Jan 24, 2019 Logan's Nature Blog My name is Logan Johnson, teenage birder, ringer, all round Naturalist and Reroute member and I have started this blog to share and record my sightings, trips and adventures as I explore the world whether birding or otherwise.
Hemlock trees even keep their own stumps alive, so the forest can keep growing.
Read MoreThus, the birth of my LoveForLogan blog. My hope for this blog, is that you are able to follow our journey as we continue through this grieving process and move forward with our lives. To follow what we have learned and continue to learn from Logan’s short presence here on earth with us. And to also listen and learn what Logan has done in. Logan’s Landing is a non-profit organization dedicated to making Cass County’s downtown between-the-rivers district a viable place to operate a business, a rewarding place to live, and a fun place to visit. For more information, call the Logan’s Landing office at 574-722-9345. Logans blog class blog. Class blog; Friday, November 11, 2016. Observation paper. Hawaii, I've been dreaming about going there ever since I was 5. I was watching television when an ad came on about a resort there and all the different things you could do when you were there. It offered snorkeling excursions, day long hikes, and was right off. Blog posts by William Bryant Logan — read entries by the author of Sprout Lands, DIrt, Oak and Air. William Bryant Logan. Events News Blog About / Contact. The Creativity of Hemlock. Hemlock trees even keep their own stumps alive, so the forest can keep growing.
The Creativity of American Beech
Jul 12, 2020Beech can even invade the impenetrable hemlocks.
Read MoreThe Creativity of Basswood
Jul 03, 2020As wild as are the roots of yellow birch, the branches of basswood are wilder. You can't keep a good basswood down.
Read MoreVoyaging Roots -- The Yellow Birch
Jun 13, 2020Yellow birch roots are great travelers
Read MorePaperback of Sprout Lands is Out
May 25, 2020The ancient commons are a model for today's urban forest.
Read MoreSprout Lands: A Conversation with William Bryant Logan with Robin Wall Kimmerer
Aug 29, 2019A lecture by William Bryant Logan, author of Sprout Lands: Tending the Endless Gift of Trees, followed by a conversation with Robin Wall Kimmerer, author of Braiding Sweetgrass (2014).
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The Genie of Fresh Kills
Apr 30, 2019Read MoreResourceful Ironwood
Mar 11, 2019A small ironwood, Carpinus caroliniana, on the edge of Lincoln Pond in the Helderbergs. It looks like high water at some point almost drowned it. But not quite. On the right hand stem, a lateral has become the new leader. How did it happen?
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Read MoreThe Power of Reiteration
Feb 27, 2019By repeating themselves, trees can revive even after they fail. Branches can become trees of their own. Roots in a hollow can become the source of a new tree. Here, a fallen osage orange has turned two lateral branches into 30 foot tall trees. The one at the end is now putting down its own roots. When the old tree dies, this tree will carry on, genetically identical. This is called phoenix regeneration.
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Willow Pollards
Feb 09, 2019The ancient tradition of pollarding willows is still alive on the Somerset Levels near Bristol in western England. It is a landscape full of stunning ancient pollards, but there are farmers who still regularly cut their willows, using the sprouts for hurdles, wattle fencing and baskets.