Roads End Naturalist

Exploring the natural world as we wander at the end of the road


Author: Mike Dunn

  • Refuges Revisited

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    Spent a windy, dusty day in the field with friends on Wednesday exploring my two favorite refuges in NC – Mattamuskeet and Pocosin Lakes. It has been two weeks since I was last down that way and things have changed dramatically – the heat is here as are the deer flies (both of which have Read more…

  • A Black and White Spring

    The question is not what you look at, but what you see. Henry David Thoreau Winter is usually thought of as gray and stark. Spring is viewed as a time of color – the varied greens of leaf out and the splashes of color from the unfolding display of wildflowers. But there are times even Read more…

  • Elk Garden

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    My Dad’s birthday and Mother’s Day are both the second week of May so I try to get home each May for a visit. As it turns out, it is also the prime time for a visit to one of my favorite areas in Virginia – the Mount Rogers National Recreation Area. Covering over 200,000 Read more…

  • Wrens in the Yard

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    While doing some chores yesterday (sweeping unbelievable amounts of accumulated pollen off the screen porch) I heard the resident Carolina Wrens scolding something. Since their new nest location is right off the screen porch I thought it might be me disturbing them, but it was so emphatic I decided to take a closer look. The Read more…

  • Another Great Day at Pungo

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    I guess it isn’t enough to be a mere observer. It’s turning to the person on your right, or left, and stating with an undiluted sense of joy and inquisitiveness, “Did you just see that?” Mike McDowell I had my first post-retirement outing yesterday with a great group of folks from the Bass Lake Photo Read more…

  • A Bounty of Bluebirds

    A friend posted a picture yesterday of bluebirds in her nest box. So I went out this morning and checked the one box I have that can be easily opened, and it looks like a good bluebird spring! The male and female were watching me as I went over to the box and opened it Read more…

  • Crossvine

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    I am a native plant promoter and have been for many years. While there is nothing wrong with planting ornamentals in the landscape (as long as they are not potential problematic invasives) I appreciate getting to know our native species and encouraging them in my landscape and in those of schools and other public areas Read more…

  • A New Invader

    While looking for critters in the garden last summer I noticed a bug I had never seen before – an odd-shaped little brown insect. I looked in my insect guides but didn’t see anything that was a match and then something probably came up to distract me and it was filed under “things to look Read more…

  • A Cup’s Worth of Birds

    Yesterday morning I sat out by the garden with a cup of coffee to listen and watch for birds – spring migration is in full swing. Here are the species seen or heard in about 45 minutes of sitting and sipping: Red-tailed Hawk, Red-shouldered Hawk, Turkey Vulture, Yellow-billed Cuckoo (first of season), American Crow, Blue Read more…

  • Black Swallowtail eggs and larvae revisited

    Since I have what might be considered by some an abnormal fascination with caterpillars, I decided to keep track of the development of the Black Swallowtail eggs from the garden. The photo above is what a typical egg looks like shortly after it is laid. Yesterday I was watering the garden and found an egg Read more…