Archive for the ‘Publications, Apps, and Websites’ category

Web Sources for Old Aerial Photographs

May 22, 2010

Wouldn’t it be nice to see what your area looked like from the air as far back as 1938? Vegetation changes are readily apparent when you compare them to aerial photographs of today. For New York I have found two sources that have old aerial photographs available for viewing on the web. The first is from Cornell University and includes counties from central New York. The second is from a website called historicaerials.com which provides old aerial photographs in the Lower Hudson area and Long Island.

The 6 counties of Central New York are available at: http://aerial-ny.library.cornell.edu/

And Long Island aerials are available at: http://www.historicaerials.com/

Have fun!

The north end of Cayuga lake in 1938

FrOGS – Friends of the Great Swamp

May 4, 2010

We have added this organization to our links list on the right side of the blog.  Visit and learn all about this beautiful and diverse swamp in Putnam County.

The Great Swamp - from the FrOGS website

NYS DEC Launches Thier New Blog “State of Green”

April 23, 2010

You can view it at State of Green.

Search for NY Plant Lists on Google Maps

April 19, 2010

Steve Young has started a Google Map called “New York Plant Lists” that shows places where there are plant lists available. If you click on the link with the map marker you can see the list. The effort has just begun and many more lists will be put up as they become available. If you would like to become a collaborator and put up your own lists, contact Steve at young@nynhp.org.

See the map by clicking HERE.

New York Flora on Google Bookmarks

April 18, 2010

We have started a list of bookmarks pertaining to New York Flora on Google Bookmarks.  Click Here to see it.  It is open to the public to view and provides a place to put bookmarks you think are relevant to understanding the flora of New York. You may contact Steve Young at young@nynhp.org to become a collaborator and add new bookmarks. Enjoy this new resource.

New Facebook Page for Friends of the Woodlawn Pine Bush Preserve

April 17, 2010

Join this Facebook Page if you are interesting in the preservation of this beautiful part of the Pine Bush ecosystem in Albany and Schenectady counties. It will feature photos of the preserve’s flora, fauna, and ecosystems,  along with volunteer opportunities, events and walks.

The pond at the Woodlawn Preserve

New Plant ID Apps for the iPhone and iPad

March 28, 2010

If you haven’t looked lately at the Apps available on iTunes there are more and more plant identification guides available.  Here is a list of the ones I have found as of September 2012. Click on links for more info:

Florafolia – Native Plants of the Northeast $3.99

Audubon North American Wildflowers  $9.99

Botany Buddy – Tree and Shrub Finder $9.99

Landscapers Companion $9.99

Flower Pedia – Garden and Wildflowers $4.99

Wild-Flower – Wildflowers of France and Western Europe $4.99

North Woods Wildflowers $0.99

Flora of the British Isles $16.99

Wildflowers of Cedar Breaks National Monument

Flora Italiana Free

MyNature Tree Guide $6.99

Key to Woody Plants of Wisconsin Forests Free

Common Mushrooms of North America Pictoral $3.99

Wild Mushrooms of North America and Europe $1.99

Tree Id –  British Isles $3.99

Winter Tree Id- British Isles $3.99

Wild Flora of Central Europe $7.99

OrchidID – British Orchid Identifier $3.99

What do you know – Botanical Edition $0.99

TreeID – North American Trees $0.99

What Tree is That? $4.99

Trees PRO HD – North America and Europe $0.99

Australian Wildflowers $2.99

Plant Finder Italian Flora $2.99

US Trees $0.99

eTrees of North America $9.99

eFlowers of Eastern North America $7.99

Colorado Plants $0.99

Wildflowers of Central Texas $2.99

Wild-flowers of France and Western Europe $4.99

Northwest Mountain Wildflowers (US) $9.99

Santa Monica Mountains Wildflowers  Free

Great Smokey Mountain Wildflowers $4.99

California Wildflowers $9.99

Wildflowers of the Western Plains $9.99

Wildflowers Along the Way – Central and Southern Appalachians $9.99

Sierra Nevada Wildflowers $9.99

Joshua Tree National Park Wildflowers $9.99

Death Valley Wildflowers $9.99

Plants of San Gabriel Mountains $12.99

Wildflowers of Detriot Free

Alpine Flowers (German Alps) $4.99

Flora EU  – Wildflowers of Europe $5.99

Wild Orchids Borneo $2.99

Iberian Orchids $2.99

Some of these are good, some not so good. Read the reviews and please comment if you have these and recommend any one of them. If they work they ought to be awesome on the iPad.  All new field guides should be made available for the iPad and Little, Brown and Company should think about  publishing Newcomb’s Wildflower Guide for the iPad with updated taxonomy. – Steve Young

Image from Wildflowers Along the Way – Wildflower ID for the Central and Southern Appalachians

New Book: Designing Gardens with Flora of the American East

January 26, 2010

Designing Gardens with Flora of the American East
Carolyn Summers, with illustrations by Michele Hertz

Gardeners are endowed with love for a hobby that has profound potential for positive change. The beautifully-illustrated Designing Gardens with Flora of the American East approaches landscape design from an ecological perspective, encouraging professional designers and backyard enthusiasts alike to intensify their use of indigenous or native plants. These plants, ones that grow naturally in the same place in which they evolved, form the basis of the food web. Wildlife simply cannot continue to survive without them—nor can we. Summers introduces our wild flora into designs for common garden landscapes, such as foundation plantings, mixed borders, even formal knot gardens.

Emphasizing the importance of indigenous plant gardening and landscape design, Summers provides guidelines for beginning gardeners as well as experienced designers.
She highlights . . .
an in-depth scientific, coherent argument for the necessity of using indigenous plants in cultivated landscapes concrete design guidance, including actual designs, along with trees, shrubs, groundcovers, and other showy substitutes for invasive plants the best ways to use exotic plants responsibly, including controlling plant reproduction, choosing cultivars and hybrids, and more joys of “safe sex in the garden”
practical issues of finding and purchasing native plants.

From Maine to Kentucky and up and down the eastern shore, Designing Gardens with Flora of the American East lays the “gardenwork”—by preserving natural areas through the thoughtful planting of indigenous plants, we may bask in the knowledge that it is possible to have loads of fun at the same time we are growing a better world.

Rutgers University Press
224 pages * 16 color and 62 black and white photographs, 9 illustrations, and 26 tables * 6 x 9
978-0-8135-4707-7 * Paper * $23.95
978-0-8135-4706-0 * Cloth * $39.95

Winter 2010 Electronic NYFA Newsletter Sent Out Today

January 22, 2010

Remember, an electronic membership has the added advantage of delivery before paper copies are sent out and includes full color photographs. You can also simply click on web addresses instead of typing them into your browser. Convert to electronic membership the next time you renew. You will be glad you did.

Homer House’s 1918 Wildflowers of NY online

January 16, 2010

This beautiful treatment of New York’s wildflowers can be found at http://chestofbooks.com/flora-plants/flowers/Wild-Flowers-New-York/index.html