Top Photo: Carolina on the left, Jacques on the right. Each year, usually around the middle or third week of February, I notice the red wolves exhibiting mating behavior. They may begin earlier, sniffing, nuzzling and scenting but I typically witness them actually coupling somewhere around the 14th – 17th of February. Our new red wolf pair, Jacques and Carolina, have yet to show anything in the way of courtship or pre-copulatory behavior, but I’m sure it’s right around theRead more
Month: January 2026
A Light Dusting
Top Photo: Raccoon tracks across floating walkway in Explore the Wild. All it takes is a light dusting of snow and the fun begins, a chance to practice up on your tracking skills. A half inch of snow is all you need. In fact, a half inch is perfect for showing detail in animal tracks. Both raccoon and gray squirrels are common and very much at home here at the museum and its woods and exhibits. Both animals are wellRead more
Squirrel Sounds
Top Photo: Eastern gray squirrel. I was walking the outdoor loop as I do each day. In several places along the path from Catch the Wind to Explore the Wild they were singing. Or should I say, calling. Squirrels! I stopped to watch two of the songsters which happened to be next to the ramp leading to the Black Bear Overlook. They were about thirty feet apart between the diabase wall (the rock you see all around you when inRead more
Great Blue Heron
Top Photo: Great blue heron relaxes alongside Floating Walkway in wetlands. Over time, I’ve seen six different species of heron in our 3 acre wetland at the Museum of Life and Science. They include great blue heron, great egret, little blue heron, green heron, black-crowned night heron, and yellow-crowned night heron. By far, the most often observed species is the great blue heron (GBH). GBHs are year round residents, they nest locally and they’re used to sharing their habitat withRead more