Photo of the Week – October 17, 2013

Last month, our Platte River Prairies crew visited a South Dakota farm owned by our friends Gerry Steinauer and Grace Kostel.  Gerry showed us around the farm, including some prairies he and Grace have been trying to rehabilitate.  It was late afternoon, and scattered fluffy clouds and golden prairie grasses made for a beautiful backdrop for our hike.

Anne and Eliza get a tour of a South Dakota prairie near Wagner, SD.

Gerry Steinauer gives Anne and Eliza a tour of his South Dakota prairie near Wagner, SD.

Even though wildflower blooming season is over for the year, there is still plenty to see in autumn prairies.  Fluffy white seeds of goldenrods and asters fly into the sky as we walk by.  Migrating sparrows pop out of the grass but quickly drop back down, giving us just enough time to make wild guesses about species identification.  Harriers course back and forth above the tall grasses, making flight look effortless and wonderful.  In every patch of short sparse vegetation, grasshoppers gather to soak up as much sun as they can before their season ends with the first hard freeze.  That freeze is yet to come, but the chill in the morning air leaves no doubt that it’s just around the corner.

Photo of the Week – September 28, 2012

During the last couple of weeks, the weather and prairies have both made full transitions to autumn.  I’ve been able to grab a little time here and there to snap some portraits of the fall prairie.  I hope you enjoy them.

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Canada wild rye (Elymus canadensis) stands out against a backdrop of gold and green prairie.

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A jumping spider peers at me from the stem of a beggarstick flower in a restored wetland.

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Black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta) – long since done flowering – is still an attractive flower in the autumn prairie.

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Stiff goldenrod (Solidago rigida) contributes strongly to the cacophany of yellow flowers in autumn prairies.

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Heath aster (Aster ericoides) is super-abundant this year in some of our prairies, and many pollinators – including this fly – appear to appreciate it.

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False boneset (Brickellia eupatorioides) is one of the deepest rooted plants in the prairie, which allowed it to flower and produce abundant seed even in this very dry year.

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