Monday, December 13, 2010


Huge Paper Wasp Nest

This wasp nest was found on the high ceiling of an old stone home just down the street. Larry Cotton (author of the Whiskey & Wickedness series of local history books we carry in the shop) was renovating his kitchen. When he tore out a built-in clothes cupboard with a false ceiling, there it was. He kindly gave it to Nature Lover’s Bookshop where it serves as a reminder of what incredible architects and builders wasps are!

Our friend and good customer biologist Ted Mosquin tells us that the nest was created by the Paper Wasp. These wasps prefer protected spots in the woods or man-made structure such as an attic or barn – or in this case an old home where the cupboard has an “attic”. The wasps chew wood fibre into sheets of saliva-soaked pulp that dries into the fine fray paper walls of their nests. Starting out small, the nest expands in progressive layers as the colony grows through the summer*. We can only imagine how many wasps must have lived that one season in this nest that is over 22 inches tall and 24 inches wide!! And that would have been for only one season as wasps do not return to the same nest from year to year.
Similarly, wasps are territorial and do not settle where other wasps have a nest – and why we sell Wasps Away - fake wasp nests rather than wasp catchers. The Wasp Away doesn’t kill the wasps, just convinces them to move along somewhere else to take up residence.
*Stokes Guide to Observing Insects available at Nature Lover’s Bookshop for only $12.99, one of over 50 adult insect books (and another 120 insect books for kids!) in stock.

Monday, October 25, 2010

We're batty!


Hallowe'en is just around the corner and along with "How to Carve a Pumpkin" books and cookbooks featuring squash and pumpkins, Hallowe'en sticker books and storybooks we have all kind of bat items: fingerpuppets, storybooks, even a robotic bat with flashing eyes that kids can make!

At Nature Lover's Bookshop, we LOVE bats! Earlier this year, we invited a bat expert from the Ontario Ministry of Natural Resources, Amy Cameron, and the place was packed! Amy gave a most inspiring and entertaining presentation on Ontario's Little Brown Bat, and its many benefits especially as a mosquito-eating phenom! A mother bat will eat its weight in mosquitoes every day. These fascinating, nocturnal, echolocating little mammals (our only mammals that truly fly) are very beneficial to humans in other ways besides being an impressive insect devourer. They pollinate flowers and plant new trees!

Amy Cameron explained that the species is at risk due White Nose Syndrome, a fungus that is alarmingly decimating the bat population. We learned many ways to protect bats by building warm houses for them (we have books in the store on how to build bat houses) and how to create a bat-friendly habitat.

You can see that we love these often misunderstood and maligned creatures and you've learned why we do. Check some of the books on our shelves: http://www.bookmanager.com/nature/?STG=307058928&opt=kw&q=h.ts&tsf=y&so=oh&qs=bats

Monday, August 2, 2010

We had a special visitor to the store!

Under the Believe It or Not" category...

This was written my our Mary Dixon about a recent 'visitor' to the Nature Lover's Bookshop:

"I was standing at the counter and a customer in the astronomy section called out "There's a skunk in the store!"

I looked at her and smiled thinking she has seen our skunk hand puppet. It must have been a "Sure, dear' look because she added, louder, "Seriously, there is a skunk in the store!!

I strolled over and THERE IT WAS!! Cute as a button - a baby skunk. It was walking slowing and calmly around, up through the kids' section, then over to the T-shirts, investigating - at which point I kind of directed it to the door - no hurry - and out it went! We laughed! The right store for a baby skunk visitor, don't you think?

We have many books about skunks for kids or grown ups including many guides on how to identify animal tracks in the wild, e.g. Welcome to the World of Skunks , by Diane Swanson as well as acclaimed outdoorsman Tom Brown's The Science and Art of Tracking Come and see us in Lanark Village!