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Land Trust Report Spring 2022

By |2022-05-27T08:50:53-04:00May 27th, 2022|Land Trust, Newsletter 2022|

by Bob Miller The section of Middle Farms that is just south of the road was burned on March 22nd by the Fishers Island Fire Department, led by Chief Jeff Edwards, as part of HLFM’s rotational burning program to maintain the maritime grassland. Prescribed burn of Land Trust grassland at Middle Farms

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Newsletter 2022: From the President

By |2022-05-27T08:38:48-04:00May 27th, 2022|Newsletter 2022|

Elizabeth McCance From the President I’m not the only one preparing for an exciting summer at Fishers – so are the ospreys! Watching an osprey lay an egg at night courtesy of an Osprey Cam recording is a treat to behold, and one that was unimaginable a few decades ago. Technology aside, this year promises to

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Black Cherry Trees: Nature’s Topiaries

By |2022-05-23T08:34:58-04:00May 18th, 2022|Field Note|

Black Cherry (Prunus serotina) Have you noticed the bizarrely-twisted trunks of so many of the Black Cherry trees on the Island? Their distorted shape is a result of natural pruning caused by a fungus, Apiosporina morbosa, known, quite descriptively, as Black knot. Black Cherry tree with Black knot disease taken along Treasure Pond

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Horsetails

By |2022-05-23T08:33:56-04:00May 17th, 2022|Field Note|

Horsetails (Equisetum sp.) Species in the genus Equisetum are living members of a group of plants, the sphenophytes, that dominated the landscape during the age of dinosaurs. Some grew up to 100 feet tall but today's plants of the Equisetum family are much smaller, even though some species in South America may reach 15

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Beech leaf disease

By |2022-05-23T08:32:15-04:00May 16th, 2022|Field Note|

These century-old beech trees are dying. (But there is hope for a remedy.) Beech leaf disease (BLD) was first recognized in Ohio in 2012. American and European beech trees in the areas around New York City, western Connecticut, and Long Island, including Suffolk County, were showing the symptoms of BLD as early as 2019.

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Beechdrops

By |2022-05-16T14:48:02-04:00May 16th, 2022|Field Note|

Beechdrops (Epifagus virginiana) As described by its scientific name, Epifagus lives exclusively on the roots of beech trees, specifically American beeches. Beechdrops found on the eastern leg of Island Pond Trail. Photo by Jack Schneider Beechdrops are an annual plant that lacks leaves and chlorophyll, relying on energy derived

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HLFM Bird Database

By |2022-06-08T10:08:55-04:00May 14th, 2022|Natural History, News|

Tracking Avian Activity on Fishers Island, Month by Month The Henry L. Ferguson Museum holds intermittent bird observation data for Fishers Island that date back to the 1920s, initially recorded by Alfred L. and Henry L. Ferguson, Sr. and later in the 1950s and 1960s by Museum Curator H. Lee Ferguson, Jr. The scope

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2022 Reported Bird Sightings on Fishers Island

By |2023-01-30T12:03:53-05:00May 10th, 2022|News|

2022 Reported Bird Sightings on Fishers Island (There were 181 different species reported by observers this year. Of those, seven were new and added to our overall list of historic sightings. That list now contains 252 species.) The data are collected by a group of knowledgeable Fishers Islanders. eBird reports and Audubon Seasonal Bird

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ANNUAL EXHIBITION 2023

Untitled
F.I. Sketchbook 2005

THE SKETCHBOOKS OF CHARLIE FERGUSON

In the full sweep of Fishers Island’s history, there is no artist more synonymous, more closely associated with Fishers Island than Charles B. “Charlie” Ferguson. The main show features images from two of Charlie's sketchbooks which functioned as illustrated diaries that were filled with daily activities, nature observations, personal notes, and lots of art—drawings, sketches, and watercolors—in various states of completion.

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