Fall 2023 Almanac: Condors, Cones, and Raccoons
When you’re the biggest bird in North America, it takes a little while to grow up. Illustrations by Jane Kim.
News about Bay Nature from the BN staff.
When you’re the biggest bird in North America, it takes a little while to grow up. Illustrations by Jane Kim.
"These are folks who speak with their actions and choices over days, years, and decades, and motivate us all to do the same," writes editor-in-chief Victoria Schlesinger.
The South Bay Salt Restoration Project is reconnecting salt ponds to SF Bay, converting them into tidal marsh for endangered species.
Stories about abalone, bobcats, underground rivers, newts, two-headed worms, out-of-place birds, acorns, shrews, moles, shrew-moles, and clams with a purpose.
A note from Regina Starr Ridley, Bay Nature's outgoing leader, introducing her successor, Wes Radez.
Each year, Bay Nature recognizes remarkable local leaders and activists in conservation and nature
This is a season of change for Bay Nature, as we welcome new people and say goodbye to others who have shaped the magazine.
I hope that like me, you'll come for the two-headed flatworms, and stay for the satisfying deep-dive journalism about nature and our roles in it.
Two landscapes stand divided by the hundred-year-old Yolo Bypass West Levee in Solano County. To the south of the levee’s U shape, canals tangle toward the sprawling Sacramento–San Joaquin River...
An introduction to Bay Nature magazine's summer 2022 print issue.