Saturday, February 21, 2026

Natural habitats

 




The "ugly" brush pile in your corner is saving lives.


Right now — late February — here's who's using it:


🐰 RABBITS

Building nests for babies due in 2-3 weeks.

The pile is predator-proof shelter.


🐦 SPARROWS & WRENS

Roosting inside at night.

Surviving single-digit temps because of your "mess."


🦨 SKUNKS

Maybe denning at the base.

Yes, that's why you smell them.


🐿️ CHIPMUNKS

Still in torpor, but the pile protects their burrow entrance.


🐛 INSECTS

Overwintering in the decay.

These become bird food in spring.


🐍 SNAKES (in a few weeks)

Will emerge from hibernation and shelter here.


WHAT YOU SEE: A pile of sticks and branches that looks messy.

WHAT WILDLIFE SEES: An apartment complex with security.


IF YOU REMOVE IT NOW:

- You evict pregnant rabbits

- You expose roosting birds to predators

- You destroy overwintering insects

- You eliminate spring shelter for emerging reptiles


LEAVE IT UNTIL LATE MAY.

Or better yet — leave it forever.


Brush piles are habitat.

Not mess.


#BrushPile #WildlifeHabitat #LeaveTheMess #BackyardEcosystem

Sunday, February 15, 2026

Feb 14th Tribute to Paul Keim memorial walk Croton Point

 

Eastern Screech owl ( gray phased), zoomed photo by Marisa Hernandez 

Hilight 25 plus Bald Eagles and Eastern Screech Owl, a lifer for group participants 

Leader Peter Dorosh

Hilight : 25 plus Bald eagle from train ride to station to park interior  & Eastern Screech Owl a lifer for group participants 

Train ride along Hudson



Croton Train Station


Croton Point State Park



Bald Eagle photos by Marisa Hernandez 


EASTERN SCREECH OWL zoomed photo by Yikun He












































Juvenile Bald Eagle photos by Yikun He

























GBBC Prospect walk by BBC Feb 15th


Leader Tina Alleva

"How many lessons of faith and beauty we should lose, if there were no winter in our year!"

-- Thomas Wentworth Higginson


---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Tina Alleva <>
Date: Sun, Feb 15, 2026, 1:38 PM
Subject: GBBC
To: Peter Dorosh <>


Hi Peter,

We had a great walk today for the Great Backyard Bird Count with about 35 participants. I love this time of year when the resident birds start to sing again.

Highlight today was a low flying adult Red-shouldered hawk.