This blog gives voice to the trees that surround us, and delves into history as a living, breathing thing. It explores the culture of arboriculture and of conservation. It takes what I see as I go about my day and gives it some context in what I hope is an entertaining way.
I first launched the blog from the Cabin, where I developed a fascination with the outdoors that led to me becoming a professional arborist. It was an 18th-century log structure, with logs that had been patched many times, a kitchen in the basement and a crumbling outhouse (a two-seater!) — the perfect perch from which to fly to times gone by. It was here that I wrote my two historical suspense novels, The Orphanmaster and Savage Girl. both set eons ago in Manhattan, and Love, Fiercely, which focused on the eccentric who compiled what is still the finest (and lengthiest) tome ever written about New York.

In this tiny cabin in the woods, 50 miles due north of New York City, some feverish activity took place. We called ourselves the slipper people, my husband and I – Gil being a writer, too — because all day long we hunched over our computers churning out the next best seller. We never had to get out of our slippers.
It seems sudden now but it must have come upon me gradually: the reality that there was a whole green world out there. We had six acres of woods, a towering magnolia that flushed pink in spring, box turtles that preferred a certain sandy spot alongside our driveway to lay their eggs. Still, becoming an arborist—and spending my days in workbooks rather than slippers!—was a different direction than I ever imagined when I started as a writer.
Earlier in my life, my experience of trees was confined to the mundane, on the one hand, or the spectacular. Trees were the giants that streamed along the highway in a solid green whoosh. I couldn’t tell you the names of any species aside from oak or maple, and my knowledge of those two was limited—one turned brown in autumn and one blazed with color.

Now I went to work for a tree company that operated in the five boroughs of New York, embracing a new life that would include delicate lindens, craggy honey locusts, soaring London planes. I saw the soil beneath these trees’ roots, and the gnarled, venerable roots themselves. I admired the pruners who performed aerial feats above my head, and re-visualized New York as an Eden of branching, breathing species. Then, as I made my way around off the job, outside New York City, I took a new hands-on look at grand old trees, street trees, leaves and seeds and stems.
What came to interest me most was not just the biology of a grand old copper beech, but its culture—all the people that slipped under those sinuous hanging branches over time to engrave their initials in its bark.
You will find both science and story when you dip into the posts here. Cheers!

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It’s in the eye of the beholder, isn’t it? I took a walk on the Old Croton Aqueduct trail as spring just came up, and it got me to thinking. So many beautiful things. So many of them so ordinary. First, a sign warning me off. My favorite kind of sign, so commonplace. I see…

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Been thinking about the concept recently while visiting some haunts both local and distant. Not ruins exactly. Let’s say slightly faded in the most perfect way. Like the nearby genteel rose garden at the Lyndhurst. Its blooms in November just as exquisite as the ones in June. Possibly even more ravishing. Is it my imagination,…

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await at Untermeyer Gardens in Yonkers, New York. Yes, the famous property — designed in 1916 to be “the finest garden in the world” — now features a Stumpery. The park once boasted sixty greenhouses. It’s still pretty nice. Just what is a Stumpery? You would be well within your rights to ask the question,…
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is not a pairing that would make sense to some people outside the Metropolitan Area (we always say that, as though there is no other metropolitan area in the world). But majestic trees do exist among the concrete canyons of NY. I’ve been fortunate to come up close to some of them. Walt Whitman: Why are…
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Growing up in the Village of Hastings-on-Hudson in southern Westchester County, Hillside Woods was a personal oasis. Not deep forest, not a virgin tract, but one hundred acres that formed the backdrop of my life — and so many other peoples’ as well. When I heard about an effort to escort deer out of Hillside…
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to talk about a 2024 resolution to be less annoying, less grandiose, less showoffy, less of a know it all, and to do it in a blog that showcases me, me, me. I know. It is true. And yet, hiking the Fay Canyon trail this morning I can’t help but ponder my resolve, how I might achieve…
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What do you see? It’s almost the new year. Time to look within. How will you change? What parts will endure? Is the past alive? Is it dead? Somewhere in between? Is life short? Sometimes seems that way. Is life long? Could be. It’s all relative. We need to name things, somehow. Of course. Sometimes it’s…
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at Wave Hill, the historic estate in Riverdale, the Bronx. Always a magnificent public-access arboretum, but perhaps especially beautiful on this brisk early afternoon in mid-December. Berries all around. Not only crimson holly, perfect for the season. But purple. The aptly named beautyberry. Shakespeare wrote about boughs which shake against the cold,/Bare ruin’d choirs, where late…
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Even those plants most people would walk right by and have no idea what to call them. In the desert, maybe, especially. It helps if you’re lucky enough to be with someone who knows most of the names. Like my brother. He seems to be acquainted with everything we pass this morning on this quiet…
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Really? You don’t say. We’re used to the regular deluge back east, especially lately. But here in the southwest, of course, raindrops are so rare as to be remarkable. There hasn’t been any rain in Phoenix in months. And even when drops do fall, as they did for a bit yesterday, much of it is…
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Yes, true. But what about the Great Trees of New York City? This is the brainchild of New York City Parks, which is reviving a project that was last completed in the 1985 with the goal of identifying the most iconic trees in all the five boroughs. Ordinary citizens nominate exceptional trees, as many as…
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is how Cornell Botanic Gardens’s docent Dana describes the end of summer and the first days of fall. She professes herself to find it a bit boring. I look out the window when we’re driving in the car and that’s all I see, purple and gold, purple and gold. Dana shows us the native aster blooming…
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is a favorite pastime of mine. All that we see or seem is but a dream within a dream, said Edgar Allan Poe. Thinking about some writers who have opined on the dark side of life as I spend some time in in a dream within a dream – the abandoned Contagious Disease Hospital at Ellis, taking around a group of…
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Natch. I get everywhere early. In this case to a field trip for a conference I’m attending in the Finger Lakes region of New York. It’s to learn all about plants and trees and sustainability – you know, eco-concerns. Yet for me it feels like so much more than the science. So many things I…
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I see no one on my walk to Lyndhurst, not a soul. My only company, late-season thistles along the path. A weathered sign by the open-air entrance to the old estate tells the story of my day in a word. Private. The Old Croton Aqueduct trail runs right through the grounds. Apparently the first owner…
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It is almost impossible to feel down when you visit. The New York Botanical Garden always has something new to see. Or something not new but ever-fresh. A bee on a blossom. Yes, the flowers are flowering. The dahlias. The hydrangeas, some more exotic than others. The lilies. Especially nice when you bring someone who…
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The cardiologist told me I’d better get in better shape. So here I am speed walking along my favorite trail on a hot day in August. It’s the path called the Old Croton Aqueduct, now a state park, once upon a time the narrow north-south route above a forty-one mile water tunnel. It delivered 75…
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Or would she be, in her small, secret part of herself, pleased? Possibly even thrilled to see all the hoopla and fuss made over her at the abode where she spent all her years. It is possible to tour the house, which sits in the shade of a mature tulip tree. Probably a sapling when…
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I hadn’t been to Manhattan in quite some time. Returning, I see all its contrasts as poetry. The old side by side with the new. Burned out church, new construction. Antiquated evidence of New York’s beaver-rich past in the Astor Place subway stop. A million year old hotel, updated several times. The struggles of nature.…
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I visited the State Park on my way to a tree conference on Long Island because it was nearby and the name compelled me. It was a weekday, and so quiet, unlike Jones Beach where I ordinarily go to swim. Sunken Meadow is also a park set on a beach, but not the Atlantic, the…
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Brooklyn’s Prospect Park neighborhood surely has some impressive trees. I stand awed in the shade of a gigantic weeping willow in a tiny neighborhood enclave. And some interesting characters, at least on my job site, one of five during a day dedicated to corners. That is, replacing the old sidewalks at intersections with colored pedestrian ramps…
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It’s a FREE Virtual Event — there’s STILL TIME TO REGISTER! Don’t miss the third installment of Save Ellis Island’s exciting new virtual speaker series Preserving New Jersey. Tonight, July 6 at 7p.m. (EDT) meet Katherine Good, Senior Project Manager/Historic Preservation Practice Leader at Michael Graves Architecture, the award-winning global leader in planning, architecture, and interior design based in Princeton, New…
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(taking a cue from John Muir, who preferred the word saunter to hike) in the largest old-growth tract in Dutchess County New York, the South Woods at Montgomery place in Annandale. It was called the Spirit Wood by the Indigenous people who occupied the land before the Livingston family bought it in 1802, with its…
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Still time to sign up, all you hot dog aficionados, for my conversation with Lloyd Handwerker tonight, June 8 at 7 EST– free, virtual, one hour, part of Save Ellis Island’s Preserving New Jersey series. Lloyd is the grandson of Nathan Handwerker, founder of the Nathan’s Famous hot dog empire. He wrote a biography of…
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on my regular saunter around the Catwalk estate. John Muir preferred the word saunter to hike. Guess what? Have you ever had a wonderful dream, then woken up, then fallen back asleep and had the same wonderful dream continue? That’s what I feel like. Catwalk called and said someone had canceled for the next session.…
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Really? How can you complain when you find yourself in the most beautiful place on earth? Can there really be trouble in paradise? It’s like this. I got some feedback on a just-drafted chapter from someone I trust. He said what I wrote was not perfect. It’s hard to write about nature when you’re in…
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as it were – and having exercised my brain enough for today I thought I would exercise my legs by making my way down the scant-mile-long trail to the river. Magic hour. Just before nightfall. It is a wonderful path, carefully marked with delicate ribbons by Chuck, who takes care of the property. I’m hoping…
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and thus not able to file regular blog posts. You’ll understand. Catwalk Institute is a ravishing place to have a writing residency. I think I will be far too consumed with writing chapters of Heartwood here to do much else. Perhaps exercising my daydreaming muscles too. Part of the creative process, don’t you know. My…
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I am about to be featured as moderator with a fascinating historical preservationist, tonight at 7 EST (virtual, free, one hour) as part of a series I’ve organized for Save Ellis Island called Preserving New Jersey. I’ve spoken with Aidita Milsted and she is very smart and it should be a lively conversation. Please consider…
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wrote Thomas Carlyle, but a hundred acorns are sown in silence by an unnoticed breeze. Here at Lasdon Arboretum in Katonah, New York, foresters, ecologists, gardeners and volunteers are giving that breeze a little bump. To wind up with an oak forest you need to start small–even tiny, with seedlings that look more like sticks…
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Three generations take a hike at Brown’s Ranch, in Scottsdale. Nothing important happens. Nothing worth recording. Except for everything. My mother, my daughter, me. Sixty years separate those two. My daughter is thirty-one. I’m somewhere in the middle. In the middle of age and work, love and life. It’s not a long hike, really a…
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with the big old trees the moment I walk into Muir Woods. Same as everyone. It’s a funny place. On the one hand these redwoods, ancient marvels of nature, on the other a precious tourist attraction. I go there accompanied by two smart people, Bay Area denizen Lisa, my friend of fully 45 years, and…
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It would seem to be just about the right time to visit Fairy Duster Trail at Spur Cross Ranch in Cave Creek. We see a perfect fairy duster. Even though it is April, the supposed height of the wildflower season, it seems as though all of the blooms are somehow not enough. But maybe we…
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For the Jewish singles event, see Matzo Ball. According to Wikipedia, “The Matzo Ball is an annual Christmas Eve nightlife event and party held in a number of major cities in the United States targeted primarily at young Jewish singles and organized by Mazel Events, LLC (previously the Society of Young Jewish Professionals).” מַצָּה קניידלעך…
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(I know I was) it’s easy enough to take yourself down the Mosholu Parkway to the New York Botanical Garden in the Bronx. However, the place’s Cherry Collection –sounds like a high-end clothing line – might not be in full bloom yet. That’s okay. Cherry trees are spectacular even if they are just barely flowering.…
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in the inimitable phrasing of Walt Whitman back in 1892. I just received news that I have been awarded a residency at Catwalk Institute in the Hudson Valley this May to work on my upcoming nonfiction book Heartwood (about Americans’ complicated love affair with our forests) – pure unalloyed time to focus and write. So…
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figured prominently in my hike along the northern section of the Old Croton Aqueduct on a day so early in spring that only a few plants were peeping up green. Also peeping up reddish-brown with yellow streaks, in the case of skunk cabbage. One of my favorite plants, the skunk cabbage enjoys an interesting chemistry…
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It takes skill – and also guts, especially if you happen to be a 16-year-old pianist making your debut leading a jazz trio in New York City. The Jasper Zimmerman Explosion appeared at the intimate establishment a couple of nights ago. No cover. No minimum. Just lots of cool. Lucky’s on Avenue B, after all.…
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in the exhibition area of the New York Botanical Garden’s Annual Orchid Show. And is there any better kind of hush? Especially on a cold and blustery late winter day in the Bronx. Orchid lovers endure heart palpitations all around. At least those not too consumed with taking pictures. Photographers are legion here. So many…
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–at least to me: a plate. It is an old plate. I’m going to call it a cake plate. It belonged to someone in my family. I never knew her. She lived a long time ago. Her name, oddly, was Brown. Even odder, her last name was Coats. So her name was Brown Coats. If…
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on this rah-rah chest-thumping holding-up-half-the-sky International Women’s Day 2023. Nurses are the lifeblood of our society. I may be a bit biased because my daughter is an RN, soon to be a nurse practitioner. Here she is all rigged out to do battle with Covid. Brava Maud! I like to talk about nurses when I…
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I can show you – at least the ectoplasmic ones at the Ellis Island Hospital ruin. If you come on a photography tour, we get to snoop around the old, crumbling areas we don’t usually take visitors on our regular Hard Hat Tours. Today I went around with Chris, who moved to NJ from the…
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in any borough of New York City. Here I am in an ordinary neighborhood of Brooklyn, rather humdrum, really, inspecting and preserving trees, and so many things have a hint of the marvelous. The human impulse toward landscape adornment reigns supreme. People here love their cherries. Doctor Seuss ornamentals. Their pipsqueak lawns. Their rose bushes,…
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can be wondrous. A silent dream. A wolf could probably take this one-and-a half-mile trail in around ten minutes, loping the loop. If a wolf inhabited these woods. Which is improbable. Bears, though, might. And beavers, definitely. Evidence of their newly gnawed work abounds. It’s gloriously somber and moody today, but could be restful if…
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and a heaping spoonful of enthusiasm, and you get a lesson in making latkes. Once again, thanks to Jasper and Tyler for documenting this edition of Eclectic Home Cooking 101 in my small but sturdy kitchen. INGREDIENTS: 8 potatoes 2 onions 2 eggs 1 tsp salt ½ tsp pepper 6 tbsp flour 1 cup vegetable…
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my colleague Doug Still and I uncovered several things: the facts, the legend, and then the legacy. Doug and I had fun producing an episode about it all for his podcast This Old Tree. You can tune in to the podcast here: https://www.buzzsprout.com/2044179/12144180. Oaks get pretty famous all over the world. Austin, Texas, has the…
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of miniaturization. Sinatra sang that line–well, not the last part. That’s the hand of Hubert Lengdorfer with one of his marvelous miniatures. There are a lot of people out there creating these tiny environments, whether they’re called shadow boxes or doll houses or dioramas. I can’t help being attracted to small, perfect rooms. I guess…
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sang the Queen of Soul, back in the day. Why am I so attracted to the desert’s blasted, the desiccated, the half dead? The mistletoe hanging on for dear life to the tree no longer alive. Zombie cacti. The juicy rind left behind. Mysterious fissures. Perhaps because in the tiniest organisms you see the pulse…
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If so, the Michelin Man is. For a famous thing, a desert icon, the Michelin Man isn’t easy to find. Cave Creek Regional Park is barely on the map, and the guy at the nature center has to give a lot of hints about how to get to it. Turn off the main trail at…
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and especially squirrels as pets. John Singleton Copley painted his delightful subject, nine-year-old Daniel Crommelin Verplanck, in 1771. You can visit with the imp at New York’s Metropolitan Museum, and I often have. Perhaps because I’ll dealing with some especially dark subject matter these days in my professional life, my mind likes to veer when…
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Someone important. A good day for strolling among the cacti. And the art. The community of Carefree is a good place to be carefree on a birthday. The botanical garden is small and sweet. Unusual plantings. The miracle of water in the desert. Back east we have tree protection, and I’ve done a lot of…
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or in memory or right in front of your eyes can be remarkable. Trees can be so personal, loved by an individual, as well as public and admired by many. Almost everyone, I’ve found, remembers one particular tree—it burns in hindsight as vividly as any madeleine Proust ever consumed. I’ve realized this in teaching arborists…
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as the first violin sounds a note and the rest of the musicians in the orchestra respond, just before the conductor steps out and all on stage smile forward, ready to go. The conductor of the Phoenix Symphony, Tito Munoz, hails from Queens and has been leading his pack here in the Southwest for nine…
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and I have the trail mainly to myself. The other day trippers, it seems, are off to The Birthing Cave or The Subway for selfies, apparently taking their cue from some meme about the five formations you must see when you visit Sedona. They don’t know that Dead Man’s Pass happens to be the most…
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wonders close to home. Yes, when your sometime home lies at the mouth of Boynton Canyon in Sedona, and snow dusts the ancient red rocks, of course everything is wondrous. But when I worked at the Grand Concourse in the Bronx last year, I thought is was pretty marvelous, too. Look, see, absorb. Yes, the…
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What are your hopes? What are your prospects? What do you want to leave behind? I like to prolong the transition from old year to new as long or longer than the next guy. My tree stays up throughout January. Our decorations include quotes from favorite poems. Auden, You shall love your crooked neighbor/ With…
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Saw two with fish on the secret bridge recently. One flew overhead, the shiny wet corpus dangling from its beak, the other perched on the bridge railing, head tilted back, chugging its catch. Gulls love to hunt from this Bailey bridge, a cool structure that was invented by British engineer Sir Donald Coleman Bailey during…
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at New York Botanical Garden’s annual Holiday Train Show. A smart novelist named Christopher Moore said, Children see magic because they look for it. Yes, especially on Christmas Eve. Today. If you want to conjure up A Visit From Saint Nicholas, by another writer named Moore, Clement Clark Moore, go to the New-York Historical Society…
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is the best word to describe the remarkable images photographer Patrick Tierney captures while roaming around his native Los Angeles. Mainly in the dark. Many of his subjects project a kind of glow from the inside. Makes me think of the creepy Tom Waits song: What’s He Building In There? Often featured, something I love,…
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and it’s not even Christmas! My brother the vagabond decided to clean out his storage space, getting rid of books among other things. Knowing I was writing a book about trees and forests, he thought of me. I get it. We just did the same – winnowed down storage and some books had to go,…
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as the 16- and almost 16-year-olds celebrate biscuits! We had our biscuit-making tutorial yesterday to the strains of Mozart’s wind instrument concertos, in between talk of a class lobbying trip to Washington (Tyler), musical endeavors (Jasper) and Frank O’Hara’s Lunch Poems. Their own effort (“Poetry always has crazy indentations!”) followed by their recipe. ode to…
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you probably get a hitch in your chest around old graveyards, places where mysteries exist as to cause of death but not the carved-in-stone age of the person buried. Thinking about it, I drive to work along all the tangled metropolitan-area highways before dawn, the tips of the tree branches brushing the tarnished gray skies.…
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if you happen to be heading north to New England for your holiday Concolor, the evergreen that gifts your home with the scent of citrus. Is there anything cornier than a Christmas tree farm? Sleighbell’s, in Sutton, Massachusetts, even has a food truck with corn on the menu…28 different varieties of kettle corn, including Coal…
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There is no secret. There are tricks, to be sure, but no reason to dread and fear preparing the home-made as some people say they do when confronted with the holiday task. It’s all good. You do need to have some proper fat. Lard is good, leaf lard better. Leaf lard is the delicate, magical…
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swooping up into the crown of a tree. Omen, sign, portent? I believe in marvels, antithetical as such ideas might be in our modern rational age. There is always a new unravelling of old mysteries. Naturalists have just come to the realization that prehistoric mastodons brought the honey locust with them to West Virginia 10,000…
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when she talks about climbing trees. “Once above 10 or 15 feet,” she told me, “your whole perspective on day-to-day life changes. It’s a biosphere you can’t get from the ground.” As founder of the Women’s Tree Climbing Workshop, Bear knows what she is talking about. I gave a presentation today at the Partners in…
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would be pretty good words to characterize the music I heard recently, performed by my friend pianist Beth Levin at Merkin Hall in Manhattan. Outside the concert venue, pin oaks held tight to their leaves in the autumn gloaming. The piece Beth played, Pictures at an Exhibition, by Modest Petrovich Mussorgsky, has stayed with me.…
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and this time it’s serious. Any holiday that causes you to dress up your pet is a big deal for sure. And it couldn’t be a bigger deal than in the Rivertowns, where I live, and specifically Sleepy Hollow, Tarrytown and Irvington, where ever Washington Irving made his mark. North Tarrytown actually changed its name…
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for fashionistas centuries ago. When sisters Mary Ann Donaldson and Nancy Maria Donaldson Johnson posed for an albumen carte de visite in 1875, they were pretty much that era’s version of Vogue models. Lappets affixed to caps had been worn since medieval times, and even as late as Abe Lincoln’s time were de rigeur for certain older…
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and especially, it seems, when they stand sentinel along the New Jersey Turnpike. Every day I see a big old hawk on a big old tree along the highway. The perfect spot for waiting to catch your supper. Vision is the art of seeing what is invisible to others. Jonathan Swift said that. When I first started…
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when I climb the stairs to the attic above the administration building at Ellis Island’s abandoned hospital complex. A central spot there, the admin building, it is the place where all sick immigrants checked in a hundred years ago, and is also the place where nurses were quartered, upstairs. The air in the attic is…
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have inspired me recently. Curiouser and curiouser, as our dear beloved Alice would say. I re-read Alice in Wonderland recently, in a gulp. Why? For some reason childhood stories move me specially now. Maybe because in sorting through boxes in storage I came upon baby books and elementary school report cards. This is the season when…
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would be hard to identify, there is so much fine mofongo in New York. But I have a hunch it might be prepared in the unassuming kitchen of 188 Bakery Cuchifritos, on 188 Street, just off of Grand Concourse in the Bronx. I worked around the corner for six months last year protecting trees, meeting…
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as we amble off through the Thain Forest–the largest enduring old-growth tract in the New York City vicinity–at the New York Botanical Garden, paying heed to the recorded forest bathing app the Garden has thoughtfully provided. These woodlands offer just some of NYBG’s 30,000 trees. I’ve been thinking about kindness. Have been telling folks on…
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and sometimes the bur ets you. Sitting beneath the drought-drooping branches of a bur oak in Brooklyn’s Green-Wood cemetery, we tapped our feet a bit impatiently, waiting for the trolley we were told would take us to the jazz concert in the catacombs. William Parker, freeform bass player, had been scheduled to perform. Nice view,…
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and I shoot when I’m in the most pain. Joe McNally credited a fellow photographer with that exquisite sentiment in the course of a workshop at the abandoned hospital complex at Ellis Island today. He taught, and led by example, shooting pictures of his own as the day progressed. I liked helping guide the group…
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one time, everybody laughed. In writing class, teachers use a prompt to get everybody’s creative juices flowing. I hiked the Old Croton Aqueduct trail today, using brown as a prompt. The familiar sandy light brown soil. Hadn’t been here for a while. The sound of the mid-afternoon breeze rustling the leaves, late summer insects’ buzz.…
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I have been going around with a smile on my face all day. Why? Because today I saved a tree. A big, beautiful linden in my home town. Yes, utility wires thread through its branches, but it has so far avoided becoming entangled. It stands lined up with two other mature lindens on the tree…
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I was taking my group on the walking tour of the abandoned hospital complex at Ellis Island. We went into the “hospice room,” which was many peoples’ last stop at the hospital. As usual, the spaces at Ellis had been magical, evocative, spooky, and above all historical. There is a room where someone once swore…
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(I am) this is the job for you. Haitian Inspector’s name is Jean, too. Jean-Robert, he tells me. Explains that where he comes from, the Catholic church would put the name Jean first in front of all the boys’ names because men should be in front of women. Doesn’t happen these days, he says. Phew,…
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included some arresting sights, such as the Wisconsin highway barn painted in mile-high letters by people who obviously wanted to get their message across. These guys should work on Madison Avenue. OKAY, WE HEAR YOU! A flock of blue jays, one of which left a memento behind for someone (me) desiring signs and best wishes for…
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might be a butterfly conservatory. Or not. The Niagara Parks Butterfly Conservatory, home to over 2,000 butterfly species from around the world, is a little like a tony African photo safari or a giant precious zoo filled with live confetti fluttering by and occasionally, amazingly, brushing up against your arm. You might rather see a…
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is debatable. It’s a marker or a meditation of some kind, says Sarah. An ode to the fact that people have been here. Yes. Sarah swims in the cold, rough ocean, and knows something about everything. Traditionally, in the Andes or Mongolia, say, rock cairns were used to mark routes to safety, to food, and to…
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read the words on the Cook-Albert Fuller Nature Center blackboard. Is there a better kind? Jane Whitney, citizen-scientist, makes every tiny detail on our meander come alive. Consummate guide, she leads an ungainly gaggle down a boardwalk at The Ridges preserve in Door County to goggle at things both tiny and large. Not the wilderness of…
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but content, with bulging bellies, we pull away from Mr. Beef in Chicago and back on to the highway. If you’ve watched The Bear, streaming on Hulu, you know something about Mr. Beef. It’s the premier Chicago joint to get an Italian beef sandwich, with great actors – including debatable hunk Jeremy Allen White – telling…
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if you can interpret signs. It’ll still be tough, they’re so mysterious. It’s easier if a very astute naturalist has come before you and shown everyone how important it is to preserve these ancient environments. In this case, A.B. Williams, who embraced a stand of woods in Ohio, with the great name North Chagrin Reservation,…
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You make your own, yada yada. Had a friend who always said we were so lucky. Why? Dunno, just are. It’s our luck to find a dino and a rocking horse hanging out together while we’re first embarking on our trip cross country. Maud says, Luck is being afforded an opportunity not of your own making. Also, health and…
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might be Corona Parkway Malls, at Southern Boulevard and Elsmere Place. Pathetic as in pathos, evoking pity or sadness. Never visited? Trash is everywhere. Despite avid, well-peopled efforts by the Parks Department to keep it clean. I snapped her photo right before she told me No photos allowed. Really? Lots of people make this park their…
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was I think my favorite takeaway from the tree conference I recently attended, put on by New York ReLeaf. That is the advocacy/education outfit which has a chapter I chair with my friend the DEC forester George Profous. Exposure to nature is not only enjoyable but can also help us improve our focus and ability…
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Stout, ancient ones mob this trail to the back of Boynton Canyon, Sedona’s most magical spot. Some are mammoth, four hundred years old or more, their rough hides entwining with the silvery smooth underclothes. I want to live! Juniperus deppeana has a tendency to splay into multiple trunks, the fusion making it hard for dendrologists…
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but nothing compares with the dusk skies of red rock Arizona. See how a prickly pear glows, somehow, from within? Their spines reflect the natural light, then the flowers say goodnight. I always feel that given the strictures of growing here, the drought, mainly, and the intensity of the sun’s rays, plants have to really…
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had a great name, and also revolutionized our thinking about day lilies. Never thought much about Hemerocallis? The name Hemerocallis comes from the Greek words for “day” and “beautiful”. Remember that the most beautiful things in the world are the most useless; peacocks and lilies for instance. John Ruskin wrote that. I don’t believe that peacocks are useless however; nor are day…
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Well. Depends who you ask. Norway maples, callery pear, ailanthus, ash. Spotted lanternfly adores laying its disgusting eggs on the bark of the ailanthus, commonly known as the tree of heaven. So ailanthus deserves to get whacked. But what about grape vines? Apple trees? These host the same invasive insect. As for the callery pear,…
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and especially those in groves, urban oases, such as in Flushing, the massive ones ringing Mount Hebron Cemetery. Whoever laid the concrete sidewalks here most recently politely made room for the spreading roots of venerable Quercus palustris. Excuse me, said the tree, we were here first. And the City complied, which is more than happens in other…
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if you happen to be a dog. Not. Or the owner of a dog. Nope. Or people temporarily in possession of granddogs. Yes. Their actual, official humans are in Italy for the week, so Gus and Ottie are making do with us. Magic hour. Rowley’s Bridge. Nice trail if you happen to like white mulberries.…
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are some of the inadequate terms we use to describe roses, but equivalent to the terms oenophiles employ for the equally ineffable flavors of wine. Oaky, fruity, tannic, et cetera. Really, no word can describe the experience of sticking your nose in a bloom and inhaling. My friend needs little encouragement to dive in. Swoon.…
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on a perfect early spring evening in Tompkins Square Park, the music of a person (pronouns fluid, if you are up to date) who calls his band Pinc Louds. He began in 2015 playing in the New York City subways for spare change, and now he goes all over the world, but also does his thing…
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I think it’s possible. Standing in Floral Park, Queens, under the canopy of Lady Linden, I’m distracted by the perfume in the air. It takes something to be distracted in the shade of a linden, especially at this time of year, when the heart-shaped leaves (cordate, if you want the technical term) have materialized and you can…