
Our latest class of Hubbard Fellows has been here at the Platte River Prairies for three weeks now. After the most competitive selection process we’ve had yet, Sarah Lueder (pronounced ‘leader’) and Kate Nootenboom (pronounced just as you’d expect) joined us just in time for heavy snow and extra-frigid temperatures. As a combined result of the weather and COVID protocols, we’ve spent much of our time getting acquainted via Zoom, which is far from ideal. Late last week, though, we took advantage of warming temperatures to wander the prairie together and I finally got some photos of them.
Now that I have photos, I can share the short introductions I asked each of them to write for themselves. I think reading these will give you a pretty good feel for why they were selected for this experience. We’re thrilled to have them and will be sharing much more from them in the coming year.

SARAH LUEDER:
Hello prairie people! Thanks for having me… I am excited to join the ranks of prairie lovers here.
I have been fortunate enough in life to get to experience the outdoors in a fashion that fostered a sense of appreciation for the environment. Growing up my dream was to live like Tarzan, and I could often be found practicing swinging off the low hanging tree branches in my backyard in St. Louis, Missouri. Through this lens of “the outdoors are awesome!” I slowly but surely developed a sense of obligation towards conservation.
This led me to the field of ecology and evolutionary biology at Tulane University in New Orleans, Louisiana. Here I was able to study the complex ecological interactions I had become so fond of observing. Getting to do this surrounded by the swampy magic that the gulf coast exudes made it all the better. It’s not hard to feel impassioned about environmentalism when walking under live oak trees that appear ancient and shaggy, branches covered in Spanish moss and bark covered in resurrection ferns, or when exploring the wonderfully bizarre longleaf pine savannas, or when watching alligators silently glide in front of knobby cypress knees.
Along the way I was able to participate in some enlightening research opportunities and conservation efforts. A particularly influential experience was conducting a study in the Ecuadorian Chocó rainforest on palm tree communities and subsequently talking to community members on their perspectives on conservation in the area. It was great to be able to answer some ecological questions (let me know if anyone wants to hear about how secondary succession may be influencing the functional traits of palm communities there), but even better were the questions it sparked but left only partially answered (what are best practices for equitable, holistic, practical conservation efforts?).
My eyes were opened to how multiple avenues of environmental work can function in concert with robust outcomes for all involved. This left me wanting to explore everything: preserving and restoring the integrity of land via directly working with it, participating in outreach, and learning more about the topics of which I had barely scratched the surface (e.g., financing). Imagine my surprise when an opportunity came along to do… exactly that! I am greatly looking forward to learning and working on a wide variety of topics in a prairie landscape alongside a team of passionate people. With prescribed burns, bison roundups, seed gathering, chainsawing, and conservation strategizing on the horizon, this next year is looking like it’ll be extraordinary.

KATE NOOTENBOOM:
I didn’t grow up around prairie people. I grew up around mountain and old-growth forest people, so when I chose to go to college in a small Minnesota town surrounded by agriculture, I mistakenly thought I was giving up easy access to inspiring landscapes. I resigned myself to the loss of a connection to nature for four years.
Luckily, I began working in the campus arboretum, and the nearly 900 acres of prairies, woods, and wetlands quickly corrected my misconceptions. I learned to make friends out of plant species, appreciate fire as a force for growth, and enjoy the drama of grassland seasons unfolding. In short, I became a prairie person.
When not in the arboretum, I studied geology, and I can draw many parallels between my attraction to both. As a geologist, I learned to wonder about the stories in a landscape, to ask: what happened here, and when? I loved the humility of operating on geologic time scales, and the camaraderie I found in a community united by a common interest. Between my work in the arboretum and field-based geology courses, I developed an indelible love of the southern Minnesota landscape. And then I graduated last spring.
Graduating is an unnerving thing to do, even without a pandemic backdrop. My role in the world was suddenly undefined, and the career advice I received was as overwhelming as it was well-intentioned. “Have an impact. Grow and contribute your skills. Heal what needs healing. Be fulfilled!” I agree. But how?
Cue the Hubbard Fellowship, arriving like a signpost in my wanderings. Instantly this opportunity excited me more than any other, and I realized the work that had brought me the most joy over the past four years already matched the advice I was getting for the future. Continuing down the path of conservation will yield meaningful impact for the natural world and all communities that depend upon it, and it is genuinely the work I most want to do.
Now that I’m here, I feel immense gratitude to be in this beautiful place and learn from such a thoughtful array of people, all committed in their own ways to conservation. Though the forests of Oregon still call out ‘home’, the Nebraska prairie stretching outside my window this morning inspires me more than any other landscape I can imagine. I am so excited for the year ahead; for all the days of work, beauty, challenge, and growth that await us. Most of all, I am happy simply to be back among prairie people.
Inspiring young women. I know they have bright futures and I wish them every success. The world needs them!
Ditto to Gay’s remarks
Wonderful introductions! I look for hope and inspiration where I can find it. This gives me both. Looking forward to your sharings in the coming year.
Remember that restoring a prairie is great, but true rewilding is even better. Good luck!
Rome wasn’t built in a day. One step at a time.
WELCOME – WELCOME- WELCOME! YOU WILL LOVE IT HERE!
Welcome aboard Sarah and Kate, from a prairie enthusiast in Missouri. I studied entomology and worked in it for a decade or before leaving Academia to take up natural area management, restoration, and interpretation for the next 30 years. I’m still doing those as a volunteer, and tending to my entomological interests as well, in retirement.
You’re gonna love it!