Photos of the Week – February 16, 2024

Well, as promised, I’ve been busy with some new job duties and haven’t posted as much as I’d like. I have managed some time for photography, though. I mean, I’m not THAT busy!

Without needless fanfare, here are some prairie photos from the last several weeks – and a few woodland shots from southeastern Oklahoma, just to keep you on your toes.

Bison and snowfall. Niobrara Valley Preserve.

Our new Hubbard Fellows, Kees Hood and Claire Morrical have been here for two weeks. As per usual, they’re full of energy and questions, and it’s been a real pleasure to introduce them to our work, staff, and sites. This week, we took a quick trip to the Niobrara Valley Preserve and introduced them to some of our bison and checked out a prairie dog town with no visible prairie dogs. (They weren’t invisible, they were just underground.)

Kees (left) and Claire photographing bison in the snow.
Same photo, but with visible bison. (We didn’t see any invisible bison.)
Grazing bison and snowfall. Niobrara Valley Preserve.
Bison and snowfall. Niobrara Valley Preserve.

While we were checking on bison, we also briefly explored an area of the sandhills and woodland that was burned in December. It looked like it did a great job killing small cedars in the prairie. That fits into a larger strategy by us and others to expand the burn windows we’re using to deal with cedar tree encroachment. There aren’t enough good burn days in the spring to do what’s needed, so we need to be ready to take advantage of good days whenever they come.

Claire and Kees exploring a December burn. Dead eastern red cedar in the foreground.

We also took a little time to scramble down to one of many springs where water from beneath the Sandhills flows out of the hills and down toward the Niobrara River.

Kees making his way down a soggy slope toward a creek with Claire photographing him from behind (in case he slipped and fell).

Back in late January, I was up at the Niobrara Valley Preserve to meet with staff and had a chance to do some photography in the fog and snow. I’d hoped to find some snowy bison to photograph, but the snow had drifted deep enough that I wasn’t confident that I’d be able to do that without getting stuck. Instead, I photographed wild rose hips.

Fog and snow and ponderosa pine. Niobrara Valley Preserve.
Rose hip and snow on a foggy day. Niobrara Valley Preserve.
Wild rose galls and snow. Niobrara Valley Preserve.
Rose hips and snow on a foggy day. Niobrara Valley Preserve.

Last weekend, Kim had a 50 mile race at Robber’s Cave State Park in Oklahoma, so I tagged along to hand her snacks and top off her water as she came through aid stations. In between, I wandered the woods a little. It was dark and cloudy most of the day, but brightened up enough in the late afternoon that I did a little photography. Here are three photos of sycamore leaves in a stream that caught my eye.

Sycamore leaf in a stream. Robber’s Cave State Park, Oklahoma.
Sycamore leaf in a stream. Robber’s Cave State Park, Oklahoma.
Sycamore leaf in a stream. Robber’s Cave State Park, Oklahoma.

If you live in a place where winters are cold, it can be hard to motivate yourself to get out the door. All I can tell you is that even on days when the light isn’t great for photography, I’ve not yet been sorry when I’ve kicked myself out the door to wander around for a while. I hope you’re all finding some joy in exploration too!

Photos of the Year – 2023 (6/6)

Well, it’s February, 2024 – the perfect time to share the last of my posts containing my favorite photos from 2023. Other blogs share those kinds of photos series at the end of a year, or – at the latest – a few days into the next. I, however, eschew convention, and will share ‘best of’ photos whenever I feel like it.

Also, I’ve been really busy.

Eastern box turtle. Osage Hills State Park, Oklahoma.

Most of my photography takes place in Nebraska. That’s largely due to the fact that I live here. Of course, it’s also a worthwhile place to photograph, with incredible diversity and beauty, though you’d never guess that by the way it’s often portrayed by non-Nebraskans. Yes, there’s a lot of corn here, too, and they even named the most popular football team the ‘cornhuskers,’ but that doesn’t mean it’s all we have.

Anyway, here’s the point. All the photos in today’s post were taken OUTSIDE Nebraska. I had lots of opportunities to travel last year – many while following my ultramarathoning wife around for training runs and races. Sometimes light and opportunity lined up well enough for me to do some photography on those trips. Here are some of my favorite 2023 photos from those excursions.

A miner bee (Anthophora abrupta) on spider milkweed (Asclepias viridis) at Osage Hills State Park. Thanks to Mike Arduser for identifying the bee for me. I figured out the milkweed on my own.
Yucca (Yucca glauca) and sunrise at the Loess Hills Wildlife Management Area in western Iowa.
Yellow flax blossom (Linum rigidum?) at the Loess Hills Wildlife Management Area
Spider (Larinia borealis) and prey. Loess Hills Wildlife Management Area
Green milkweed (Asclepias viridiflora). Loess Hills Wildlife Management Area
Yucca (Yucca glauca) and sunrise at the Loess Hills Wildlife Management area in western Iowa.
Coreopsis flowers at the White Rock Conservancy in Iowa.
Reconstructed prairie full of pale purple coneflower (Echinacea pallida) and white wild indigo (Baptisia alba) during a North American Prairie Conference Field trip to land owned and restored by Jon Judson.
Butterfly milkweed (Asclepias tuberosa) and pale purple coneflower (Echinacea pallida) during a North American Prairie Conference Field trip to land owned and restored by Jon Judson.
Common checkered skipper (butterfly) at Wilson Lake, Kansas
Mayfly at Wilson Lake, Kansas
Columbine and other wildflowers in the Flat Tops Wilderness in Colorado
Wildflowers (Arnica sp?) in the Flat Tops Wilderness in Colorado
Wildflowers growing out of a rocky cliff in the Flat Tops Wilderness in Colorado
Oak trees and rocks near Lake Murray in Oklahoma
A wheel bug at Konza Prairie Biological Station in the Flint Hills of Kansas
Hiking trail at Konza Prairie Biological Station in the Flint Hills of Kansas