Winter is an especially great time to go hunting for animal tracks in the snow. In summer, animals’ prints can be difficult to spot on packed dirt trails. But snow preserves them, allowing hikers to ...
Animal tracks are a key component to successfully watching, scouting, hunting, tracking, and photographing different wildlife species. If you want to know where the animals are, you often need to ...
Your neighborhood is home to all sorts of amazing animals, from raccoons, squirrels and skunks to birds, bugs and snails. Even if you don’t see them, most of these creatures are leaving evidence of ...
Experienced wildlife trackers will tell you that every animal will invariably leave the track of another species from time to time. Of course they’re not being literal, but speaking to the difficulty ...
One of the joys of getting out on the trail in the winter is that every movement leaves a track. While many animals migrate south for the winter, spend the cold months hibernating or even avoid chilly ...
Wild Bulletin, Indiana Department of Natural Resources (DNR) Fish and Wildlife: Snow blanketing the ground creates a canvas for spotting wildlife tracks. Here are some tips for exploring snow-covered ...
WELCOME TO TODAY’S GROWTH GREEN. WE’RE AT THE PRESCOTT FARM ENVIRONMENTAL EDUCATIONAL CENTER IN LACONIA AND I’M JOINED BY CHRIS WELLONS, WHO’S A MEMBER OF THIS FARM. AND CHRIS, IF YOU’RE LIKE ME, YOU ...
Between trees, on paths, and at forest edges, animal tracks tell of a lively, mostly unseen nightlife. Mud and fresh snow act like nature’s notepad–each animal leaves its own unique signature. For our ...
Tennessee Pass, between Minturn and Leadville, not only designates the separation of the Mosquito and Sawatch mountain ranges but it also parts the watersheds between the Colorado and Arkansas river ...
Join a U.S. Army Corps of Engineers park ranger on Sunday for an afternoon of learning how to find and identify animal tracks. See if you can match the tracks in the animal-tracks identification game.
From snails to skunks, squirrels to cicadas, most of our neighbors are quiet and seldom interact with us, but they play ...