Photo Credit: Taylor Ruhle
Walk Leader: Andy Sabin, President, South Fork Natural History Museum Board of Directors
On this walk to one of our vernal ponds, we’ll be searching for the Spotted Salamander, one of our four native mole salamanders. This salamander is a beauty, with its shiny black body and bright yellow spots. It, like the Eastern Tiger Salamander and the Blue-spotted Salamander, as well as the early-autumn breeding Marbled Salamander, is called a mole salamander because it spends most of its time underground. Please bring a flashlight and wear boots, as late winter rains will make the ground soggy. This walk will take place only if there have been heavy rains.
Advance reservations are required for all events. For more information, reservations, and directions to meeting places, please call: (631) 537-9735.
Walk Leader: Andy Sabin, President, South Fork Natural History Museum Board of Directors On this walk to one of our vernal ponds, we’ll be searching for[...]
Club Leader: Miles Todaro, South Fork Natural History Museum Environmental Educator Club Advisors: Frank Quevedo, Executive Director, South Fork Natural History Museum, and Barbara Blaisdell, Experienced[...]
Workshop Leader: Muriel Appelbaum. Muriel is a working artist with an MFA in Studio Art from Pratt Institute in NYC. She mostly draws from nature—landscapes, people,[...]
Walk Leader: Andy Sabin, President, South Fork Natural History Museum Board of Directors Here is another opportunity to join SOFO’s “Salamander Commander” Andy Sabin on an[...]
Walk Leader: South Fork Natural History Museum Environmental Educator With the cold of winter, many northern animal visitors come to the South Shore of Long Island[...]
This is an example pop-up that you can make using jQuery.