Episode
109 - The Science of Noticing When Nature Happens
- Podcast
- Buzz Blossom & Squeak
- Published
- Apr 16, 2026
- Duration seconds
- 819
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Summary
Spring doesn't arrive in a single moment — it arrives in layers, and phenology is the science of noticing the order. There's a name for what farmers, hunters, and naturalists have practiced for centuries: tracking when nature shows up. And it turns out you can start doing it right now, with nothing more than a notebook. What Phenology Is Phenology is the study of cyclic and seasonal natural events — when the first flower blooms, when the first frog calls, when ice leaves the lake. The word comes from the Greek for 'to appear.' It's one of the oldest sciences in the world, used long before it had a name, by communities who planted corn when the oak leaf was the size of a squirrel's ear and tracked walleye spawning by when the lilacs bloomed. A Long History of Careful Watchers In 1736, English naturalist Robert Marsham began recording the first dates of 27 natural events on his estate. He continued for 62 years. His family kept the records going after he died. Henry David Thoreau did the same in Concord, Massachusetts — noting flower dates, ice-out on Walden Pond, the arrival of specific birds. Those journals are still being studied today. Aldo Leopold's A Sand County Almanac brought the same practice to Wisconsin with the precision of a scientist and the voice of a poet. Spring Comes in Layers Silver maples flower before trilliums emerge. Trilliums emerge before warblers arrive. The order stays the same every year — what changes is how early or late the whole sequence runs. A warm February pushes the ladder forward. A cold snap in April pauses it. When you know the order, each event predicts the next one. How to Start Your Own Record Pick five things you already notice every year — first robin, first bumblebee, first dandelion, first day the lake is ice-free, first humm…