• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
  • Skip to footer

ObserverWV

Local News & Events in Jefferson County WV

  • Home
  • Newsletter Signup
  • Print Issues

Primary Sidebar

Latest Stories

County Commission Plans For Growth With Purchase Of New Buildings

Bee Line March Anniversary Events In Shepherdstown Mark 250 Years Of History

No Kings Rally In Shepherdstown Gathers More Than 1,000 Participants

County Planning Commission To Look At Zoning, Solar & Data Centers

County Budget Shifts From Surplus To Deficit

County Commission Explains Funding Plan For New Buildings

Shepherdstown Celebrates Its First Pride Parade

County Commission Makes Early Revision to FY26 Budget

County Commission Plans To Change Impact Fees Again

City & County Struggle To Align On Downtown Charles Town Plans

Governor Celebrates Building Rehabilitation In Charles Town

Shepherdstown Banner Program Honors Veterans

Read all stories

Appreciating Nature

Local voices share observations, experiences, and thoughts about the living world that surround us and the many ways to connect with and enjoy nature.

The Prairie Grass Season

September 28, 2021 Tagged With: landscaping, native grasses

a close up view of native Indian Grass.

Years ago the highway department scraped and graded a steep bank along the road past our property. In order to prevent erosion and to enhance the area as wildlife habitat, we seeded the bare clay soil with a mixture of native perennial plants and warm season grasses. Big bluestem (Andropogon gerardi) and Indian grass (Sorghastrum nutans) are both useful and dramatically beautiful native grasses. Read the Full Story >>

On Seeing Uncommon Butterflies

August 25, 2021 Tagged With: giant swallowtail butterfly, pipevine swallowtail butterfly

Pennsylvania. There was a bath house where electric lights burned all night in the middle of the woods. Each morning and evening, countless insects covered the side of the building around the beam of the flood lights. Read the Full Story >>

A Tree Finds A New Life

July 29, 2021 Tagged With: Viking Tree Service, wildlife habitat tree

For the past five years, we worried that every time it stormed a big limb would break off of our beloved old Kentucky coffee tree and destroy our entryway fence. Now our property is safe from that disaster and a magnificent old tree remains as wildlife habitat. Read the Full Story >>

Sounds Of Summer: The Wood Pewee

July 1, 2021 Tagged With: wood pewee

As spring turns into summer, I listen for a bird song I’ve loved since childhood. I remember hearing, as soon as school closed for the summer, a rather lazy, sentimental birdsong coming from the woods across the road. Whenever I hear it now, it invokes memories of long summer days. Read the Full Story >>

At Home With a Special Tulip Tree

June 3, 2021 Tagged With: tulip tree

Sample board for mural by Doug Pifer

For about a century, a magnificent tulip tree has stood in the front yard of our house. Read the Full Story >>

A Look at The Blue-Eyed Cicada

May 1, 2021 Tagged With: Brood X, cicadas

By the time you read this story, tens of thousands of cicadas may have already appeared in the Eastern Panhandle, filling the air with their buzzing. Read the Full Story >>

Keep Your Bird Feeders Clean

April 1, 2021 Tagged With: bird feeders

Feeding the birds has helped people young and old to get through this pandemic winter. For many home-bound Americans, this backyard hobby has helped lighten the loneliness and depression brought about by the isolation of the pandemic quarantine. But in recent months, all these bird feeders may have brought the birds an epidemic of their own. Thankfully, the solution to this problem is simple Read the Full Story >>

Feeling The Heartbeat Of Spring Emerging

February 26, 2021

During my sixty-odd years as a naturalist, I’ve learned spring actually starts long before the first of March. I write this in mid-February as it seems winter has yet to loosen its grip, until you listen and look closely. Read the Full Story >>

The Flow Must Go On

January 31, 2021 Tagged With: beavers, gage station, USGS

An illustration of a lake habitat, showing a beaver and other woodland creatures.

No creatures on earth can change their environment more drastically than humans and beavers. In the natural world, beaver dams create new wetland habitat for a variety of wildlife. Fishermen, hunters, bird watchers, hikers and outdoor recreationists love to visit beaver dams. But when beavers cut down trees, obstruct and divert waterways, and flood fields, septic systems and basements, their “damming” activities place beavers in direct conflict with humans.  Read the Full Story >>

Seeing & Hearing The Signs of New Beginnings

January 12, 2021

Photo of witch hazel flowers in bloom. Photo Credit Doug Pifer.

As a difficult and challenging year winds down and the pandemic shows new surges, I find much comfort observing nature. The transition from late fall into winter to me represents more of a beginning than an end.  Read the Full Story >>

Even the Birds Sound Different in 2020

December 1, 2020

White-Throated Sparrow. Photo by Doug Pifer.

About a half hour after sunrise, the song of a white-throated sparrow came from our big forsythia bush. I look forward to these sparrows every year, but this time I was paying special attention. Read the Full Story >>

A Colorful Winter Ahead?

October 29, 2020

A Pine siskin in an arborvitae branch. drawing.

Last month I heard a different bird call coming from one of our tall arborvitae trees in the front yard. When I heard it again a few days later I recognized it—pine siskins! I was excited to see a flock of about a hundred land in the same tree. Read the Full Story >>

Rediscovering Hummingbirds

September 1, 2020 Tagged With: hummingbirds

Ruby-throated hummingbirds. illustration.

Can you find something positive to remember about this summer, despite the lockdown and the quarantine? I shall remember this as the summer we rediscovered hummingbirds. Read the Full Story >>

Butterfly Weed — Outstanding In Our Field

August 1, 2020 Tagged With: butterflies, grassland bird habitat initiative, Potomac Valley Audubon Society

zebra butterfly sipping nectar from the flower of an orange butterfly weed plant.

We were talking and my wife suddenly stood with her mouth open, staring out into our distant hayfield. “That looks like orange butterfly weed!” she exclaimed, her eyes wide with surprise. Read the Full Story >>

Wake Up: It’s Later Than You Think.

March 9, 2020

Birds flying near a birdhouse

March sneaks up on me. I still consider it the beginning of nature’s year when the earliest spring birds and flowers appear. But now there’s a somber side to nature’s awakening—an odd, empty feeling, like waking up to discover I forgot to set the alarm clock. Time has passed while I’ve been snoozing. What did I miss and why is it so quiet? Read the Full Story >>

« Previous Page
Next Page »

Footer

Topics

  • Community
  • Economy & Environment
  • Government
  • Events & Activities

Sightline Stories

  • Solar in Jefferson County
  • Remembering Hartstown

Quick Links

  • Jefferson Weekly
  • WV Perspectives
  • Nature
  • Local History

The Observer

  • About
  • Advertise
  • Connect With Us
  • Print Issues
  • Terms of Use

Follow Us

  • Facebook

Copyright © 2025 WV Independent Observer LLC · Log in