News

An example of how nature and agriculture can coexist to benefit crop production, water quality and habitat preservation was ...
BEMUS POINT, N.Y. — A new legal battle is underway over New York State’s expanded wetlands regulations. Property owners around Chautauqua Lake have filed a lawsuit against the Department of ...
Hastings-on-Hudson is getting a $356,511 state grant to restore Hillside Park's woodlands to a native forest ecosystem. It ...
North of Hampton, an evolving wetland on 39 acres north of Hampton welcomes birds, bugs, furry critters, reptiles, amphibians ...
If you see a furry head with whiskers pop up in a local creek or wetland, it may be an otter. Or it may be a beaver. River otters were re-introduced to Western New York in the late 1990s after they ...
Just in time for Arbor Day, community members and local politicians gathered for the planting of dozens of native trees at ...
With construction beginning in the coming weeks, visitors to the Sugarloaf Trail — a hot spot for visiting hikers and ...
Setalcott Nation takes stewardship of the newly opened Setauket wetlands site in collaboration with the New York DEC.
A longtime provision of federal law called Swampbuster, which has protected millions of acres of wetland from being farmed, ...
While adorable to look at, the fairytale gets old fast when deer show up in the garden. But there are plants you can grow ...
The Lower Hudson Valley is home to hardiness zones 6a through 7b, which provides a great climate for many deer-resistant plants. Deer are more likely to stay away from poisonous and fragrant plants, ...