 2012
    • Aug 3, 2012 Q-and-A with Olympic Medalist (and Avid Naturalist) Lynn Jennings Aug 3, 2012
  • July 2012
    • Jul 30, 2012 A Walk in the Park Jul 30, 2012
    • Jul 28, 2012 Green Olympics Jul 28, 2012
    • Jul 24, 2012 Off to the London Games Jul 24, 2012
    • Jul 19, 2012 It's Done Jul 19, 2012
    • Jul 11, 2012 What's a Dog For? Jul 11, 2012
    • Jul 7, 2012 A Tree Grows in Manhattan (But What Kind?) Jul 7, 2012
    • Jul 5, 2012 The Tarn and the Office Jul 5, 2012
    • Jul 2, 2012 Building a Better Robot: A Guest Blog By David Eacho Jul 2, 2012
  • June 2012
    • Jun 27, 2012 The Peanut Butter Jar and the Skunk Jun 27, 2012
    • Jun 25, 2012 A New Season Begins Jun 25, 2012
    • Jun 22, 2012 Spaceship Clouds (And Other Sightings) Jun 22, 2012
    • Jun 16, 2012 Eye Pod and Egg-Laying Turtles Jun 16, 2012
    • Jun 13, 2012 Binocular Bird, Olympic Fish, Debuting Dog Jun 13, 2012
    • Jun 9, 2012 The Wildflower Detective Jun 9, 2012
    • Jun 5, 2012 Glimpse of What's Coming Jun 5, 2012
    • Jun 2, 2012 Up for June Jun 2, 2012
  • May 2012
    • May 28, 2012 How to Extract Iron From Breakfast Cereal With a Magnet May 28, 2012
    • May 25, 2012 Tribute to a Friend May 25, 2012
    • May 15, 2012 How an Abandoned Navy Base Became a Mecca for Scientists, Naturalists, Artists, Educators... and Porcupines May 15, 2012
    • May 12, 2012 Happy Bird Day May 12, 2012
    • May 8, 2012 Time and Tide to Get Outside May 8, 2012
  • April 2012
    • Apr 30, 2012 A Trip to Vermont to See Bernd Heinrich Apr 30, 2012
    • Apr 21, 2012 Our Nest Eggs Apr 21, 2012
    • Apr 17, 2012 Up Cadillac Mountain Apr 17, 2012
    • Apr 15, 2012 A Shell In Wonderland Apr 15, 2012
    • Apr 14, 2012 Rube Goldberg in the 21st Century Apr 14, 2012
    • Apr 12, 2012 Woodpeckers in Love Apr 12, 2012
    • Apr 7, 2012 Take Two Hikes and Call Me In the Morning Apr 7, 2012
    • Apr 4, 2012 Great Blue Heron Eggs and Nest Apr 4, 2012
    • Apr 2, 2012 Jon Stewart, Chemistry Buff (And Other Surprises) Apr 2, 2012
  • March 2012
    • Mar 26, 2012 Painting Science and Nature Without a Brush (And a Super-Slo-Mo Eagle Owl) Mar 26, 2012
    • Mar 22, 2012 Inside the MDI Biological Lab Mar 22, 2012
    • Mar 19, 2012 Through the Lens Mar 19, 2012
    • Mar 17, 2012 500 Years of Women In Art In Less Than 3 Minutes (and Other March Madness) Mar 17, 2012
    • Mar 14, 2012 The Barred Owl and the Tree Lobster Mar 14, 2012
    • Mar 10, 2012 Observe. Draw. Don't Mind the Arsenic. Mar 10, 2012
    • Mar 8, 2012 Crow Tracks In Snow Mar 8, 2012
    • Mar 7, 2012 Hello...Sharp-Shinned Hawk? Mar 7, 2012
    • Mar 4, 2012 The Grape and the Football Field Mar 4, 2012
    • Mar 1, 2012 Leonardo Live (A da Vinci Quiz) Mar 1, 2012
  • February 2012
    • Feb 28, 2012 What Do Dogs Smell? Feb 28, 2012
    • Feb 25, 2012 The Mailbag Feb 25, 2012
    • Feb 22, 2012 Moody Maine Morning Feb 22, 2012
    • Feb 20, 2012 Who Was That Masked Naturalist? Feb 20, 2012
    • Feb 14, 2012 Biking on Siberian Pine Feb 14, 2012
    • Feb 13, 2012 Of Farm, Food and Song Feb 13, 2012
    • Feb 9, 2012 The Truth About Cats and Birds Feb 9, 2012
    • Feb 7, 2012 Just the Moon Feb 7, 2012
    • Feb 4, 2012 Tweet-Tweeting, A Porcupine Find and Algae for Rockets Feb 4, 2012
    • Feb 1, 2012 Harry Potter Sings About the Elements Feb 1, 2012
  • January 2012
    • Jan 30, 2012 Painting On Corn Starch (Or How to Have Fun with a Non-Newtonian Liquid) Jan 30, 2012
    • Jan 28, 2012 You've Just Found a Stranded Seal, Whale or Dolphin. What Do You Do? Jan 28, 2012
    • Jan 23, 2012 Art + Science + Vision = Microsculpture Jan 23, 2012
    • Jan 20, 2012 An Amazing Bridge Jan 20, 2012
    • Jan 18, 2012 Ice, Football and Smart Women Jan 18, 2012
    • Jan 12, 2012 Where a Forest Once Stood Jan 12, 2012
    • Jan 10, 2012 The Blue Jay and the Ant Jan 10, 2012
    • Jan 7, 2012 How Do You Mend a Broken Toe? Jan 7, 2012
    • Jan 3, 2012 Marching Back to the Office Jan 3, 2012
  • December 2011
    • Dec 31, 2011 Happy 2012 Dec 31, 2011
    • Dec 21, 2011 8 Hours, 54 Minutes of Sun Dec 21, 2011
    • Dec 17, 2011 Sloths Come to TV Dec 17, 2011
    • Dec 10, 2011 Charitable Thoughts Dec 10, 2011
    • Dec 6, 2011 Show 20 Slides, Talk for 20 Seconds Per Slide, Tell Us Something Fascinating. Go! Dec 6, 2011
  • November 2011
    • Nov 26, 2011 Science-Driven Fashion (As Envisioned in the 1930s) Nov 26, 2011
    • Nov 23, 2011 Day at the Zoo Nov 23, 2011
    • Nov 19, 2011 Otherworldly Dry Ice Art Nov 19, 2011
    • Nov 15, 2011 Gymnastic Gibbons Nov 15, 2011
    • Nov 12, 2011 Cockles and Starlings Nov 12, 2011
  • October 2011
    • Oct 19, 2011 Off to England Oct 19, 2011
    • Oct 5, 2011 Double-Double Total Rainbows Oct 5, 2011
    • Oct 1, 2011 Welcome to October of the Year...13,700,002,011? Oct 1, 2011
  • September 2011
    • Sep 23, 2011 The Seal Harbor Roadblock Sep 23, 2011
    • Sep 17, 2011 Birds, Dark Skies, Doc Holliday and the New Honey Champion Sep 17, 2011
    • Sep 11, 2011 Sea Dogs and Seahawks, 'Novas and 9/11 Sep 11, 2011
    • Sep 2, 2011 Crazy Sneakers and Changing Seasons Sep 2, 2011
  • August 2011
    • Aug 29, 2011 Wild and Windy Aug 29, 2011
    • Aug 27, 2011 Hurricane Irene Aug 27, 2011
    • Aug 24, 2011 Come to Our Thursday Night Talk: Saving the Chimpanzee Aug 24, 2011
    • Aug 21, 2011 How to Draw a World Map in 30 Seconds Aug 21, 2011
    • Aug 18, 2011 Coming to the Notebook On Saturday: An Eco-Smart Gardening Workshop and a Greenhouse on Wheels Aug 18, 2011
    • Aug 14, 2011 Quite a Week, Grasshopper Aug 14, 2011
    • Aug 7, 2011 The Sweet 16 Is Here Aug 7, 2011
    • Aug 3, 2011 Thuya Garden Aug 3, 2011
  • July 2011
    • Jul 29, 2011 Maine Summer Jul 29, 2011
    • Jul 23, 2011 Guest Blog: Harvard's Michael R. Canfield On What Naturalists Carry Jul 23, 2011
    • Jul 20, 2011 Earth News Is Here Jul 20, 2011
    • Jul 18, 2011 Margaret's Workshop Jul 18, 2011
    • Jul 14, 2011 Lost in Space? Jul 14, 2011
    • Jul 13, 2011 Shadows Jul 13, 2011
    • Jul 11, 2011 An Extraordinary (And Inspiring) Young Birder and Artist Jul 11, 2011
    • Jul 7, 2011 Margaret Krug Workshop Jul 7, 2011
    • Jul 4, 2011 Venturing Inside the Notebook Cave Jul 4, 2011
    • Jul 2, 2011 Stand Back—Volcano! Jul 2, 2011
  • June 2011
    • Jun 29, 2011 Look What Landed Jun 29, 2011
    • Jun 26, 2011 Sign Up for Workshops Jun 26, 2011
    • Jun 23, 2011 "The Inspired Garden" and Other Fun Jun 23, 2011
    • Jun 20, 2011 We're Open Jun 20, 2011
    • Jun 13, 2011 Notebook Countdown Jun 13, 2011
    • Jun 3, 2011 New Summer Program: Earth News for Kids Jun 3, 2011
  • May 2011
    • May 27, 2011 Amazing Bird Fallout May 27, 2011
    • May 24, 2011 Signs, Sightings and Bird-Friendly Coffee May 24, 2011
    • May 18, 2011 Science Winners, Butterfly Chasing and Chickens In a Vending Machine May 18, 2011
    • May 11, 2011 Movie Preview: Wings of Life May 11, 2011
    • May 6, 2011 Teenage Scientists and Ambitious Ants May 6, 2011
  • April 2011
    • Apr 29, 2011 Maine Morning Postcard Apr 29, 2011
    • Apr 27, 2011 Vegetable Orchestras and Birds Who Imitate Saws and Power Drills Apr 27, 2011
    • Apr 23, 2011 What's On the Other Side of the Earth? Apr 23, 2011
    • Apr 19, 2011 Exploring at Night Apr 19, 2011
    • Apr 15, 2011 Decoding da Vinci Apr 15, 2011
    • Apr 12, 2011 Jumpin' Jake Apr 12, 2011
    • Apr 8, 2011 Sweet Incentive Apr 8, 2011
    • Apr 6, 2011 Life In Slow Motion Apr 6, 2011
    • Apr 2, 2011 CSI: Maine Apr 2, 2011
  • March 2011
    • Mar 31, 2011 Ninety Seconds on Mercury Mar 31, 2011
    • Mar 29, 2011 Aristotle's Robin and Joe Torre's Heron Mar 29, 2011
    • Mar 26, 2011 The Play's the Thing Mar 26, 2011
    • Mar 23, 2011 Blue Birds and Blue Devils Mar 23, 2011
    • Mar 19, 2011 How a Nuclear Plant Nearly Was Built Next to Acadia National Park (Part I) Mar 19, 2011
    • Mar 16, 2011 Inside an Ant City Mar 16, 2011
    • Mar 12, 2011 Earthquake Artists and the Countdown to Pi (π) Day Mar 12, 2011
    • Mar 9, 2011 The Rhino Who Painted (and the Elephants Who Still Do) Mar 9, 2011
    • Mar 5, 2011 From Bumblebees to Michelangelo Mar 5, 2011
    • Mar 1, 2011 The Chipmunk Who Thought He Was a Groundhog Mar 1, 2011
  • February 2011
    • Feb 26, 2011 The Creature in the Fridge Feb 26, 2011
    • Feb 23, 2011 Evolution in Bar Harbor Feb 23, 2011
    • Feb 21, 2011 Bearing Up in New York City Feb 21, 2011
    • Feb 19, 2011 Ahoy! Sea Turkeys Feb 19, 2011
    • Feb 15, 2011 Music, Moscow and the Mailbag Feb 15, 2011
    • Feb 11, 2011 The Valentine Heart Feb 11, 2011
    • Feb 8, 2011 RIP, Barred Owl Feb 8, 2011
    • Feb 4, 2011 Groundhog Fever, Pluto, and the Hidden Chemistry of the Super Bowl Feb 4, 2011
    • Feb 2, 2011 Snow Joking Around Feb 2, 2011
  • January 2011
    • Jan 31, 2011 Of Mice and Moon Jan 31, 2011
    • Jan 29, 2011 Yellow Journalism? A Look at the Color of the Sun, the Super Bowl and Nat Geo Jan 29, 2011
    • Jan 26, 2011 Final Hours of a Duck Jan 26, 2011
    • Jan 24, 2011 How Cold Is It Where You Are? Jan 24, 2011
    • Jan 22, 2011 Rabbits' Luck Jan 22, 2011
    • Jan 20, 2011 Numbers, Doodling and Football Jan 20, 2011
    • Jan 19, 2011 Birds and the "Scary Movie Effect" Jan 19, 2011
    • Jan 17, 2011 Cold and Colder Jan 17, 2011
    • Jan 16, 2011 London's Olympian Fish Plan Jan 16, 2011
    • Jan 15, 2011 Whooping Cranes and Swimsuit Sands Jan 15, 2011
    • Jan 13, 2011 Iodine Contrast Jan 13, 2011
    • Jan 10, 2011 Bart Simpson and Acidic Words Jan 10, 2011
    • Jan 8, 2011 North Pole Shift, Whiz Kid Astronomer... Jan 8, 2011
    • Jan 6, 2011 Margaret Krug in American Artist Jan 6, 2011
    • Jan 4, 2011 James Bond and the Genius Jan 4, 2011
    • Jan 2, 2011 Water Hazard Jan 2, 2011
  • December 2010
    • Dec 31, 2010 The 2011 Crystal Ball Dec 31, 2010
    • Dec 28, 2010 Danger, Will Woodpecker! Dec 28, 2010
    • Dec 27, 2010 The Blizzard Theory Dec 27, 2010
    • Dec 23, 2010 Green Acres Dec 23, 2010
    • Dec 20, 2010 Naturally Frosted Dec 20, 2010
    • Dec 15, 2010 Let's See...How Many Turtle Doves? Dec 15, 2010
    • Dec 11, 2010 Real Dog Sledding Dec 11, 2010
    • Dec 11, 2010 Just Follow the Arrows Dec 11, 2010
    • Dec 9, 2010 Light Show Dec 9, 2010
    • Dec 6, 2010 Foxes in the Snow Dec 6, 2010
    • Dec 1, 2010 Ready for December Dec 1, 2010
  • November 2010
    • Nov 25, 2010 Turkey Day Trot Nov 25, 2010
    • Nov 21, 2010 We're Open Again Nov 21, 2010
    • Nov 10, 2010 Last Days in California Nov 10, 2010
    • Nov 9, 2010 Day at the Museum Nov 9, 2010
    • Nov 7, 2010 Land of the Giants Nov 7, 2010
  • October 2010
    • Oct 31, 2010 Oregon to California Oct 31, 2010
    • Oct 28, 2010 Checking Out Oregon's High Desert Oct 28, 2010
    • Oct 27, 2010 Boise and Birds Oct 27, 2010
    • Oct 26, 2010 A Day in Utah Oct 26, 2010
    • Oct 25, 2010 Blowing Into Idaho Oct 25, 2010
    • Oct 24, 2010 Welcome to Montana Oct 24, 2010
    • Oct 19, 2010 Big Cats Playing With Pumpkins Oct 19, 2010
    • Oct 17, 2010 Last Blooms Before the Frost Oct 17, 2010
    • Oct 12, 2010 The End of Our Regular Season Oct 12, 2010
    • Oct 8, 2010 Coming Saturday: Arthur Haines Oct 8, 2010
    • Oct 6, 2010 India's Pollinator Problem (and Other News) Oct 6, 2010
    • Oct 5, 2010 October at Eagle Lake Oct 5, 2010
    • Oct 3, 2010 Happy Bird Day Oct 3, 2010
    • Oct 2, 2010 Did a Mushroom Lead to the Word "Berserk"? Oct 2, 2010
  • September 2010
    • Sep 30, 2010 A Budding Naturalist at Age 14 Sep 30, 2010
    • Sep 25, 2010 A Rays Runaway Sep 25, 2010
    • Sep 23, 2010 Good Morning, Maine Sep 23, 2010
    • Sep 13, 2010 Whole Foods' Smart Move Sep 13, 2010
    • Sep 13, 2010 Three Months Later: The Great Sun Chips Bag Composting Test (And More) Sep 13, 2010
    • Sep 11, 2010 Stargazing and Other Fall Treats Sep 11, 2010
    • Sep 8, 2010 Big Numbers Sep 8, 2010
    • Sep 7, 2010 Maine. The Magazine Sep 7, 2010
    • Sep 4, 2010 The 2010 Honey Champion Sep 4, 2010
    • Sep 1, 2010 Newspaper Story on Pamelia and Her Tidal Photos Sep 1, 2010
  • August 2010
    • Aug 31, 2010 Disneynature's Pollinator Movie Aug 31, 2010
    • Aug 30, 2010 Migration Time Aug 30, 2010
    • Aug 28, 2010 What Happened to My Lunch Aug 28, 2010
    • Aug 25, 2010 Look Who Crawled In Aug 25, 2010
    • Aug 21, 2010 Scandal at the Sweet 16 Tournament: Did Fritz the Dog Influence the Outcome? Aug 21, 2010
    • Aug 12, 2010 Back to Work Aug 12, 2010
    • Aug 1, 2010 Next Stop: London Aug 1, 2010
  • July 2010
    • Jul 29, 2010 The Climbing Grey Fox Jul 29, 2010
    • Jul 28, 2010 Tonight's Maine Moon Jul 28, 2010
    • Jul 26, 2010 11 Things I Learned While Hanging Out at The Naturalist's Notebook This Week Jul 26, 2010
    • Jul 21, 2010 Straw Meets Potato (A Science Experiment) Jul 21, 2010
    • Jul 19, 2010 Attack of the Hungry Gull Jul 19, 2010
    • Jul 18, 2010 Photos From the Workshop Jul 18, 2010
    • Jul 17, 2010 Show Time Jul 17, 2010
    • Jul 15, 2010 An Exciting Spell in Maine Jul 15, 2010
    • Jul 13, 2010 Do You Get Things Like This In the Mail? Jul 13, 2010
    • Jul 9, 2010 New Muppet Species Found Jul 9, 2010
    • Jul 7, 2010 10 Things That Happened at The Notebook This Week Jul 7, 2010
    • Jul 4, 2010 Great Piece on Gulf Disaster Jul 4, 2010
    • Jul 1, 2010 Bar Harbor Times Article Jul 1, 2010
  • June 2010
    • Jun 29, 2010 Go Climb a Mountain Jun 29, 2010
    • Jun 25, 2010 Don't Swat That Mosquito! It's Part of an Artwork that Has People Buzzing Jun 25, 2010
    • Jun 21, 2010 Bangor Daily News Feature Jun 21, 2010
    • Jun 20, 2010 Happy Father's Day Jun 20, 2010
    • Jun 18, 2010 Another Fine Mess Jun 18, 2010
    • Jun 11, 2010 Sneak Peek at the Notebook Jun 11, 2010
    • Jun 2, 2010 The Sun Chip Composting Test Jun 2, 2010
  • May 2010
    • May 31, 2010 Memorial Day Animal Picnic May 31, 2010
    • May 28, 2010 Tadpole Buddies, a Plant Genius and My Lonely Yellow Warbler May 28, 2010
    • May 24, 2010 The Gorilla Connection May 24, 2010
    • May 22, 2010 Amazing Green Apartment: 344 sf, 24 rms May 22, 2010
    • May 20, 2010 Nice Notebook Review May 20, 2010
    • May 19, 2010 Oil and Sea Turtles Don't Mix May 19, 2010
    • May 16, 2010 Good Way to Start the Day May 16, 2010
    • May 14, 2010 DNA, DMC and UFO? May 14, 2010
    • May 13, 2010 The Chiusdino Climber May 13, 2010
    • May 10, 2010 The Notebook in Italy: Our Tuscan Top 10 May 10, 2010
  • April 2010
    • Apr 26, 2010 Quick Hello From Italy Apr 26, 2010
    • Apr 22, 2010 Happy Earth Day Apr 22, 2010
    • Apr 20, 2010 Utter Horsetail! Apr 20, 2010
    • Apr 18, 2010 Elephant Meets Dog Apr 18, 2010
    • Apr 17, 2010 Maine Movie Night: Earth Disaster! Apr 17, 2010
    • Apr 15, 2010 Panda-monium (and Maine in Blue) Apr 15, 2010
    • Apr 14, 2010 Another Problem Caused By Deforestation Apr 14, 2010
    • Apr 13, 2010 Planting and Painting Dahlias (and Other April Adventures) Apr 13, 2010
    • Apr 11, 2010 Photos from a Maine Walk Apr 11, 2010
    • Apr 10, 2010 A Simple, Sound Nature Tip Apr 10, 2010
    • Apr 2, 2010 The Highly Evolved Dog Apr 2, 2010
  • March 2010
    • Mar 30, 2010 On Weather, Longfellow and Jamie Oliver Mar 30, 2010
    • Mar 27, 2010 Olympics' Green Legacy Mar 27, 2010
  • February 2010
    • Feb 6, 2010 Moon Snail in Maine Winter Feb 6, 2010
  • January 2010
    • Jan 30, 2010 Pluto Revisited Jan 30, 2010
    • Jan 20, 2010 Snow Cat Jan 20, 2010
  • December 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 A view of nature... Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 The Natural League Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 Seal Harbor Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 The Natural History Deck Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 The Coolest Shop... Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 21, 2009 Bees and Honey Dec 21, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 The Farm Room Dec 20, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 The Naturalist's Room Dec 20, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 The Notebook Dec 20, 2009
    • Dec 20, 2009 Grand Opening! Dec 20, 2009