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A pink petunia is covered in an early snow in October.

Poetry After the Fall

Dave Anderson | November 5, 2020

New Hampshire’s ever-changing weather and scenery drive the NH tourism economy and collective mood swings. Beyond the recent tumult of politics and pandemic, the forest offers an antidote: a sense of place, personality and yes, poetry.

Tags:
Wildlife,
Climate
A view of the renovated Carey Cottage after the completion of the project in November 2020.

Seacoast Online: Portsmouth's historic Carey Cottage begins new life with first tenant

November 5, 2020

Owned by the Forest Society and leased by GoodWork, the historic Carey Cottage has its first nonprofit tenant after renovations were completed.

A blue jay in autumn yellow foliage of an alder eating bright green bit of lichen

Blue Jay Way

Ellen Kenny | November 3, 2020

Ellen Kenny shares her wildlife photos covering events both large and small occurring along Mill Brook in Concord on the Forest Society's Merrimack River Outdoor Education & Conservation Area.

Tags:
Wildlife
A view of a field at Tuckaway Farm.

Tuckaway Farm, Lee

October 28, 2020
Fall Foliage at Moose Mountains

Forest Society Comments on NH Forest Action Plan

Matt Leahy | October 23, 2020

The Forest Society recently submitted comments to the NH Division of Forests and Lands regarding the proposed 2020 New Hampshire Forest Action Plan, a 10-year strategic plan for New Hampshire's forests.

Tags:
Advocacy

Stand Up For Forests

Matt Leahy | October 23, 2020

The Forest Society is part of the Northeast Forest Network (NFN), a coalition of organizations from across New England and New York who share a common mission of forest conservation, combating climate change, protecting clean air and water, and enhancing wildlife habitats.

Tags:
Advocacy
View looking west upriver at I-93 bridge over Merrimack River in soft, pink morning light on wide, placid river in Concord, NH

Autumn River

Dave Anderson, Ellen Kenny | October 21, 2020

The late September "autumnal equinox" brings days and nights into balance and equal length — but not for long. The beginning of autumn is a time when bird migrations peak as waves of warblers, then raptors — the hawks, falcons, eagles and ospreys — depart New England.

Tags:
Wildlife