BY Jonathan Schechter with some friends at his SUZANNE SHERMAN Brandon Township home. PHOTOGRAPHY BY ANGIE BAAN F or most, the first sign of spring is spotting a robin in the back yard. Not so for Jonathan Schechter, West Bloomfield's West Bloomfield naturalist relishes the season: 6 • NIA) . 2005 • JNPLATINUM naturalist and park ranger. Try turkey vultures. That's right, turkey vultures. "For me, the spring tease is the flow of maple sap, the return of the redwings to the marshes and the wonderful night choruses of spring peepers," he says. "But my favorite is the return of the turkey vultures. When those magnificent birds are soaring above and riding the ther- mals, I know it is really spring. And, of course, the first good thun- derstorm confirms that spring really is here to stay." While he has worked with the West Bloomfield Parks & Recreation Department for almost 12 years maintaining the town- ship's precious 510-acre preserve, Schechter's favorite part of his job is sharing his love for all things wild through the nature programs. "As a naturalist, I love working with preschoolers," he says. "They are so full of contagious excite- ment, and their ability to grasp solid science concepts is amazing." His own love for nature stems from the short time he spent with his father, a biologist at a New York college, who died when Schechter was 7. `I spent a good part of my sixth summer with him at Woods Hole, Mass., where he was doing work — I think — on octopus and starfish," he recalls. "And that was my first exciting exposure to hurricanes. I loved watching sailboats being hauled up out of the bay before the storm hit." Those early experience led him to earn his bachelor's degree in nat- ural science, followed by a master's degree in science in outdoor recre- ation and interpretation. Raised in a Jewish home, Schechter, 53, says too many peo-