Earlier this winter, I stopped by a local pond while on a break between meetings. I had intended to get out for a walk much earlier in the day, but instead found myself glued to the computer, buried under a mountain of emails, spreadsheets and.
The opening of Into the Wild, new paintings by Rosemary Conroy, will be Friday, May 6, from 5 to 7 p.m. at the Harris Center for Conservation Education, 83 King’s Highway in Hancock.Nearly 20 years after her first show at the Harris Center,.
It started with an early morning text from our neighbor, Deborah. A bear had “disabled” one of her backyard bird feeders during the night. Still in bed on this bright, but cold, Sunday morning, I groggily listened to my wife, Julie, recount Deborah’s.
There was just enough woods behind Phil Brown’s Staten Island childhood home to get him interested in nature.He’d climb trees, catch frogs and snakes – the sort of activities that a lot of kids enjoy when given the freedom to roam around in the.
Tucked along a remote section of Windy Row in Hancock, a 260-ton, 82-foot diameter antenna looms behind a patch of trees just out of sight from the public road.A dirt road leads to the unit’s base, and the massive, white orb becomes visible soon after.