Guardians of Nature

Guardians of Nature Contact information, map and directions, contact form, opening hours, services, ratings, photos, videos and announcements from Guardians of Nature, Wildlife sanctuary, 2110 Jamestown Road, Williamsburg, VA.

We stand with nature’s guardians: native plants, bees, hummingbirds, fireflies, turtles, and all wildlife. 🌱✨
Through tips, inspiration, and action, we promote a world where every creature has a place and every garden becomes a sanctuary. πŸπŸ•ŠοΈπŸ’

Evolution writes the diet onto the face, and the bill is the tool! πŸ¦… The shape determines the job. Take the rose-breaste...
06/14/2026

Evolution writes the diet onto the face, and the bill is the tool! πŸ¦… The shape determines the job. Take the rose-breasted grosbeak, for example. Its massive triangular bill acts like a nutcracker, splitting seeds with a force many times its own weight!

Then there’s the nuthatch with its thin, straight bill, which functions like a pair of tweezers. It walks headfirst down tree trunks, prying insects from the bark and wedging nuts into crevices to crack them open. Same tree, completely different equipment!

The anhinga is a real showstopper! It swims underwater, only its snake-like neck above the surface, then strikes with precision to spear fish straight through the side. 🎣 The turkey vulture has a hooked bill designed for tearing apart meals that it finds in a unique wayβ€”by smell! It can catch the scent of decay from high in the sky.

The curlew boasts the longest bill in North America, perfectly curved to reach worms and crabs deep in their burrows. Meanwhile, the acorn woodpecker chisels thousands of holes into a single tree, storing acorns as a granary for generations to guard.

Let’s not forget the purple martin, which scoops insects from the sky (and contrary to popular belief, it’s after dragonflies, not mosquitoes!).

The grackle’s versatile bill does it allβ€”grains, fish, eggs, and even worms stolen from robins!

Eight bill shapes. Eight diets. The birds are telling you what they eat; you just have to read their tools! 🐾

The little pink-and-yellow moth stuck to your porch screen has never taken a single bite of food. It never will. It can'...
06/14/2026

The little pink-and-yellow moth stuck to your porch screen has never taken a single bite of food. It never will. It can't.

It's a rosy maple moth β€” the smallest of North America's great silk moths, colored like cotton candy for a reason worth knowing.

As an adult, it has no working mouth. No tongue to uncoil, nothing to drink with. The equipment simply isn't there.

Everything it will ever do β€” fly, find a mate, lay the next generation β€” runs entirely on fuel it banked months ago, as a fat green caterpillar chewing the leaves of your maple.

It can't hear you, either. No ears at all. It reads the whole world through feathered antennae and its feet, chasing one signal on the night air: a mate's scent.

And the pink and yellow aren't decoration. Against spring's flowering branches, that pastel is camouflage.

So it has a few short days β€” no hunger, no sound β€” just the single errand it spent an entire caterpillarhood saving up for.

It isn't starving. It was never built to eat. The meal was the childhood, taken on your maple tree.

The corner of your yard you keep meaning to clean up is doing more work than the rest of it combined.You see clutter. A ...
06/14/2026

The corner of your yard you keep meaning to clean up is doing more work than the rest of it combined.

You see clutter. A patch of unmowed grass. Some dead stems you didn't cut back. A drift of leaves the rake missed. A little pile of brush by the fence. It reads as a chore you haven't gotten to.

Look again, slower, because every one of those "messes" is somebody's nursery.

That inch of leaf litter isn't debris β€” it's a blanket over moth and butterfly pupae waiting out the season, over firefly larvae that need damp dark to survive, over salamanders riding out the heat. Rake it bare and you've evicted next summer's fireflies.

Those hollow dead stems you meant to snip? Solitary bees are raising the next generation inside them, one sealed chamber at a time β€” bees that pollinate your garden and never sting a soul.

The unmowed grass is a roof. A bumblebee queen may have a nest at its base; a cottontail may have a fur-lined cup hidden in it. The brush pile is a stacked apartment β€” a wren in the twigs up top, a chipmunk below, a toad in the cool dark at the bottom.

And the seed heads you didn't deadhead are a pantry the goldfinches are counting on.

Half a dozen families, raising young across one strip you were going to tidy on Saturday. The tidy version of that corner feeds and shelters almost nothing. The messy version is full.

This is the trade nobody mentions: every yard is either built for looking at or built for living in, and the second one always looks a little undone. The neatness costs more than it shows.

You call it a mess. They call it the only nursery they've got.

The fireflies are in your neighbor's yard. Not yours. Both yards look the same from the street.The difference is undergr...
06/14/2026

The fireflies are in your neighbor's yard. Not yours. Both yards look the same from the street.

The difference is underground. She left the leaves under the shrubs β€” the larvae spent two years in that litter. She didn't treat the lawn with broad-spectrum pesticide β€” the larvae survived. She mows a little higher and turns the porch light off at dusk β€” the females can see the flashes and the males can find them.

Three things. None visible from the street. All visible from the lawn at nine o'clock.

Eight strategies. One question. How do you convince someone you're the one worth choosing.The red-eyed vireo sings over ...
06/13/2026

Eight strategies. One question. How do you convince someone you're the one worth choosing.

The red-eyed vireo sings over twenty thousand songs in a single day. He doesn't stop. The singing itself is the proof β€” if he can sustain that output, he's healthy enough to raise young. Endurance is the rΓ©sumΓ©.

The wren builds multiple nests and lets the female inspect every one. She picks the best builder. The dummy nests sit empty β€” construction samples she rejected.

🐾 The two most people haven't heard of:

The scorpionfly presents a dead insect to the female as a gift. She eats it during mating. The bigger the gift, the longer she stays. It's a transaction measured in protein.

The luna moth has no song, no dance, no color display. She releases a chemical signal so precise that a male can follow it from over a mile away using feathery antennae built for nothing else. No eyes needed. Just scent in the dark.

Song, dance, architecture, combat, light, gift, color, scent. Eight completely different solutions to the same problem β€” and every one of them is happening in your yard right now 🌿

You glance at the feeder, see "a little gray bird," and move on. Slow down for a second β€” at least five different specie...
06/13/2026

You glance at the feeder, see "a little gray bird," and move on. Slow down for a second β€” at least five different species are taking turns out there, and each wears one field mark that gives it away instantly.

Here's the cheat sheet.

The gray bird with the pointed crest and the big black eye is a tufted titmouse β€” look for the crest, listen for a clear, whistled peter-peter-peter. The small one with the black cap and black bib, busy and acrobatic, is a chickadee; its name is its call, that buzzy chick-a-dee-dee-dee. The bird walking straight down the tree trunk headfirst β€” a trick almost nothing else does β€” is a white-breasted nuthatch, with a clean white face and a nasal yank-yank.

The showy one needs no help: a pointed crest and a heavy orange bill mean northern cardinal, and the rich, whistled cheer-cheer carries across the yard. And the flash of bright yellow bouncing through in deep loops is an American goldfinch, calling po-ta-to-chip on every dip of its roller-coaster flight.

Five birds, five tells: crest, cap-and-bib, the headfirst walk, the orange bill, the yellow. Once you've got them, you stop seeing "a little gray bird" and start seeing the regulars by name.

And naming them changes how you watch. The titmouse hauling a single sunflower seed to a branch to hammer it open, the nuthatch wedging one into bark for later, the chickadee carrying a memory map of every seed it has ever hidden β€” these aren't background. They're a cast, and most will be at that feeder every day of the summer.

Two metallic-green beetles will land in your garden this month. One shreds your roses. The other barely touches them. Te...
06/13/2026

Two metallic-green beetles will land in your garden this month. One shreds your roses. The other barely touches them. Telling them apart takes two seconds.

The wrecker is the Japanese beetle. Invasive. Small β€” about a thumbnail. Green head, coppery-bronze back, out feeding in the bright daylight.

The one people confuse it with is the green June beetle. Native. Nearly twice the size, a solid velvety green, mostly interested in your fallen, overripe fruit, and active more at dawn and dusk.

The tell is on the sides. Look along the edge of the abdomen, just under the wing covers.

A row of little white tufts down each side, plus a pair at the tail β€” that's the Japanese beetle. Every time. No tufts and a bigger body? You're looking at a native that was here long before your lawn, doing nobody any harm.

So before you reach for a spray that kills both β€” and the pollinators with them β€” check the sides.

🐾 The fix
Hand-pick the tufted ones into soapy water early in the morning, when they're cold and slow. Skip the hanging bag traps; they pull in far more beetles than they ever catch.

Tufts down the sides: the invader. No tufts: the neighbor. Two seconds decides which one you were about to punish.

You don't have a yard. You can still feed them. One pot of a native becomes a fuel stop.You don't need a garden to put a...
06/13/2026

You don't have a yard. You can still feed them. One pot of a native becomes a fuel stop.

You don't need a garden to put a pollinator station on the map. You need one big pot and one native plant. Renters, balconies, a bare concrete patio β€” all of it works.

Start with anise hyssop. A tough native perennial in the mint family with soft purple flower spikes and licorice-scented leaves. Bumblebees work it nonstop, with hummingbirds and butterflies dropping in.

🌿 The setup:

- Pot at least 12 inches across and deep β€” she grows a deep root and wants the room.
- Drainage holes. Soggy roots will end it.
- Plain potting mix, no fertilizer. She doesn't want rich living.
- Full sun, water while she settles in, then she handles dry spells on her own.
- Deer and rabbits skip her thanks to the minty oils. Shady rail β€” mountain mint takes the same treatment.

Cost: one pot, one plant, a bag of soil. That's the whole list.

A single blooming pot, even four floors up, becomes a refueling stop on a route bees and butterflies are already flying β€” a patch of nectar in a stretch of city that didn't have one before 🌱

I'm a striped skunk. I live in your yard because the food is good. The fox doesn't.A house cat is heavier than I am. My ...
06/13/2026

I'm a striped skunk. I live in your yard because the food is good. The fox doesn't.

A house cat is heavier than I am. My legs are short, my run is slow, and on open ground a coyote could catch me in three seconds. So evolution didn't give me speed. It gave me a billboard, a ladder, and a tank.

The billboard is my stripes. Black-and-white isn't camouflage β€” it's the opposite. I want you to see me from a hundred feet away. The stripes mean: I've already won this. Don't make me prove it.

The ladder is the warning. I stop walking. I hiss. I stomp my front feet hard enough to feel through the ground. I lift my tail straight up. I do a short charge, tail high, in your direction. Every one of those steps is a chance for you to leave. Every fox, every bobcat, every raccoon on this continent reads the ladder and walks away.

The tank is small. I carry about fifteen milliliters of musk in two glands beside my tail β€” enough for five or six shots, and then I'm empty for about a week. That's why I warn so hard. The spray is the last step, not the first. I'm not trying to spray you. I'm trying not to have to.

When I do spray, it's thiols β€” the same family of chemicals you cry over when you cut an onion. I can hit a face at three to four meters and I aim for the eyes. It causes temporary blindness, nausea, and an odor your dog will carry for ten days.

One animal on this continent doesn't read the ladder. The great horned owl has almost no sense of smell, and it drops out of the dark before I can turn. Owl nests sometimes stink of skunk. That's the only fight I lose.

🦨 If a skunk is in your yard:
- Don't run. Don't shout. Back away slowly the moment you see a tail go up or hear stomping. That's the second-to-last warning
- Keep dogs leashed and inside at dusk. Dogs ignore the warning every single time, and the vet bill is the smaller cost
- Never corner a skunk in a window well, a garage, or under a deck. Open the exit, leave the area, and the skunk will leave on its own at dusk
- If you see a skunk active in full daylight, weaving or unafraid, keep your distance and call animal control β€” rabies is more common in skunks than in any other native mammal in many states

I never moved closer to your porch to escape something bigger. I walked in because your compost is good and your coyote already learned to step around me πŸŒ’

If you've got a cracked flowerpot you were about to toss, stop. It's the best toad house money can't buy, and it goes to...
06/12/2026

If you've got a cracked flowerpot you were about to toss, stop. It's the best toad house money can't buy, and it goes together in about a minute.

A toad asks for exactly three things: shade, moisture, and a dark place to wait out the daylight. A broken terracotta pot delivers all three for nothing. Here's the whole build.

Take the pot β€” chipped, cracked, missing a chunk, all fine. Lay it on its side, or set it upside-down and prop one edge up on a stone so the gap becomes a doorway. Tuck it into the shadiest, dampest corner you have: under a shrub, beside the hose bib, behind the AC unit, along the north side of the house. Press the rim a little into the soil so the floor underneath stays cool and damp. That's it. That's the house.

A few touches make it a home. Set a shallow dish of water nearby, with sloped or rough sides so anything that climbs in can climb back out, and a toad will use it to soak. Skip the pesticides anywhere near it β€” the entire point is the bugs, and a resident toad will patrol your beds every single night and never hand you a bill.

Use terracotta over plastic if you can. Clay breathes and stays cool; plastic bakes. And then leave it completely alone. If the spot is right β€” shady, damp, undisturbed β€” something usually moves in within a few weeks, and toads are loyal: find the right address and they'll keep it season after season.

One broken pot, one shady corner, and you've hired a gardener for the price of nothing.

Address

2110 Jamestown Road
Williamsburg, VA
23185

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