Hubbard Fellowship Blog – Sarah Settles In

Today’s post is written by Sarah Kennings. Sarah and her colleague Leah Zuschlag joined The Nature Conservancy as Hubbard Fellows in early February of this year. Their Fellowship will run 12 months and end at the end of January 2027. Sarah comes from Chelsea, Michigan, graduated from Michigan Tech University, and came into the fellowship with immense enthusiasm and energy, along with many talents. She and Leah have both been jumping into a wide range of activities, including fire training, leading volunteer work days, fixing fence, cutting trees, driving skid steers, attending conservation strategy meetings, and more. Sarah’s post below captures an evening near the end of her second month in Nebraska. Enjoy!

Sarah Kennings, left, with our other Hubbard Fellow, Leah Zuschlag.

Journal entry from 03/30/2026 – Settling into the Platte River Preserve

I roll over in my bed and check the time on my phone. 8:16 pm. It’s still barely light enough outside that I can go out to the garden to simply… exist. I pause the show I’m watching, grab my favorite flannel from the closet, leave my phone plugged in on the nightstand, slide on my sandals by the front door, and slip out of the house. The cool, evening air catches me off guard. It’s hot and stuffy in the house because me and Leah (my co-fellow) haven’t quite figured out the air conditioning yet and the windows like to stick.  

I step through pools of cool evening air as I make my way out to the garden. “Just taking a peek,” I tell myself, “Check in on things.” There’s not much to check in on at the moment. We have stripped the garden back to square one, taken all the old garden infrastructure out, built a new compost bin, and mowed. It doesn’t look much like a garden at this point, but I get giddy thinking about the taste of tomatoes straight off the vine. I can’t wait. I’m beating myself up because I wore shorts. I’ve already found a tick on me from working in the garden before. I remember the feeling of something small tickling my back, ear, leg, head – you name it, I found a tick there – while I was trying to fall asleep in my tent in summers past. I sigh, kicking myself for the poor choice in clothing.

The clouds are putting on a show in the remnant light. Still some pink, but it’s mostly faded, yet there are a myriad of textures and shapes. The moon is behind me as I lean against a post. A waxing gibbous, shrouded in a thin layer of cloud that provides a halo effect. Both the moon and clouds are creeping slowly across the sky, one barely faster than the other. There is barely any wind to move the branches of the tree above me, which has little buds that have just burst in the past few days.

I pause and listen. A distant turkey gobbles and a dog down the road barks. The turkey is obviously taunting the fenced pup. The robins chirp and the mourning doves lament their usual tunes. A pigeon hums. I can hear small creatures moving amongst the brush. I assume rabbits and this one little chipmunk-looking thing that I’ve yet to identify (upon further review, it’s a thirteen-lined ground squirrel). I wonder where the black and white cat went that greeted us in the evenings when we first moved in. Coyotes yip and yelp from different directions. I bet they’re happy it’s spring now, too. The post is starting to bore into my back, but I don’t mind.

The black and white cat. Photo by Sarah Kennings

Look deeper. The sun is so far set that I can only see the outlined clumps of dead grasses, but not the individual stems. They’re silhouetted memorials. I turn and look across the street. Two little heads are bobbing around in a pasture, then disappear. Deer. I hear the low hum of a motor far in the distance and hope it doesn’t come too quickly. They sneak through the barbed wire and are taking their sweet time crossing the road. I rush them in my mind. Without one ounce of motivation, the deer make it across the road and jump the wire into the pasture closest to me. They are out for an evening mosey, just like myself. They walk about 20 yards away from me. I’m happy that it’s dark enough to provide me some camouflage, but they know something’s up. One by one, I can see them catch my scent and stare at me. They wiggle their ears, walk back and forth a little bit, then waddle away. I’m not a threat. I hear more crunching and more deer appear – a mother and fawn. The fawn is quite antsy while mom stays still, staring me down. More deer are further up on the hill, but they snort and trot off. She walks away but is diligent about checking my position every few steps. Up on the hill, she and her baby are just black silhouettes behind a dead clump of big blue stem.

A (different) sunset seen from near Sarah’s house on the Platte River Prairies. Photo by Sarah Kennings

If only I had brought my phone to take a picture, but this walk to the garden was a conscious decision to be free of devices and just exist. An attempt to feel more grounded in this new place and put down some of those deep, fibrous, prairie roots.

Bison, Bingo, and Other Bits and Bobs

A bison bull at the Niobrara Valley Preserve this week

Today, I want to share a bunch of announcements, a wonderful surprise I received last night, some photos from this week’s trip to the Niobrara Valley Preserve, and some spring/summer prairie bingo cards. Thanks for your patience with this omnibus post.

I’ll start with an invitation to volunteer at The Nature Conservancy’s Platte River Prairies or Niobrara Valley Preserve. If you’ve always wanted to come visit one of these sites and also enjoy contributing to conservation efforts, here’s your chance! (If you just want to come visit and NOT work, you’re also welcome to do that, and both sites have public hiking trails just waiting for you.)

At the Platte River Prairies, we host volunteer workdays twice a month throughout most of the year. You can find more information on those workdays here. At the Niobrara Valley Preserve, Kate Samuelson, our outreach coordinator is going to start hosting volunteer days this summer. She created a flyer (below) with the information you need to know. Possible NVP volunteer days include June 6th and 10th and July 18th and 29th. At both sites, we may be able to provide overnight housing for people traveling from far away.

In addition to volunteering and hiking our public trails, another opportunity to visit and learn will come on July 11, 2026, which is the date of our next public field day at the Platte River Prairies. I’ll share more information later, but please save the date if you’re interested. It’ll be a terrific opportunity to meet our staff, explore both restored and remnant (unplowed) prairies, and learn prairie ecology, research, and land stewardship.

We will also be hosting four habitat workshops this summer, aimed at land owners and land managers. At those workshops, we share what we’ve been learning about fire, grazing, restoration, and other stewardship practices, as well as a good dose of plant identification practice. If you’re interested in attending one of these free workshops, please contact Kate for more information (see her contact info in the above flyer for the NVP volunteer days). Habitat workshop days will be June 9 and August 18 at the Platte River Prairies and May 19 and August 11 at the Niobrara Valley Preserve.

If you’re looking for something to entice you out on a hike in the prairie, either at one of our sites or in any other prairie, I’ve created some bingo cards for the spring and summer seasons. I had a surprising number of people thank me for the last batch I made, so I hope these will be similarly helpful. There are three bingo cards at the end of this post, each with the same items to find, but in different locations on the card, in case you have multiple people and it’s helpful to non-identical cards. Look, don’t let me tell you how to have a good time in prairies – I’m just giving you options!

Lastly, before I just dump a bunch of recent photos on you, here’s the terrific surprise I received last night. Many of you will know about Wild Green Memes For Ecological Fiends. If you’re on social media and you’re not aware of that group, I’m not sure why you’re on social media. Wild Green Media also has other platforms, including their Wild Green Streams podcast, on which I appeared last year.

Well, anyway, Rhett Barker, founder of the Wild Green Memes for Ecological Fiends, executive director of Wild Green Future, and the person who interviewed me on their podcast, sent me an email last night. Apparently, after hearing about my square meter photography project, he was inspired to try his own (12-hour) version. The resulting 10-minute YouTube video is fantastic and I wanted to share it here. If the video link below doesn’t open for you, please click on the title of this post above to open it online and that will make the link active.

Ok, on to photos… Here is a batch of images from the Niobrara Valley Preserve this week:

Bison and cowbirds in Sandhills prairie
A young bison calf giving me the sideeye
Mom and calf
A calf young enough you can still see the remnant of its umbilical cord
Bison fur along one of the many creeks the animals visit for water (along with other water sources we provide for them)
A paper birch log along a spring-fed stream
A riparian oak woodland recently cleared of (most) eastern red cedar trees to improve habitat conditions
Grasslands on the north side of the Niobrara River – Dakota mixed-grass prairie
The last pasque flower (Pulsatilla patens) I saw in bloom on the north side of the river.
Most pasque flowers have produced fruits/seeds now.
A close-up of a pasque flower seed head
One of many crab spiders hanging out in pasque flower seed heads
A different spider on a different pasque flower
Sun sedge (Carex inops) with fruits. This sedge is one of the most abundant plants at the Niobrara Valley Preserve.
Sand cherry (Prunus pumila)
A juvenile female black widow spider on her web in an abandoned prairie dog burrow.
A pair of bald eagles sitting together at sunrise

Finally, as promised, here are some bingo cards you can print out or otherwise utilize to add a little extra fun to your prairie explorations this summer. Each card has the same squares/items, but in different orders/locations. Enjoy!