A flower is not a star, yet at some point in our dreams and at the edge of reality they cross paths and the two become one, Dana Wilde writes.
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Dana Wilde: The woods are lovely, dark and way too deep
Only passive landscaping is keeping the birches, sumac and raspberry thickets from taking over the yard, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: A narrated showdown between 2 spiders in a vial
Nature, red in tooth and claw, was on full display as a hammock spider and jumping spider encountered each other, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: Woodpeckers’ signals reveal beauty, complication
The birds’ tapping can be communicating complicated messages, such as domestic intimacy, as sounds are passed around out there among the trees, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: Slow changes in climate build to reckoning
The Earth’s climate is changing, whether you believe it or not, and so is the moral climate, Dana Wilde writes.
A diary of spring 2018
From 7-foot high snowbanks to dandelions, the slow dawning of spring has come after a paralyzing winter, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: The decline of the birds
Bird populations are being decimated worldwide, including 19 percent of Maine species, largely because of habitat degradation, writes Dana Wilde.
Dana Wilde: Of bugs, disasters, balance in nature
Catastrophic floods provide a window into the effect global warming is having on insect populations and, as a result, the very fabric of our ecology, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: Spring in Maine is a belief in beauty
Whether true ‘spring’ exists in Maine is debatable, but for now there is winter’s hangover, Dana Wilde writes.
Dana Wilde: The names of the stars in Orion
Astronomers turn to ancient origins for most bright stars, and some of those designations are mysteries, Dana Wilde writes.