Strange creatures are lurking in Manchester and the hunt is on. Studio 550 Arts Center founder and programs manager Monica Leap — “that’s Leap, like to jump” — spoke about the scavenger hunt for wild clay treasures.
“It’s a free community event that we do every year that we’ve been open…. It’s all about getting people out to enjoy the city and find some art in the process,” she said. “The real treat is discovering your downtown and seeing what there is out there, getting art into the streets so people can find it.”
The Monster Hunt started 12 years ago. This year it will be on Saturday, Aug. 24.
“We usually do it one of the last Saturdays in August,” Leap said. “The youth-only hunt is going to be at 10:30 [a.m.] in the green space in front of the Center of New Hampshire, which is a building on the corner right next to the DoubleTree Hotel.”
The public hunt is at 11 a.m., “starting at City Hall and people will break from there,” Leap said. The Studio 550 website advises participants to meet at 10:50 a.m. for a “Monster Hunters Meeting.”
How many monsters are hiding in Manchester?
“We sculpt 100 unique clay monsters,” Leap said, “and the past couple years we’ve actually been making 125 because we started a youth hunt for kids 5 and under.” Leap made 50 of the monsters.
Originally the monsters themselves were hidden, but some monsters would wander off, “so we started hiding medallions that you can trade in for the actual monster,” Leap said. “The past year or two we’ve done medallions, and people have really enjoyed that because you kind of get two surprises during the day. One is finding the medallion out there in the streets, and that’s also very exciting because they’re all unique and different as well, and then you bring it back and then you get the second surprise of actually unveiling the monster that you get, which is associated with the number to the medallion that you found,” Leap said.
How did it start? “We just did it for fun, honestly … it’s evolved, for sure, over the years,” Leap said. “We always put them out in public places so you don’t have to buy anything, you don’t have to do anything to get one, you just have to find one, so it’s just about the art of surprise and art in daily life versus having to go to a museum or a gallery to experience it, just something that is there.”
Medallions or monsters can get you some tasty treats in the city. One monster partner is Dancing Lion Chocolate on Elm Street. “You can show it to them and they will give you a free chocolate coin which is a very artful chocolate coin,” Leap said. “Everything they make is beautiful.”
Queen City Cupcakes has a monster cupcake for any medallion finders as well, and the Bookmobile from the Manchester City Library will be at City Hall for the duration of the hunt.
The Monster Hunt is not the only way to have fun with Studio 550 Arts on Saturday, Aug. 24. “We have a whole art activities open house at our studio during the time that we’re doing the exchange of the medallions for the monsters,” Leap said, “and people can try the pottery wheel, they can sculpt their own monster out of clay, they can do some tie dye, which is also a fun activity that most people won’t do at their house because it’s so incredibly messy,” she said.
Speaking of messy, bringing a monster into the home is no small task. Where is it going to live?
“They can also create a little monster habitat where they get to pick a small piece of pottery, get some soil in there, and then put a succulent in there so that your monster has a little habitat to live in when you take it home,” Leap said.
There will be other free crafts at the Studio, like “painting a rock or creating a paper bag puppet monster and then a few other things that we put out that day,” Leap said. “It’s a whole community event.” Clean-up begins at 1 p.m. at the Studio.
Leap has an idea on why people arrive to track down the hidden clay critters: “It’s a game, it’s a hunt, you feel special when you find one.”
Participants can head over to Studio 550 Arts to make their own creation if the monsters are successful in eluding their capture. “Even if you don’t find one you can come to the studio and make your own or just experience some hands-on art activities,” Leap said.
Monster Hunt and Studio 550 Open House Saturday, Aug. 24, youth hunt (age 5 and younger) at 10:30 a.m. in the green space in front of the Center of New Hampshire by the DoubleTree Hotel (700 Elm St.), Manchester; public hunt at 11 a.m. (meet at 10:50 a.m.) starts at City Hall (908 Elm St.) Monster Medallions will be hidden in public places on Elm Street from Studio 550 north to Bridge Street. Studio 550 Arts open house is 10:45 a.m. to 1 p.m. 550arts.com
Featured image: Monsters. Photos by Zachary Lewis.
Specifically, the eastern cottontails “have been increasing in New Hampshire because of, likely, the milder winters, and some of our development,” said Heidi Holman, Wildlife Diversity Biologist from New Hampshire Fish and Game.
They like the suburbs.
“The eastern cottontails do really well in our suburban neighborhoods. They take cover from us from some of their predators,” Holman said.
Eastern cottontails are on an upward trajectory.
“I think the populations are just growing so it seems like every year we keep seeing more rabbits … so we’re just seeing the populations continue to increase year over year, so every year [it’s] like we’re seeing the most rabbits we’ve ever seen right now, that’s the trend,” she said.
The Hippo spoke with several biologists from New Hampshire Fish and Game about the different bunnies in the state, along with some fellow mammals that call the Granite State their home.
BUNNIES
Species: New England cottontail
Eastern cottontail
Snowshoe hare
There are three types of what would typically be considered bunnies in the Granite State, according to Holman. The first is the New England cottontail.
“It’s also nicknamed the coney or a wood rabbit and that is in reference to the fact that it typically lived in interspersed thickets,” Holman said.
The next one is the eastern cottontail.
“This species is actually from the Midwest, so areas west of the Hudson River Valley, and they were brought to New England for release in the 1800s, early 1900s. At the time I don’t think they recognized them as two distinct species. They look incredibly similar, very similar in size, although if you get familiar with them you’ll notice eastern cottontails are bigger.”
Finally, the snowshoe hare.
”The third species of what we might link to rabbits would be the snowshoe hare,” Holman said. “It’s different than a cottontail rabbit. Its young are born with fur and can actually move around early on. They become more independent from their parents.”
Cottontails are not ready to go out on their own right away.
“Rabbits are born without fur and are blind and are in a nest … for a pretty long time, a couple weeks,” she said.
How are they doing? “Snowshoe hare are doing well,” Holman said. “They are being researched for the impacts of climate change, so that concept of them changing color and snow being on the ground, if they still change color but there is no snow, all of a sudden there’s this big white rabbit on a brown landscape so that could lead to higher predation rates, so the exact opposite of what keeps cottontails south, traditionally.”
The recently arrived eastern cottontail, relatively speaking, is faring fairly well.
“The eastern cottontail populations have been growing in New Hampshire pretty substantially, especially in the past five to 10 years, we’ve noticed them in many towns that we hadn’t detected them [in] for a long time,” Holman said.
When they first arrived, “we have documentation from literature that shows they were pretty much everywhere, ” she said. But as forests grew back, their numbers “retreated from this historic anomaly that had been created by people.”
Holman is from southwest New Hampshire and is noticing them there now too: “I grew up out there, I never saw a cottontail rabbit growing up and now I see them pretty regularly in the town I grew up in.”
The native rabbit species is not doing as well. “The New England cottontail has been declining for several decades and is listed as state endangered,” she said.
New Hampshire Fish and Game workers are studying their numbers.
“We have two different focus areas that we’ve been working on conservation,” Holman said. “One is in the Merrimack River corridor. There, it just has continued to decline, there’s just so much development along that corridor between Nashua, Londonderry and Manchester. Where we had the largest remnant population, we’ve slowly lost it to industrial buildings. We’re having a hard time creating a viable landscape with enough habitat for them to maintain a viable population.”
There is a different story on the Seacoast, where there is “a lot more agriculture, and you have larger parcels, maybe more historic farms … and more wooded areas too, which we’re finding might be critical for them…. The landscape In the Seacoast region is OK and we’ve been able to find a lot of landowners that are willing to work with us so we have been able to expand the population in that area, modestly, but we’re still working on it,” Holman said. The added wooded cover could be helping New England cottontails dodge predators while they find thickets of solitude. As mentioned above, the New England cottontail is listed as endangered on the state level as well.
How do the New England and eastern cottontail fit together?
“We don’t really know much at the moment about the interaction between cottontails and snowshoe hare,” Holman said. “If cottontails move north and snowshoe hare are all living in somewhat similar locations, would there be enough room, is there a competition issue, etc.”
Where to find them: The eastern cottontail “are from a more open landscape,” Holman said. “So there’s a lot more fields and native prairies in the Midwest. They live pretty much all the way to the West Coast as well. So they adapted to using more hedgerows and stone walls, less cover, they tend to be out in the open more…. They also tend to be more southern.”
As snow dwindles, certain bunny populations expand.
“One of the things that determines how far north they’re found is how many days of snow cover there is in a year.The longer winters make the brown rabbits more susceptible to predation, but as winters get shorter there’s a higher likelihood any individual will survive, so populations will continue to grow, and then they have the opportunity to disperse and move north,” she said.
Snowshoe hares are actually all over the place.
“We detect them across the entire state of New Hampshire because we do still get snow over most of the state,” Holman said.
The original bunnies have a smaller area. “Native New England cottontails were only really found in the southern part of the state, and they seem to have been more of a coastal species, again, where you’re going to get a lot more hurricanes, probably creation of coastal thicket, but they tend to be more southern,” she said.
Their place in the ecosystem: Rabbits like to multiply.
“They’re known for rapid reproduction, right, ‘breeds like bunnies,’ so they have multiple litters with lots of young, and that’s part of their role in the ecosystem because they are so plentiful only a small portion of them survive to make it to their first winter, anywhere, I think it’s 30 to 40 percent, and that may fluctuate somewhat but it’s less than half,” Holman said.
The change in seasons is an obstacle. “Survival over the course of winter is challenging,” she said.
Eastern cottontails have a unique advantage.
“UNH did some research and they determined that they had the ability to detect predators from a further distance, better peripheral vision, and they just happen to go out in the openings more regularly than our native rabbits,” Holman said.
Snowshoe hares have a helpful ability, she noted. They “change their fur color as the days get longer and shorter, so they turn to a white coat in the winter and that allows them to be less detectable to predators as they’re moving around. Then in the summer they tend to be a similar color to cottontail rabbits.”
The future: How are things looking for the eastern cottontail? “As of right now,” Holman said, “I see them continuing to potentially expand in the state. Similarly to how we’ve seen deer move north….”
They are doing better than the New England cottontail, which “don’t seem to do well sharing the habitat” with the eastern cottontail, she said, but “that’s some research we need to do. That is a huge concern for us over time.”
Brett Ferry, a colleague of Holman’s who specializes in small game spoke on the future of the snowshoe hare.
“There is some concern with less snow during the winter [that] they’ll be mismatched,” Ferry said. “Instead of being white to blend in with the snow. Some concern there for them but for now they remain a common species that is statewide.”
Bunnies at Millstone
The Millstone Wildlife Center in Widham (16 Millstone Road, millstonewildlife.com) rehabilitates mammals in the Granite State and has first-hand knowledge of how they are doing. When people find bunnies in their yard that need help, they typically reach out to Millstone and those bunnies are typically eastern cottontails.
“Most everyone that comes in here is the eastern cottontail.” said Frannie Greenberg, Executive Director.
Markings can help differentiate between eastern and New England cottontail, though a DNA test would be needed to be conclusive, but location is also a helpful indicator.
“Because of where they are found, we are going by habitat…,” Greenberg said. “We can surmise, because the amount of eastern cottontails in the state are much, much higher, that most all of the ones that come in here are eastern cottontails.”
Greenberg has noticed the increase of eastern cottontails in the state. “We are seeing that rabbit babies start coming earlier and earlier,” she said. “This year we had rabbits in March, and people aren’t usually thinking the rabbits are out with babies because there may be snow on the ground — they don’t care about that. If it’s a warm stretch they may start having their litters.”
These warm stretches are being utilized by the eastern cottontail.
“The rabbit population is on the rise in southern New Hampshire,” Greenberg said.
Again, warmer winters are fueling the surge. “If they start in March and they go all the way through October, there is plenty of time to have six or seven litters…,” Greenberg said. “That’s a lot of rabbits. It’s natural that not every rabbit makes it to adulthood, which is why rabbits are prolific, why they have more.”
The bunnies continue to do well, and although it remains to be seen how the eastern and New England cottontail cohabitate, the rise in eastern cottontails is good for larger predators.
“Enough of them have made it so that we see a notable difference over the last few years of the rabbit population in southern New Hampshire…,” Greenberg said. “The better rabbits do in the state, the more food sources there are for the other animals. They are the bottom of the food chain, so when there are more rabbits, they can support more predators so there can be more bobcats or foxes or other animals that would eat the rabbits.”
There is an issue for these larger predators that the MWC has noticed and that echoes the sentiments of NH Fish and Game, and that issue is rodenticide poisoning.
“Rodenticide poisoning is a concern,” Greenberg said. “We are seeing more and more that animals come in here with secondary rodenticide poisoning. That means they’re not necessarily the ones that get into the bait box that gets sick…. Even if it’s a few animals past that mouse. It can be that an animal eats the mouse and then something else eats that animal, that poisoning stays in their system.”
For foxes, rodenticide can exacerbate the effects of mange and make it harder to recover. “That, in turn, presents itself very often with mange. Mange in red foxes is something that the fox themselves have a harder time if they’re immunocompromised, if their systems just are struggling because of the rodenticide poisoning, mange seems to take a hold a whole lot quicker and be a more devastating problem for them in the state of New Hampshire,” Greenberg said.
The health of mammals in the state should be a concern for all. “If it’s a problem for them then it’s a problem for all of us if we want to maintain our red fox population.”
BOBCATS
Species: Lynx rufus (not to be confused with the Canada Lynx)
How are they doing? Oodles of bobcats live in the Granite State, according to Patrick Tate, a Fish and Game biologist.
“Bobcats are very abundant in New Hampshire and are doing great statewide,” Tate said. “Their densities do decline, and by density I mean number of animals per square mile, as one goes north, particularly in the White Mountain area and the very extreme northern parts of New Hampshire, and that is because of snow depth. They have small feet and don’t do exceptionally well with snow during the winter.”
We’re not talking about a small amount of snow.
“Not 4 or 5 inches, but 12 inches or more of snow. They don’t do well because their body weight pushes their feet through the snow and moving around becomes difficult,” Tate said.
The winters do appear to be changing, Tate noted: “Our winters are a little more mild than they’ve been in decades past. With milder winters, animals do better, predators do better.”
“There’s been various work done where predators of bobcat have altered in their number which allows bobcats to do greater, meaning reproduce more. Some of those predators, one in particular, are argued to be fisher, and there’s various work there, but at the same time where our bobcats are doing so well now our fisher may not be doing as well because in part of our bobcat population doing so well,” Tate said.
Where to find them: Bobcats can be found all over the state.
“Seeing a bobcat during daylight hours is not anything to be alarmed about,” Tate said. “The species will be active 24 hours a day, they will hunt during the day, that’s a normal behavior.”
They are not skittish.
“Seeing a bobcat walk away, rather than run away, from a person is a normal behavior. They tend to be tolerant of human presence.”
But chicken owners should be aware.
“Make sure they have a properly constructed chicken coop with a chicken run. Don’t rely on having chickens out during the day because there’s a lower number of predators. Bobcats learn to key in on human behavior and timing and will learn to hunt chickens during the day,” Tate said.
Their place in the ecosystem: Besides occasional chickens, what does a bobcat eat?
“Bobcats are capable of taking down anything from smaller than a mouse to whitetail deer-sized animal, any species between there: rabbits, raccoons, there’ve been situations where they’ve gone after foxes, deer fawns, gray squirrels, bird, beaver, muskrat, and adult whitetail deer,” Tate said. They like to eat and move on to their next errand.
“They are a strict carnivore species,” Tate said. “They will scavenge in the winter…. They tend not to cache animals unless it is the winter months, and during winter months they will cache whitetail deer because they can’t consume one entirely at one sitting.”
As to rivals, “fisher and bobcat are predators of one another,” he said.
The future: The outlook for the bobcat is unclear.
“The future all depends on what time scale we are talking about and how much habitat continues to be fragmented and the impact of those roads,” Tate said.
There is an issue with rodenticide. “Rodenticide use and how we use rodenticides has potential of impacting various wildlife species and indirectly bobcat. Where I stand now, the future does not look awful. I don’t want to put rose-colored glasses on and say it looks the best it’ll ever be,” he said.
“Predator species key on prey that are a little bit off and not acting correctly and they’ll kill those prey. That is called secondary poisoning. By killing mice and in situations where other animals are poisoned, the predator is then poisoned themselves…,” Tate said.
How many bobcats are affected by rodenticide? “The exact numbers on bobcats, I don’t know,” he said, “but I can say for sure with fox and fisher, it happens a lot.”
The UNH Veterinary Diagnostic Lab has done work with New Hampshire Fish and Game on fox and fisher and “it showed that over 90 percent had been exposed to rodenticide, of the animals we submitted,” he said.
Overall though, “bobcats are doing well and as long as our wildlife habitat, our unforced habitat, remains where it is, bobcats will continue to do well.”
BATS
Species: There are eight species of bats, three of them migratory, according to Sandra Houghton, a Wildlife Diversity Biologist in the Nongame and Endangered Wildlife Program through the New Hampshire Fish and Game Department. These include the hoary bat, silver-haired bat and eastern red bat.
The five that winter here are the little brown bat, the northern long-eared bat, the tricolored bat, the eastern small-footed bat and the big brown bat.
“The big brown bat is now much more common. It used to be the little brown bat prior to white-nose syndrome,” Houghton said.
How are they doing? Unfortunately, bats are not doing well and the main culprit is white-nose syndrome (WNS). “White-nose syndrome, it’s caused by a fungus that basically decimated bat populations, originally in the Northeast but now it’s kind of spread across the nation,” Houghton said. “It’s causing them to arouse more frequently during the winter and we just saw massive die-offs. A 90 percent decline in many of our wintering bat species.”
When and where did this come from? “It was first documented in New Hampshire in 2009 and most of that decline occurred generally by 2014, 2015, our numbers were low and have stabilized at that low number. It’s a little bit different for every species. Some have been impacted more severely…. It was first documented in New York…. It’s a little bit unknown … it may have come from Europe or Asia. It was a new fungus to the environment,” she said.
Some bats can carry the fungus and be asymptomatic but still pass on spores.
Will they get better? “Any recovery is going to be slow and uncertain. They’re generally only having one young each year and the likelihood of survival for that young is also more tenuous now than it was. That’s about how they are doing,” Houghton said.
Many bats are considered threatened or endangered both on a state and federal level.
“The northern long-eared bat was listed as federally threatened … it just became federally endangered…. The tricolor is proposed for listing as federally endangered and four out of the five of those species are state endangered,” Houghton said. These include the little brown bat, the northern long-eared bat, the tricolored bat and the eastern small-footed bat.
Where to find them: “The wintering locations are more confined,” Houghton said. “It might be an old mine or cave that has a suitable environment. That’s high humidity, generally over 80 percent humidity. The temperature is stable so it’s staying like 34 to 40 degrees. It’s inground.”
When the weather warms up, it’s a different story.
“During the summer, it’s really statewide. Different species use a variety of habitats,” she said. “Some of them live in trees. We have one bat, the eastern small-footed bat, that lives in more of a rock crevice, like a talus slope….”
Bats utilize snug spaces in trees too.
“Others will roost in different parts of a tree. some use the cracks and crevices, some will be among the leaves, and then some might be underneath the bark, and both the little brown bat and big brown bat will utilize man-made structure,” Houghton said.
Their place in the ecosystem: Bats will eat a lot of insects.
“They are our largest predator of night flying insects. They’re eating half their body weight, and when they’re pregnant or nursing they may be eating all of their body weight in insects and they’re eating a whole diversity, agricultural pests, forest pests, a mosquito that people find to be pesky,” Houghton said.
As for what eats bats, “predators could include owls or cats,” though that’s not an exhaustive list, she said.
The future: Not without hope, but having the joy of watching bats flutter about at twilight is an ongoing struggle.
“We see little glimmers of potential signs of recovery but any recovery is going to be slow and uncertain. Any glimmers we’re taking with caution,” Houghton said.
Some other good news include a certain longevity and the ability to have their offspring survive. “We’ve seen little brown bats who we’ve documented surviving over a decade,” she said. “Also, successfully having young and having the young return. Little signs of encouragement. Little things like that.”
CHIPMUNKS & SQUIRRELS
Species: Eastern gray squirrel
Red squirrel
Eastern chipmunk
How are they doing? According to Brett Ferry, the New Hampshire Fish and Game small game project leader, squirrels are doing fine.
“They are doing quite well,” Ferry said. “Their population is based on available food sources, mostly oak acorns, pine seeds and cones. If it’s a good pine cone year then there are a lot of pine seeds for them to eat over the winter.”
The chipmunks, “they’re doing fine as well,” he said, and they are on “the same track as squirrels…. Sometimes people call in because they occasionally see an albino squirrel or sometimes they’re black, but they’re all the same eastern gray squirrel; they just have some different color variations once in a while.”
Where to find them: “They’re pretty common, found statewide,” Ferry said. “The gray squirrels will be more in the southern part of the state. Red squirrels are more common in the north. But they’re both statewide…. There’s a hunting season on gray squirrels.” This starts on Sept. 1.
Their place in the ecosystem: Chipmunks and squirrels provide similar ecosystem services.
“They spread the seeds and nuts of the trees they eat. They spread acorns around, keeping those species going. Then, they’re also prey for predators such as hawks and owls, weasels…,” Ferry said.
The future: Squirrels do not seem to be going anywhere.
“They’re able to exist with humans pretty well, and good stands of oak trees to maintain acorns and future food sources so they should do well,” Ferry said. Chipmunks are “pretty much the same.”
COYOTES
Species: The eastern coyote, canis latrans variant, is what’s found in New Hampshire, as Patrick Tate explains. “They are a mix of western coyote DNA, a small amount of wolf DNA, and I’m going to use rough terms, call it 10 percent or so, and approximately 10 percent domestic dog,” Tate said.
These coyotes are found all the way from Ohio to the tip of Maine and from there down to the Carolinas and back up to Ohio.
It is interesting to note that “eastern coyotes in New Hampshire, which are pretty similar to all those occupying New England, would be extremely different from an eastern coyote on the edge of Ohio or New York.”
How are they doing? Coyotes are doing great. “Eastern coyotes are doing very well in New Hampshire,” Tate said. “They arrived in the state in the late ’30s, early 1940’s. The first documented one in New Hampshire was in 1944 and that was up in the Lakes Region…. Animals are generally present for a few years before they are officially documented.”
Where to find them: Coyotes are pretty much everywhere.
“By the 1970’s they [were] found statewide and they continue to remain statewide,” Tate said. “They are highly adaptable to all habitats and have the ability to do well in all the places they adapt to, so our cities have eastern coyotes in them and certainly every town in the state.”
Their place in the ecosystem: Coyotes eat lots of different types of food.
“They’re an omnivore species,” Tate said, “so they eat fruits, berries, and take prey up to the size of whitetail deer. They do very well at taking whitetail deer … If there is good snow depth or snow conditions they’ll do better.”
These animals excel at what they do, Tate said. “As predators, they are a consistent force through the year to remove sick and weak prey animals, which strengthens the prey species because the stronger ones survive. It’s that predator-prey relationship game that all the species that we discussed play, that they’re a part of…. They have the ability to help the natural ecological function of being a predator and capturing animals.”
The future: Tate does not have information on coyotes with rodenticide, but said “they do extremely well in all habitats and seem to be more resistant to human changes in the landscape. As a wildlife biologist, my projection is that they’ll continue to do well as they are….”
FOXES
Species: Red fox, Gray fox
These two types of foxes are “completely separate species. They have a different chromosome number and they do not have any ability to interbreed,” Tate said.
How are they doing? Tate and New Hampshire Fish and Game “are doing some trail camera work to determine densities” of fox populations, Tate said. Numbers for both species are down, he said. “Their numbers are down from the historic high; however, we have no reason to believe that foxes are about to leave this state and not be present.”
Where to find them: Both can be found statewide, and especially for “red fox, the density per square mile does not vary greatly throughout the entire state,” Tate said.
It is different for the gray fox.
“Gray foxes are near the northern limit of their range in New England. Because of that, as a person goes north, the density per square mile of gray fox declines,” he said.
Their place in the ecosystem: Foxes have a varied palate.
“They’re an omnivore species, both red and gray; interestingly their diets overlap,” Tate said. “So they’ll eat berries, they’ll eat fruits. Then mice, squirrels, rabbits … waterfowl, turkeys, wild turkeys, that’s all in their realm.”
Unlike the bobcat and coyote, foxes leave deer alone, he said. “They have less capabilities than bobcats.”
It is fun to note that gray foxes have retractable front claws. “They have the ability to climb trees,” Tate said. “When I say climb, they hold on with the front claws and with their rear claws, push themselves up the tree. So they’re not using limbs to climb; they’re actually using their claws to grip and climb the tree.”
Red foxes lack this trait. “Red foxes do not have that ability,” Tate said. “However, red foxes will climb ornamental trees that they’re able to jump limb to limb to get to fruit such as crab apples or apples…. It’s not the same type of climbing technique and one could argue that one does not climb at all. Whereas gray foxes can certainly climb trees.”
The future: The outlook is similar to that for the bobcat, although “based on exposure rates, I would argue that rodenticides are more impactful to the population because of the fox’s willingness to occupy residential settings at a greater level,” Tate said.
Foxes do not travel as far as bobcats either.
“They have smaller home ranges than bobcat, smaller area, and can expose themselves a little more because of that,” he said. This makes rodenticide exposure a greater concern. But it is important not to lose hope. “There’s work at the federal level regarding rodenticide … that continues to be ongoing,” Tate said, “so my hope is that the rodenticide issue gets cleared up over time and the population is less impacted by human presence.”
The two-day New Hampshire Irish Festival begins today, with shows tonight at 6 p.m. and Saturday, Aug. 24, at 6 p.m at the Palace Theatre, 80 Hanover St. in Manchester. Each night will feature six bands: The Spain Brothers, Ronan Tynan, Derek Warfield and the Young Wolfe Tones, Reverie Road, Seamus Kennedy and Screaming Orphans. Meanwhile, at the Spotlight Room, 96 Hanover St., catch Marty Quirk (5 p.m.) and Black Pudding Rovers (6:30 p.m.) on Friday and, on Saturday, Speed the Plough (3 p.m.), Marty Quirk (4:30 p.m.), Black Pudding Rovers (6 p.m.) and Erin Og (7:30 p.m.). The Spotlight Room shows are free. Reserve tickets online. Palace Theatre show tickets start at $49 for one day or $79 for a weekend pass. See palacetheatre.org.
Saturday, Aug. 24
The second annual Wildflower Festival will take place today from 11 a.m. to 9 p.m. in downtown Milford. Walk around and check out the art market, grab a bite to eat from one of the food vendors and support local artists. Then head into town for a drink at one of Milford’s local businesses. Music will be from 6 to 9 p.m., with live performances from Winkler, Sneaky Miles and Rigometrics. Proceeds from the festival will be dedicated to the creation of pollinator gardens and bee hotels throughout the town of Milford.
Saturday, Aug. 24
The New England Racing Museum (New Hampshire Motor Speedway, 922 Route 106, Loudon, 783-0183, nemsmuseum.com) will host its annual Hot Rods, Muscle and More Car Show today from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. This event will feature more than 250 vehicles with proceeds to support the mission of the Museum. The cost for spectators is $5 per person with kids under 12 admitted free. To learn more, visit nermuseum.com.
Saturday, Aug. 24
The 11th annual New Hampshire Monarch Festival (petalsinthepines.com/monarch-festival) begins this weekend at Petals in the Pines (126 Baptist Road, Canterbury, petalsinthepines.com, 783-0220). Online reservations for two-hour time slots are required; the cost is $7 for adults, $3.50 for kids, and infants (non-walkers) get in free. Learn about ways to help migrating monarchs and other pollinators at the festival, which will feature kids’ activities and games, monarch tagging, book readings, labyrinths, ask a master gardener, free milkweed seeds and 2 miles of woodland trails and garden paths, according to a press release. Butterfly wings and costumes are encouraged, according to the website.
Saturday, Aug. 24
The Capital Mineral Club (capitalmineralclub.org) will host the 60th Annual Gem, Mineral & Jewelry Show today from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and tomorrow from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at the Everett Arena (15 Loudon Road, Concord). There will be gems, jewelry, minerals, fossils, carvings, displays, demonstrations, and more. Admission for adults is $5 and free for children under 12.
Save the Date! Friday, Aug. 30 Jewel Music Venue (61 Canal St., Manchester, 819-9336, jewelmusicvenue.com) will host a shredding Labor Day weekend with 17 intense bands taking the stage Friday, Aug. 30, through Sunday, Sept. 1, including Kottonmouth Kings, First Jason, Dr. Gigglez, Problemattik, and Lex the Hex Master. This is an 18+ event; ID is required. Single-day passes are $35; weekend passes are $90. Tickets are available through eventbrite.com.
According to New Hampshire beekeepers, bees are feeling the stressof climate change. In an Aug. 9 story reported by New Hampshire Public Radio, local beekeeper Lee Alexander said that warm weather, ample rain and sunshine this year have unexpectedly made conditions difficult for his bees. His bees produced so much honey that they ran out of room to store it, and started filling up the brood chambers, where young bees are supposed to develop. The NHPR story stated that changing weather conditions complicate bees’ lives in many other ways. “Winters can also pose problems,“ the story reported. “Mild winter temperatures can cause bees to leave their hive too soon, only to freeze to death during a cold snap. Extreme rain events can create too much moisture in a hive, leaving bees unable to dry off and at risk for hypothermia. Heavy rainfall or flooding can also wash away pollen, leaving bees without enough food.”
QOL score: -1
Comment:Bee well.
Crabgrass, we hardly knew ye
A recent article in Systematic Biology, “Molecular and Taxonomic Reevaluation of the Digitaria filiformis Complex (Poaceae), Including a Globally Extinct, Single-Site Endemic from New Hampshire, USA, and a New Species from Mexico,” hardly seems like a popular page-turner, but it highlights the role played by an extinct species of New Hampshire crabgrass. “In 1901, several peculiar specimens of crabgrass were discovered on the rocky slopes of Rock Rimmon in Manchester, New Hampshire,” the UNH College of Life Sciences and Agriculture wrote in an Aug. 14 press release. “Initially thought to belong to the species Digitaria filiformis, the slender, wiry plants with small, delicate spikelets were only known from this single location. But by 1931, they were last collected from the area, and the grass has not been observed since. Recently, UNH’s Albion R. Hodgdon Herbarium, which holds three of the last known remaining dried specimens of the grass, played a key role in identifyingthese plantsas their own unique species, Digitaria laeviglumis, commonly known as smooth crabgrass…. ”
QOL score: a belated -1
Comment: According to the press release, this marks the first documented plant extinction in New Hampshire.
Gold medals and belly rubs
In an Aug. 15 press release, the Golden Dog Adventure Co. in Barrington announced the conclusion of the 2024 Summer Doggy Olympics. Golden Dog, which hosted the event, wrote, “Over the course of two weeks, 23 canine athletes and their handlers competed in eighteen events hosted in 14 cities throughout New Hampshire.” Events included Howling, Agility, Pool Toy Retrieval, Ice Cream Licking, Obstacle Course, Nose Work, and Tricks. A Lifetime Achievement Award was given to Cody, “ a senior canine athlete who not only competed in the 2021 Summer Doggy Olympics, but at the age of 10, participated in seven competitions at this year’s games.”
QOL score: +1
Comment:Watch the closing ceremonies on YouTube. Search for “2024 Doggy Olympics Closing Ceremony.”
Last week’s QOL score: 76
Net change: -1
QOL this week: 75
What’s affecting your Quality of Life here in New Hampshire?
The Big Story – Happy Birthday, Yaz: We’ll start today with birthday greetings to Red Sox legend CarlYastrzemski as he turns 84. His 1967 season is arguably the greatest season for carrying his team on his back since JoeDiMaggio in 1941.
My favorite Yaz stat has nothing to do with baseball, though. It’s that as a high school basketball player he set Long Island’s single-game scoring record by going for 60 one day. Not bad for a place that includes JuliusErving among its basketball alumni. So happy b-day, Captain Carl.
Sports 101: When Yaz went for those 60 points, whose LI scoring record did he break?
News Item – Mickey Gasper: The big day came for the catcher out of Merrimack when the Red Sox called him to the show last week. He immediately played in two games, walking twice in two AB’s to give him an impossible-to-top 1.000 on-base percentage.
News Item – Drake Maye: The Pats may have lost 14-13 to Philly, but there were encouraging signs of life from their rookie QB as he calmly led two scoring drives while going 6-11 for 47 yards and 15 more and a TD on four carries.
The Numbers:
3 –games out of the final wild card spot for the Sox as the week started.
300 – homer mark reached by Yankees slugger AaronJudge last week.
… Of the Week Awards
Thumbs Up – Bayless Dumped By FS1: With his ratings tanking, repugnant talking head SkipBayless is gone from his show on FS1.
Sports/Politics Note of the Week – Royce White: The former Iowa State hoopster won the GOP primary in Minnesota last week to let him face Dem AmyKlobuchar for her Senate seat.
Random Thoughts: How ridiculous was it to hear Kenley (Blood and Guts) Jansen telling AlexCora he was “ready to get 4” during a win over Texas last week? Wow, like facing four guys instead of three is a herculean task.
A Little History – Closers in 1949: The Yankees went into their season-closing two-game series with the Red Sox trailing Boston by one game for the pennant. Starter AllieReynolds got tagged with four runs in the third inning to send New York down 0-4. So with the season on the line CaseyStengel quick-triggered him for an unorthodox move that would give managers, media pundits and people like Jansen a stroke today.
He brought closer JoePage to stem the potential season-ending rally. Which he did. And Casey not only did that, but he had Page keep going until the Sox got to him. Which they never did.
Leading old Joe to “close” out a crucial 5-4 Yankees win with an astonishing scoreless 6.2-inning, 1-hit, 5-strikeout effort to save the season. Especially since the Yanks won 5-3 the next day to steal the pennant from Boston
Again.
Sports 101 Answer: Before Yaz, the LI single game record was held by the greatest football player who ever lived, JimmyBrown, who had 53 for Manhasset in the early 1950s.
Final Thought – The White Sox Race to be the Worst Ever: Longtime New York Met EdKranepool went on record last week saying he hopes the Chicago White Sox surpass the 40-120 record of his 1962 Mets for the worst single season ever in MLB history.
If you don’t who Kranepool is, he is sort of a New York legend in a weird way. He was a NYC high school phenom who made it to the Mets in their first year when he was 17. And then despite being nothing more than a journeyman first baseman his entire career, he somehow managed to last with the Mets for the next 18 years despite never driving in even 60 runs in a year. I would venture no one’s ever pulled off a feat like that without being traded at least once.
But sorry, Ed, I don’t want them to break your Mets’ record of futility. I’m a New Yorker at heart and that team, as bad as it was, was a historic, beloved team of distinction.
First, because their arrival as an expansion team brought baseball back to National League fans in NYC after they were abandoned by the Giants and Dodgers after 1957. Second, they lost in both lovable and comical how-did-they-do-that ways. And finally, they had the perfect ringleader at the center of all the chaos in legendary Yankees manager Casey Stengel to explain all the lunacy as it unfolded in the entertaining fashion only he could.
In other words, they were perfect in their futility, while Chicago is just terrible and B-O-R-I-N-G. So it’ll be a loss for baseball history if the record falls from the Amazing Mets, at whom Stengel used to shout in anguish from the dugout, “Can’t anyone here play this game?!!!”
Rose Mountain Rumble ride benefits land conservation
Chirs Wells is the President and Executive Director of the Piscataquog Land Conservancy (PLC). The PLC is a private nonprofit land conservation organization that works to conserve the natural resources and scenic beauty of the Piscataquog, Souhegan and Nashua River valleys of southern New Hampshire. The Rose Mountain Rumble that takes place on Saturday, Aug. 24, is their annual “gravel ride” that helps raise funds for the PLC and awareness about land conservation. Registration is full but there is a waitlist. Visit plcnh.org for more information about the organization and rosemountainrumble.com for information about the gravel ride.
What is the Rose Mountain Rumble?
What people that are into it call a quote ‘gravel ride’ or a ‘gravel grinder.’ It’s in between, essentially, road biking and mountain biking. People are mostly riding bicycles that are a tweaked version of a road bike but they’re a little bit beefier, they’ve got a little bit different gearing, a little bit wider tires, and what they’re really made for, yes, you can ride them on pavement for sure, but their sweet spot is to be riding on dirt woods or woods road kind of environment. It’s turned into a real culture and a real scene. One of our organizers, Kris Henry, always likes to stress that this is not a race, this is a ride. The whole point of it is to get people on the back roads, dirt roads of south central New Hampshire, which is the area that we work in, to get out and experience these lightly traveled dirt roads, beautiful scenery, and be with a community of people.
How did the gravel ride get started?
We got started with this ride back in 2014…. It’s our 10th year since the first one but we missed one from Covid, so this is actually officially the ninth annual, so take your pick, it’s either the ninth or the 10th. The first year we had all of 30 people ride in it. We went from 30 to within a couple years we’re at 150 and have been ever since. We capped it intentionally to have it not be too big. Anyway, back in 2014 our organization was working on a land conservation project to conserve basically the whole top of Rose Mountain. It’s sort of a 2,000-footish small mountain in Lyndeborough and we had this opportunity to acquire the property and had to raise a decent amount of money to do it. At the time, somebody who was a longtime friend of the organization said, ‘Here’s an idea, maybe you could do a bike thing or something, you should talk to these people I know in Lyndeborough.’ Those people turned out to be a guy named Kris Henry who’s basically a custom bike builder … and then a couple, Doug Powers and his wife, Doria Harris, they are both avid cyclists…. We literally got together at Kris Henry’s bike building shop, his backyard of his house in Lyndeborough, and pretty quickly came up with the idea of doing a gravel ride in the area and whatever money we could spin off of it would benefit this land conservation area.
Can you expand on what the PLC does?
The PLC is a private, nonprofit land conservation organization; some people will shorten that to being ‘a land trust.’ We are the local land trust, basically, for greater Manchester, greater Nashua, 26 towns altogether. Just about all of them are in Hillsborough County; we have a couple that are in Merrimack. It’s a really diverse area. We’ve been around since 1970. As of today we hold land for conservation easements on … about 9,600 acres. Basically, what we do, we work on a purely voluntary basis with land owners that are interested in conserving their property or looking to sell their property to whoever but we know it’s of conservation value. Some of the lands and easements are straight up donations, some of them we’re paying full market value based on appraisal, and honestly sort of everything in between. The whole point of it is to conserve the property in an undeveloped state in perpetuity, i.e. forever. Once the land is protected, whether it’s through a conservation easement, which is essentially you’re taking the development rights off of a property but it remains in private or town ownership, or something that we own, either way we are then responsible forevermore to be monitoring that property at least annually to make sure that the boundaries are being respected, nothing bad is going on, and that the natural resource values are being protected on an ongoing basis. On some of the properties we own we have trail systems that we are maintaining and in some cases adding to. We’re trying to make some of our properties, where it’s appropriate, to be local recreational areas for people…. All of our lands are open to the public, that is lands we own outright. All of them are open to some level of recreation. Most of them are open to hunting and fishing to people that are into it. We try to have them open to as many activities as is reasonable and safe.
What’s the best way for someone to support PLC’s mission?
It’s kind of the classic answer from a nonprofit organization. One obvious and good way, and we definitely always need people to help us out, is to be a member. Make a contribution, be a member in the organization, support us financially. And/or, it doesn’t have to be one or the other, volunteer. We definitely need volunteers, especially for our property monitoring. We’ve got 80-plus people in any given year that are volunteer land monitors and they are often the people who are out there annually being our eyes and ears on the ground to check on these properties as we go along.
—Zachary Lewis
Featured image: Rose Mountain Rumble. Photo by Gabriella Nissen.