For the average person, identifying what trees are in the forest can be difficult -- especially during winter, when their leaves have fallen.
Two arborists’ uncommon hobby takes them deep into the North Carolina woods to look for the state’s leafy giants.
The newly protected tract, known as Pinnacle Mountains South, is part of plan to “create a permanent conservation corridor ...
Falk clearly enjoys experimenting and pushing the boundaries of what can be grown in our Zone 3B climate, but he’s playing ...
SD: Yeah, so one urban study estimated gray squirrels retrieve about 85 percent of their cached nuts, or, you know, whatever ...
Kenia Pittman, director of exhibition design operations at the New York Botanical Garden, towers over the Brooklyn Bridge as ...
After smoking more than 115 pounds of pork shoulder (plus chicken breasts, salmon, corn and pork chops), we feel confident ...
Happy Cold, Snowy New Year to one and ...
While Ohio might be famous for its buckeyes, corn fields, and rock and roll, this 309-acre slice of paradise proves the ...
The easiest way is a cut test. Take random samples of ~10 fruits/seeds and cut them in half to see if solid. Many maples, ...
The land that now comprises A.W. Marion State Park was once farmland, and hints of this agricultural heritage can still be spotted by observant visitors – old fence lines, the occasional foundation ...
Spruce bark beetles don’t just tolerate their host tree’s chemical defenses—they actively reshape them into stronger ...