Bird & Nature Blog

Knowles-Nelson Stewardship = land + birds

Governor Evers has proposed a 10-year renewal of $70 million a year for the Knowles-Nelson Stewardship Program, one of the biggest sources of funding for major land and water conservation projects statewide. In turn, this work protects our wonderful birds and wildlife! Within about five miles of any given Important Bird Area (IBA) in WI, there are 3,500+ Knowles-Nelson projects protecting over 370,000 acres.

Madison Audubon photo

Stewardship needs you NOW

As you read the Gathering Waters report and note the positive report on a few Republicans voicing fairly vague support of Stewardship, PLEASE DO NOT ASSUME that Stewardship is secure. We have not lost but we sure ain't won.

So, Mr. Broken Record here, begs you to contact your and any Republican legislator you know really, really soon.

Photo by Jack Dougherty

Fire Science and the Art of the Burn

I attended my first “burn” in 1992 while a graduate student at UW-Madison.  I was hooked.  The sights, sounds, smell and the skill exhibited by the burn team made me want to learn more.  Then life got in the way.

Fast forward to 2010.

In 2010 I retired from a career in Landscape Architecture and embarked on a new career path in Photography.  I began an ongoing project documenting the activity of local burn teams throughout the area.

The pandemic put a hold on burn activity for 2020, which gave me the opportunity to review my work and go forward when the world started opening up again.

Last year 2020 (fall) and this year 2021 (spring) I worked with Graham Steinhauer and the team creating imagery from several burns at the Goose Pond Sanctuary.

Photo by Carolyn Knorr

Photo by Carolyn Knorr

The question I get asked the most is “why”.

My reason for making these images is two-fold.  First, I want to document and bring awareness to the public of the importance of the science of burning.  Wisconsin is fortunate to have remnants of prairie, oak savanna and wetlands that are on conservation lands and are managed through burning.  These tracts provide shelter to a rich variety of plants and animals.  Habitats that would otherwise be overtaken by invasive species, if not for the burning.

The second reason I make these images is for the beauty and artistic nature of the burns themselves.  They are a metaphor for so many human emotions.  Life, death, rebirth, renewal to name a few.

My goal with this project is to heighten awareness of the importance of land management through burning and to ultimately present this project in book form and a traveling photography exhibit.

Written by Carolyn S. Knorr, fine art photographer and Goose Pond Sanctuary volunteer

Help birds: prevent window collisions

Help birds: prevent window collisions

The big Birdathon day for team All About Aves is just around the corner, this Thursday! We are sharing an important action you can take today #ForTheBirds.

Did you know up to one billion birds die from hitting windows each year in the U.S. alone? New buildings are going up every day, using increasingly more glass and making migrations more dangerous. Show your support for Madison’s Bird-Safe Glass Ordinance and learn about the influential work done by the volunteers in Madison Audubon’s Bird Collision Corps!

Photo by Linda Crubaugh

Help birds: bring cats inside

Help birds: bring cats inside

What a lovely weekend of bird songs and sightings... We are getting excited for our Great Wisconsin Birdathon this Thursday!

All of us at Madison Audubon are animal lovers, and have our own cats and dogs that we could not live without. But science has shown us that free-roaming cats can be a major danger for birds, including those especially bright and colorful passing migrants.

Photo by Kelly Colgan Azar