You can find wild things everywhere — even in your own backyard. So lace up your boots, shoulder your pack, and head into the wild.
Look
Grassy backyards with scattered trees are a great place to spot Missouri’s state bird, the eastern bluebird. Bluebirds nest in abandoned woodpecker holes and hollow trees. If your backyard lacks these natural cavities, don’t be blue. Build a bluebird box. To learn how, fly over to xplormo.org/node/2937.
Do More
To migrate 3,000 miles from Missouri to Mexico, monarch butterflies have to be tough. But it’s rough to be tough when your tummy is empty. Milkweed, a monarch’s favorite food, is disappearing across the country. To keep monarchs fluttering, plant milkweed in your backyard. For plants and seeds, visit grownative.org.
Take A Closer Look
Did that rock just blink? With their brown bumpy skin, toads are masters of camouflage. By day, the chubby amphibians hide out in shady, damp areas. At night, they hop out to gobble insects. Search basement window wells and under bushes, garden plants, and dead leaves to see if a toad or two is living in your yard.
Heads Up!
Leave baby birds, newborn rabbits, and small fawns where you find them. They aren’t abandoned. Mom is hiding nearby and won’t return until you leave.
Listen
Blue jays are wordy birds, with quite a large vocabulary. You may recognize their shrieking alarm call: “Thief! Thief!” But the blabby birds also imitate hawks, cats, and other sounds. How many sounds can you hear them make?
What Happened Here?
In summer, immature cicadas crawl out of the soil and anchor themselves to the nearest vertical surface. Then, in a scene fit for a monster movie, the tough outer shell of each cicada splits open, and a winged adult squirms out. The process happens at night, so most folks miss it, but the crunchy shells left behind offer evidence of the bizarre transformation.
Touch
Ruby-throated hummingbirds are tiny birds with enormous attitudes. To see how gutsy a hummer can be, hold your hand beside a hummingbird feeder as if your finger were a perch. With patience — and a steady hand — one of the bold little birds will buzz in and sit on your finger for a quick sip of nectar.
Did You Know?
In a quest to fill their bellies with earthworms and grubs, eastern moles can tunnel twice the length of their bodies in under a minute. At that rate, you could dig the length of a football field in half an hour.
And More...
This Issue's Staff
Les Fortenberry
Karen Hudson
Regina Knauer
Angie Daly Morfeld
Noppadol Paothong
Marci Porter
Mark Raithel
Laura Scheuler
Matt Seek
David Stonner
Nichole LeClair Terrill
Stephanie Thurber
Cliff White