Is there any more welcome sound this time of year then the nighttime chorus of spring peepers? This tiny tree frog, pseudacris crucifer, is one of our most common, but given it's size (less than two inches) and nocturnal habits, it is rarely seen. But they are thankfully easy to hear. Starting now and building for the next few months, the night air near any wooded wetlands will be filled with their mating calls. For many, the sound of spring peepers is one of the true harbingers of spring.
I heard my first "peep" at Scully a few nights ago on Easter. It was solitary and somewhat lonely, but still exciting. Within a few days the single peep was joined by many others in a chorus of peeping frogs. For the rest of the spring and into the summer it will become such a familiar sound that it will be hard to remember the quiet winter nights.
If you can't hear them where you are, take a walk or ride down South Bay Avenue towards where the woods meet the marsh. Or you can visit just about any other woodland on the South Shore and you're sure to hear them. Enjoy!
Enrico

