Adirondack Explorer

On the Wild Side

nce I climbed St. Regis Mountain near Paul Smiths on a fall day with some guiding clients, and we found ourselves standing inside a cloud—not of water droplets but of dragonflies. The insects were green darners, which migrate long distances south in autumn. Or at least a fraction of them do. A subset of green darners, for reasons unclear, seems

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Adirondack Explorer

Adirondack Explorer3 min read
A Silver Lining After The Fall
On what started as a normal day, Bob Emery dropped off his 4-year-old daughter at daycare and drove to Cascade Pass to meet Bobby O’Connor and three Northwood School students at an ice-climbing cliff known as Pitchoff Right. A guidebook describes Pit
Adirondack Explorer5 min read
Requiem For Ice
Driving to Pitchoff Mountain on Route 73 in early January—our first day ice climbing this winter—I took note of the sorry state of classic ice routes. Rock faces that should have been fat with ice, were not. Roaring Brook Falls, one of the most popul
Adirondack Explorer1 min read
Adirondack Explorer
Publisher: Tracy Ormsbee tracy@adirondackexplorer.org Editor: James M. Odato jim@adirondackexplorer.org Associate Publisher: Betsy Dirnberger betsy@adirondackexplorer.org Designer: Kelly Hofschneider design@adirondackexplorer.org Digital Editor: Meli

Related Books & Audiobooks