Showing posts with label Nicandri Nature Center. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nicandri Nature Center. Show all posts

Thursday, November 16, 2017

Nicandri Nature Center - Part 2

I was touring the new nature center on the shores of the St. Lawrence River in Massena, New York (see also Part 1, posted yesterday). I fondly remembered this giant hollow log from my previous visit. It was made of concrete but looked entirely real:

I walked up to it and entered, this time knowing what to expect. When someone enters, a red light comes on and these imitation bats begin chirping. I saw a woman scream the last time:

All along the wall of this room was a diorama with birds and mammals common to the area:

This Wild Turkey was one of the most realistic and one of the most commonly seen:

 A Cottontail Rabbit and Red Fox:

The last time I was at the nature center, their bees had not yet arrived. But they had taken up residence over the summer and built a large, thriving colony. They were crowded and difficult to see, though, but that was solved by the lighted, enlarging camera which could be positioned wherever you wanted a better view:

And whatever you focused it on was displayed, giant sized, on the adjacent screen:

Honeybees are an important part of our natural world and of our agriculture:

A third room contained a Blandings Turtle, a familiar species to me because I had one as a boy. If I had lived within bicycling range of a place like this when I was young, I'd have been there every day and made a pest of myself:

They also had a Wood Turtle, a species I've rescued from the roads several times around here:

I'd seen most everything, so I thanked the naturalist and exited to the first, main room on my way out:

Outdoors, I saw that they had planted a garden which was designed specifically for the bees:

It doesn't look like it here, but many of those plants were still flowering, even this late in the year:

Wednesday, November 15, 2017

Nicandri Nature Center - Part 1

The nature center in Massena, New York opened this past spring and when I first visited there, I called it the Robert Moses (State Park) Nature Center. It does seem to be on state park land or at least adjacent to it, but the official name is Nicandri Nature Center:

There are trained interpretive naturalists on duty to take school kids on guided tours or to shoot the breeze with an old geezer like me who once studied these things but had to earn his living elsewhere. Pollywogs, weeds and wildlife have been my passion since I was a small boy, trying to catch minnows in the local creek. This gigantic, wrap-around aquarium is the first thing a visitor sees:

On an island inside the big aquarium were four frogs, probably Green Frogs (though I didn't ask). The naturalist told me that some of the big Channel Catfish had been trying to eat them, so they stayed up where it was safe and waited for the staff to feed them crickets:

The aquarium was filled with Bullhead, Perch, Channel Catfish, Sunfish, Bluegills, etc. There was a Map Turtle and probably other animals as well, but the beaver, bear and heron were stuffed:

Who needs wetlands? We all do, and the St. Lawrence River wetlands are an ideal place to study them:

Another giant aquarium in another room contained other species. In this photo are a Bullfrog tadpole (on the log) and two Sturgeons (resting on the gravel). There were eels and other species as well. The Mudpuppy was a rubber model which sat on a shelf outside the aquarium:

In the big aquarium were several Longnose Gars, the first I'd ever seen in real life:

And a display case with five species of local freshwater clams:

One entire wall was filled with a wildlife diorama which contained taxidermy mammals and birds:

I remembered the pied deer from my last visit because it was so unusual:

A black bear. I was told that the small bear skin at its feet was for school children to handle so they could keep their hands off of the full bear. Pictures with the bear, however, are encouraged:

Behind the wavy glass were scenes as could be found in wild settings all through the area. There was more for me to see, though, and I'll post Part 2 tomorrow: