SL Teams from Howard Spring 2013 have been added.
I was away (again... I hate doing that) for the Passages Through Time program during week 5, so I do not have a photo for that group. If you have a copy, please send it along and I'll post it.
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SL Teams from Howard Spring 2013 have been added. I was away (again... I hate doing that) for the Passages Through Time program during week 5, so I do not have a photo for that group. If you have a copy, please send it along and I'll post it.
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Incredible Animals page added; it will highlight articles found throughout the web with interesting animal facts and news, and categorized by scientific group names. Student Leaders - SL Teams page updated with all photos and wood cookies to date. Each week at Namanu Outdoor School, a new group of high school Student Leaders arrives to teach the Animals Field Study curriculum. These brave souls learn from and support each other, laugh and share stories, and persevere even when they're more tired than they have ever been before. Some return again and again, some only participate once—but all are valuable components to our learning community. Here they are at the end of their week: dirty, tired, and happy.
If I'm missing a photo that you have, please send it to me! Read More... Field Guide 1966 - Birds - Bufflehead page finished. Awkward waddling ex-nest users... Habitat
Buffleheads are migratory, and spend the winter in inland waters or protected coastal waters such as shallow bays, sheltered coves, harbors, coastal lagoons, and estuaries, and breed in wooded lakes and ponds in northern taiga habitats. They nest in cavities of aspens or poplars close to small lakes or permanent freshwater ponds and marshes, and have been known to nest in priaries when trees and water are nearby. Their small size allows Buffleheads to use the nesting cavities left by Northern Flickers, and their habitats coincide. Read More... Field Guide 1966 - Mammals - Virginia Opossum page finished. More defenses than just "playing possum." Habitat
The Virginia Opossum is native to the southeastern United States, and was introduced into the West during the 1930s as a food source. The Virginia Opossum has been successful inhabiting the Pacific coast, and is expanding its range into Canada. It lives in a variety of habitats such as deciduous forests, prairies, marshes, swamps, farmlands, and even cities, and prefers areas near water. The Virginia Opossum is equally at home on the ground and in trees, and prefer dens in hollow logs, tree cavities, woodpiles, rock piles, crevices, under buildings, in attics, and in underground burrows left by other mammals. Read More... Toolbar at the bottom added. Site search, scroll-to-top arrow (far right), google translation, and RSS feed of this very list of updates. Wibiya provides a FREE, powerful solution that enables blogs and websites to quickly and easily integrate the most popular and exciting web applications – games, Facebook and Twitter buttons, live chat, video & image galleries, and more – directly into their site.
Wibiya also gives publishers the power to manage their bar’s performance in real time through the Wibiya user dashboard, as well as connect with users instantly via real-time notifications. Thousands of websites and blogs in 120 countries around the world – from small businesses to global brands such as Jelly Belly, Brothersoft, and Free Ride Games – are using the Wibiya Bar to engage their users and successfully promote their content, with many more joining each day. Field Guide 1966 - Birds - Northern Harrier page finished. Check out that bit about kleptoparasitism! Habitat
Northern Harriers prefer open wetlands, meadows, pastures, prairies, plains, sloughs, marshlands, swamps, grasslands, croplands, shrublands, savannas, desert steppes, and riparian woodlands. Large forest clearings serve as preferred hunting grounds, and they prefer low perches such as stumps or fence posts. They make their nests on the ground, usually near water, or in tall grass. Occasionally Northern Harriers will make their nest on the water, using a foundation of sticks, willow, or sedge. Read More... Field Guide 1966 - Arthropods - Goldenrod Crab Spider page finished. Who knew they had such interesting camouflage abilities? Habitat
The goldenrod crab spider can be found all over the Northern Hemisphere, and it gets its name from the goldenrod sprays in which it hunts during the autumn. Other hunting grounds for this spider include spotted joe-pye weed, ox-eye, spotted jewelweed, evergreen blackberry, common milkweed, queen anne's lace, common dandelion, black-eyed susan, bird-foot violet, bushy aster, swamp rose mallow, and common mullein. Goldenrod crab spiders can range from yellow to white, depending on their current flower, and can change their color to blend in with their current flower species. This spider does not use a web to capture its prey, but does produce webbing as a safety line, and also for creating egg sacs. Read More... Student Leaders - SL Teams page updated with as many photographs and groupings as I could find to date. Each week at Namanu Outdoor School, a new group of high school Student Leaders arrives to teach the Animals Field Study curriculum. These brave souls learn from and support each other, laugh and share stories, and persevere even when they're more tired than they have ever been before. Some return again and again, some only participate once—but all are valuable components to our learning community. Here they are at the end of their week: dirty, tired, and happy.
If I'm missing a photo that you have, please send it to me! Read More... Student Leaders page finished. Blurbs taken directly from its two sub-pages. Student Leader Teams
Each week at Namanu Outdoor School, a new group of high school Student Leaders arrives to teach the Animals Field Study curriculum. These brave souls learn from and support each other, laugh and share stories, and persevere even when they're more tired than they have ever been before. Some return again and again, some only participate once—but all are valuable components to our learning community. Here they are at the end of their week: dirty, tired, and happy. Read More... |