Author: news

The Real March Madness: Outside in Nature

[caption id="attachment_274808" align="aligncenter" width="480"] Toadshade trillium in bud, one of the many spring wildflowers soon to bloom on our trails.[/caption] It’s hugely exciting times for college hoops fans, awash in basketball games where they breathlessly wait to see if, oh, the Providence Friars can hold off the South Dakota State Jackrabbits. (OK, Villanova vs. Delaware is pretty cool.) Some $3.1 billion will be bet-- DOUBLE what was spent only last year-- and almost 40 million Americans will fill out those brackets.  Over 19-year-old kids playing hoops. Welcome to March Madness.  Meanwhile, receiving no fanfare at all, nature in March is…

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Ukraine: “This is a Fossil Fuel War”

[caption id="attachment_274792" align="aligncenter" width="600"] A gas-powered power plant and thermal power plant in snow-covered Anadyr, Siberia, Russia.[/caption] We’ve all been watching the increasingly grim war in Ukraine with a mixture of horror, outrage, and sadness at the needless loss of life and the tragic outpouring of refugees. Given Vladimir Putin’s relentless resolve in pushing forward at all costs, I’m guessing the situation only worsens between my writing this on Friday and your reading it next week.  Svitlana Krakovska has a unique lens to view the war. A Kyiv resident, she’s Ukraine’s leading climate scientist and the head of the country’s…

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The Life, Death, and Rebirth of a Great American Tree

[caption id="attachment_274766" align="aligncenter" width="600"] A chestnut tree showing its open bur and those famously alluring fruits, craved by both people and a diverse assemblage of animals, from deer to passenger pigeons. Photo courtesy of the American Chestnut Foundation.[/caption] Walk through a local forest, and you’ll see a diverse assemblage of trees-- tuliptrees reaching straight up into the sky, sassafras wiggling their trunks through the canopy, black cherries sporting their chipped bark, beeches seemingly standing like huge immovable elephants, massive smooth gray trunks imitating pachyderms.  But you won’t see any American chestnut trees, once one of the most common trees in…

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LESS IS MORE

[caption id="attachment_274729" align="aligncenter" width="600"] Guests explore the gallery during December's opening reception of LESS IS MORE.[/caption] If you visit our art gallery, you won’t find any real or crafted plants, any carved or photographed trees, any mapped or painted landscapes. Instead, in Makeba Rainey’s show LESS IS MORE: The Nature of Letting Go, you’ll see large fabric portraits overlaid with patterns of African wax cloth, a Kwanzaa altar, a wall of church fans, and a cozy corner stocked with books. And you may wonder: how is this environmental art? The answer is both clear and complex—namely, we humans are also…

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The First Wildflower of Spring is Here!

[caption id="attachment_274103" align="aligncenter" width="400"] Skunk cabbage, one of the first wildflowers to bloom during spring, sprouting on our Ravine Loop.[/caption] In this weird winter of seesaw weather-- 60 degrees one day, 20 the next with an inch of snow to boot-- last week I walked the Ravine Loop in search of one of my Holy Grails, one of my key markers in the natural year's calendar. I was searching for the very first flower of spring, one that appears as early as mid-February, the first flower in a long march that concludes in the late summer with goldenrod and aster,…

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North Light Weathers the Viral Storm

[caption id="attachment_273862" align="aligncenter" width="600"] North Light's Jared Poindexter helps one of his students in the community center's after-school program, one of the many services the center provides.[/caption] Remember when the pandemic hit back in March 2020, and non-profits like the Schuylkill Center and North Light Community Center shuttered our doors, assuming we’d close for a few weeks,  “flatten the curve,” and reopen in April? Well, that didn't happen. Instead, non-profits have been battered financially and programmatically by choppy waves in the viral ocean. Some of us have swum these pandemic seas-- not always gracefully-- but many non-profits have sunk, disappearing…

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The Hidden History of Groundhog Day

[caption id="attachment_273823" align="aligncenter" width="600"] Punxsutawney Phil meets his adoring masses in 2020, when he called an early spring. What will he say this year?[/caption] Early Wednesday morning, way out there in the small town of Punxsutawney, a portly aging man in top hat and tails will unceremoniously yank a grumpy groundhog from his winter den and present it to a roaring crowd numbering in the tens of thousands. The man then will whisper to the groundhog in a secret, shared language, what he calls “Groundhogese”… And, for the 136th year since 1886, Punxsutawney Phil, the most famous rodent besides a…

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The Healing Power of White Pine

[caption id="attachment_273814" align="aligncenter" width="690"] The white pine in winter, one of the few sources of green in our wintry world.[/caption] This deep in a surprisingly cold and snowy winter, you, like me, might be jonesing for some greenery, as winter’s bleakness can be a little depressing. I have just the antidote: get thee to the Pine Grove, an island of green in an ocean of winter’s browns and grays.  One of our visitors’ favorite sites on the Center’s 340 acres, the grove is oddly not a natural phenomenon at all, but instead an artificial plantation of white pines planted in…

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The Schuylkill Center’s Year of Restoration

[caption id="attachment_273776" align="aligncenter" width="360"] Many hands make restoration possible. Join our Restoration Work Day.[/caption] We have named 2022 as our Year of Restoration, dedicating our programming to restoring so many things, starting with the forest habitat that our nature center calls home. But we are also looking to restore our climate, the planet in total, and several things lost in pandemic confusion: our sense of awe and a balance in our relationships with nature and each other. The 11th annual Richard L. James Lecture, named for our founding director, will be held virtually in March and will focus on restoring…

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Countdown: 10 Things I Love About Winter

Last week, the first full week of the New Year, was a weird one weather-wise. It was supposed to snow last Monday for like 24 hours straight, but the snow slipped east and south instead, slamming DC and the Jersey shore. Then on Wednesday, the morning commute was icy, and finally, on Friday, we saw our first real snowfall of the year, a nice covering of three to five inches hereabouts. Philadelphians LOVE to complain about weather, and winter gives us a lot to complain about. But TV meteorologists don’t help, always acting surprised when winter weather is cold, or…

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