Blue Hills Trailside Museum Needs Your Help

In order to keep the state budget balanced, Governor Baker has announced that he will utilize 9C cuts to reduce the funding of any executive branch agency or operation.  This includes the Blue Hills Trailside Museum!

We have already sent a letter to Governor Baker urging him to prioritize funding for Blue Hills Trailside Museum. But our words can only go so far. We need you to call or email the governor asking him to continue funding Trailside. Please also consider sharing a personal story with him of a special memory from a visit to Trailside, or what Trailside means to you and your family.

Norman Smith releasing a snowy owl with his granddaughters

Trailside Museum’s Sanctuary Director Norman Smith releasing a snowy owl with his granddaughters

We can do it!

Recently, funding for the Blue Hills Trailside Museum was at risk when Governor Baker vetoed the funds set aside for running the state-owned interpretive center for the Blue Hills Reservation.

The museum, which features indoor and outdoor wildlife and natural history exhibits, welcomes more than 200,000 visitors a year to the Blue Hills Reservation; provides environmental education to more than 200 schools; and offers universally accessible nature trails, including sensory exhibits and self-guided audio tours so that everyone may enjoy the natural history exhibits.

And when we asked for you to contact your legislators demanding that they override the governor’s veto, you came through in a big way. Many legislators reached out to us, commenting on how many calls and emails they received in support of Trailside.

To everyone who called, emailed, and shared this message, we want to offer our sincere thanks.

Unfortunately, Trailside is not out of the woods yet however, which is why we are reaching out to our community of supporters once again.

Why Not Start a Petition or Fundraising Campaign?

You may be wondering why we don’t utilize online petitions of crowd-funding platforms. Online petitions can be an effective means of gathering support for some issues. That being said, Mass Audubon’s experience is that emailing and calling legislators and the Governor’s office is a more personal, timely, and direct method of requesting action. We have specifically heard that even just a few phone calls can go a long way.

Crowd-funding is a little trickier since Trailside’s budget is complex. The government has been providing operating funds for Trailside since it first opened in 1959. When Mass Audubon took over managing the museum for the state in 1974, we began raising additional money above and beyond the state funding to run public and school programs for adults, children, and families and to care for and research the animals that could not survive in the wild.

For example, the Snowy Owl Project based at Blue Hills Trailside Museum has become a national example of how to humanely capture snowy owls at airports and relocate them to safer areas.

In order for Trailside to operate at its fullest potential, we need both sources of funding on an annual basis. Learn more in our Trailside Funding FAQs.

See Why Trailside is Unique

If you have never been to the Blue Hills Trailside Museum, we invite you to come visit our native live animal exhibits.

Take a walk on our universally accessible trail, which includes a rope guide and educational materials in large-print, Braille, audio, and tactile formats.

Universally Accessible Trail © Kent Harnois

Universally Accessible Trail © Kent Harnois

And reach out to one of the many dedicated staff members or volunteers, who can tell you first-hand just how important this resource is for the nature of Massachusetts.

In addition to contacting the governor to keep state funding in place, you can support Mass Audubon’s work keeping Trailside the vibrant, fun, and engaging place to visit by making a donation today.

The Truth About Porcupine Projectiles

Pop Quiz: How far can a porcupine shoot its quills?

The Answer: Trick Question!

A rumor has been floating around for centuries that porcupines can fling their quills at enemies. The truth is a different story.

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Porcupines are solitary, slow-moving animals that largely keep to themselves unless threatened. The quills usually lie flat against the porcupine’s body until they encounter a threat, at which point they “puff up” and erect their quills, swinging their spiny tails until the threat either leaves them alone or gets a sharp whack and a face, hand, or paw full of quills.

Quills are actually stiff, hollow hairs with microscopic, backward-facing barbs at the tip (kind of like tiny fish hooks), so when they come into contact with flesh—human or animal—they get stuck and pull free from the porcupine’s skin.

So where did this rumor come from? One possible explanation is people saw porcupines molting, or shaking off loose quills, and assumed they could “shoot” their quills like projectile weapons!

Encountering Porcupines

The best thing to do if you encounter a porcupine is to leave it alone. They are solitary creatures and want nothing to do with you.

However, if you or your pet do come in contact and get quilled, seek immediate medical attention. Porcupine quills absorb water and body heat and expand, working their way deeper into the skin. If you can, snip just the ends off the hollow quills to relieve the build-up of pressure inside, and then seek professional medical care to ensure the quills are removed correctly and completely.

Learn more

Get info on porcupine behavior, diet, and predators.