Tag: news-import

Philadelphia’s Top Trails

[caption id="attachment_238" align="aligncenter" width="300"] On one of Schuylkill Center's Trails[/caption] As Thanksgiving is fast approaching, you might be in need of an activity for your visiting family members. Even as the weather starts to grow colder, the greater Philadelphia area offers many beautiful and relaxing nature trails. Try one of the following trails with your family, your partner, or even just for yourself this holiday season. Looking for a more active day? -Wissahickon's Green Ribbon Trail (20 miles): This multi-purpose path stretches along the Wissahickon Creek from Whitemarsh Township to a point near Lansdale Borough. -Schuylkill River Trail (27 miles): Following the beautiful Schuylkill…

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Butterfly Land

As the mercury hovers around 100, people might wilt and retreat indoors—but the butterflies are having a ball. Summer is high season for butterflies, and the hotter it is, the happier they seem.  In fact, driving down SCEE’s long driveway between the nature center and Hagy’s Mill Road, literally dozens of butterflies jump up from the dusty driveway to avoid the car, and dozens more flit across the driveway flying past. We are Butterfly Land.  Come see.  Right now. Just outside our front door, common milkweed is in full glorious bloom, perfect globular bursts that resemble pink fireworks.  Smelling unbelievably…

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Sex and the Single Firefly

The male firefly, flashing in search of a female By Mike Weilbacher, Exec Director Saw my first firefly just last week, right after Memorial Day.  For me, a naturalist who marks the passage of time by nature’s calendar, nothing says summer like an evening of fireflies. And one of my favorite stories is the secrets of a firefly's flash. When you see a cloud of fireflies rising from your lawn like liquid lightning, you are witnessing a stag party, a collection of horny males desperately seeking Susans-- every firefly flashing around you is male, the flash used to seduce a…

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Bird above, wildflowers below

By Executive Director Mike Weilbacher Nature’s wildflower parade continues! On a walk along our Ravine Loop last Saturday, the forest was awash in colors.  While bloodroot is finished and done for the season, the cheerful caps of trout lily (below, right) poked through masses of Virginia bluebells.  Two species of trillium, one a deep wine red, the other a [caption id="attachment_207" align="alignleft" width="300"] White trillium[/caption] bright white (left), also enlivened the forest floor. We’ll be heading out this next Saturday at 8:30 a.m. to search for these—and other!—flowers.  The walk, “Warblers and Wildflowers,” will have us looking two directions at…

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From tailess to tail in a matter of hours…

[caption id="attachment_187" align="alignleft" width="200"] "Imping" a Cooper's hawk's damaged tail[/caption] Last week the staff of the wildlife clinic did something remarkable, especially for those of us who make our living working at a desk.  They rebuilt a bird's tail. The bird in question, a Cooper’s hawk, was brought into the clinic in February with multiple injuries, including head trauma and a severely damaged tail.  The clinic nursed the bird for several weeks as it recovered from a concussion and regained its strength.  The bird’s tail feathers, however, were still in tatters, preventing proper flight.  As I learned from our clinic director,…

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The Race is on: Flowers vs. Trees!

[caption id="attachment_160" align="alignright" width="300"] The delicately pink-striped Spring Beauty[/caption] It’s springtime in a forest: an ancient race between trees and flowers. Here’s the deal: as spring comes to a forest, the trees are still naked and bare-branched, allowing streaming sunlight to strike—and warm!—the forest floor.  Warmed by the sun’s rays, underground roots send up this year’s shoots and flowers, the fresh flowers giving pollinators like native bees, also waking up just now, their first taste of nectar in the new season. [caption id="attachment_163" align="alignleft" width="200"] Virginia Bluebells, three colors in one flower![/caption]And as the flower is pollinated, it makes the…

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Tallamy Tabbed to Give the Inaugural Dick James Lecture

The Schuylkill Center's founding director Founding director. Outstanding teacher. Sharp wit.  Leader.  Acclaimed meteorologist. Radio and TV personality.  Give Dick his due: he was a force to be reckoned with for decades. To honor his accomplishments and reconnect to his legacy, the Schuylkill Center happily announces the establishment of the annual Richard L. James lecture. This year’s inaugural edition will be held Thursday, March 8 at 7:30 p.m. at the Cathedral Village auditorium. Dr. Doug Tallamy, professor of entomology and author of the remarkable “Bringing Nature Home: How You Can Sustain Wildlife with Native Plants,” provides a visually compelling slide…

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Those cute little baby bunnies and birds are tougher than you think…

“Baby animals fall out of trees all the time. But that doesn’t necessarily mean they need rescuing." -- Wildlife rehabber and clinic director, Rick Schubert Spring is our wildlife  clinic’s busy season, as the wildlife baby boom hits, and people bring in baby birds that have fallen from nests or bunnies seemingly abandoned in their backyard. Out of the over 12,000 phone calls the clinic handles in a year, hundreds involve questions or concerns about baby animals being orphaned. That's more spring babies than our clinic-- or most similar clinics, I'd imagine-- can treat onsite.  The good news is, many of these "orphans" really don't…

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A Thanksgiving Tale

[caption id="attachment_123" align="alignleft" width="225" caption="The wildlife clinic is caring for this sick turkey"][/caption] By Naomi Leach, Marketing and PR Coordinator As the gobble, gobble holiday approaches, at least one turkey has reason to give thanks, to the staff at the Schuylkill Center’s Wildlife Rehab Clinic, who are working hard to save its life.  The turkey was brought into the clinic Wednesday injured and very sick.  Clinic staff are working to rehydrate and feed the emaciated bird and evaluate its condition, with the hope of eventually releasing it back into the wild. The story began with a call to the clinic…

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A ‘Grate’ Day: Steel & The Schuylkill Center

Last week, I got to do something few people are given the opportunity to do. I got to see the guts of a steel plant up close and personal! Our friends at ArcelorMittal provided us with a  guided tour of the international corporation's Conshohocken facility - just down river from our own organization. I was there with two similarly giddy co-workers, our Director of Land & Facilities and his Assistant, to pick up a custom machined well cover from the plant’s fabrication shop. What in the world, you ask, does ArcelorMittal and the international steel industry have to do with the Schuylkill Center? As it turns…

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