Some of our favorite sites to visit on the web!
Join WGNSS for birds, bugs, & botany!
Pickle Creek photo by Casey Galvin
Favorite Nature Sites by your website editor, Anne McCormack, aka Nature Nut. Awesome stuff!
T. C. MacRae's blog, Beetles in the Bush.
Anne McCormack's blog about native plants, butterflies, birds and any nature topic Gardening with Binoculars.
Over a period of 20 springs, Randy Korotev collected data on the migration through Forest Park. See this interactive display, or view the original by clicking on Bird and Birding Information > Timetable of Spring Migration.
This site, listed first by Google in the search "lunar meteorite" is written by one of our members. From the Dept. of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri.
Great photos from our members
If you have a blog or site you'd like listed here, contact WGNSS website coordinator, Anne McCormack.
Summary of posts about birds in Missouri at Birding on the Net
How are birds doing in the face of habitat loss, etc? Here's the complete State of the Birds, 2013 report. Sponsored by American Bird Conservancy, National Audubon, US Fish and Wildlife, and many more.
The webcam for Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park. When you see a crowd gathering, you know a predicted eruption is near.
You'll flip when you see this! Flashy intro to Olivia Gentile's new book about birding champ and WGNSS member, Phoebe Snetsinger.
Here's the Wikipedia article about Phoebe Snetsinger.
Jim Jackson wrote a great article about WGNSS in the Missouri Conservationist in 1995.
John Trapp writes in his blog, Birds Etcetera, about the Secretary of Defense birding with WGNSS birder Dick Anderson.
Why do we have a photo of a golf course on this page?
This lovely palm-tree-lined golf course is a place holder. We need WGNSS members to send a suitable photo for the Favorite Links page to Anne McCormack.
T. C. MacRae's blog, Beetles in the Bush.
Anne McCormack's blog about native plants, butterflies, birds and any nature topic Gardening with Binoculars.
Over a period of 20 springs, Randy Korotev collected data on the migration through Forest Park. See this interactive display, or view the original by clicking on Bird and Birding Information > Timetable of Spring Migration.
This site, listed first by Google in the search "lunar meteorite" is written by one of our members. From the Dept. of Earth & Planetary Sciences, Washington University, Saint Louis, Missouri.
Great photos from our members
If you have a blog or site you'd like listed here, contact WGNSS website coordinator, Anne McCormack.
Summary of posts about birds in Missouri at Birding on the Net
How are birds doing in the face of habitat loss, etc? Here's the complete State of the Birds, 2013 report. Sponsored by American Bird Conservancy, National Audubon, US Fish and Wildlife, and many more.
The webcam for Old Faithful in Yellowstone National Park. When you see a crowd gathering, you know a predicted eruption is near.
You'll flip when you see this! Flashy intro to Olivia Gentile's new book about birding champ and WGNSS member, Phoebe Snetsinger.
Here's the Wikipedia article about Phoebe Snetsinger.
Jim Jackson wrote a great article about WGNSS in the Missouri Conservationist in 1995.
John Trapp writes in his blog, Birds Etcetera, about the Secretary of Defense birding with WGNSS birder Dick Anderson.
Why do we have a photo of a golf course on this page?
This lovely palm-tree-lined golf course is a place holder. We need WGNSS members to send a suitable photo for the Favorite Links page to Anne McCormack.