Photos of the Week – October 31, 2025

I got my first frost photography morning of the season yesterday. I’d been watching the forecast and had blocked out a couple hours on my calendar to make sure I had time to get out enjoy it. I woke up early and drove out to our family prairie well before sunrise.

I’m glad I got there early because there was a terrific explosion of color in the sky before the sun came up. I scrambled around trying to find plants to silhouette against the pink and orange clouds.

Big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii) and sunrise clouds.
Indiangrass (Sorghastrum nutans) and sunrise clouds.
Stiff goldenrod (Solidago rigida) with the same sunrise clouds.

As the sun started to rise, I walked uphill to catch the first light and then worked back down the hill, following the edge of light and trying to photograph frost as it was first hit by the sun but before it started to melt.

Curlycup gumweed (Grindelia squarrosa)
Stiff goldenrod seed. This might be my favorite of the morning.

Sideoats grama is always a favorite subject of mine and frost only amplifies my enthusiasm. I didn’t see a lot of it (I was in the wrong part of the prairie) but had fun playing with one particularly attractive example.

Sideoats grama (Bouteloua curtipendula).
Sideoats grama, but closer.
Roughleaf dogwood (Cornus drummundii).
Stiff goldenrod leaves.

I think I take basically the same photo of dotted gayfeather seeds every year. I can’t help it – it’s such a great plant to play with in different lighting. So, here’s this year’s version:

Dotted gayfeather (Liatris punctata) seeds.
Big bluestem.
Wild licorice (Glycyrrhiza lepidota) leaf.
Coralberry (Symphoricarpus orbiculatus).
Stiff goldenrod seed head.
Stiff goldenrod.

False boneset is a great plant for frosty mornings because there is so much surface area on the seed heads to hold frost crystals. By the time I found some plants, the sun was getting pretty high and I had to work quickly before all the frost melted away.

False boneset seed heads (Brickellia eupatoria).
False boneset again.

Frost is fun anytime, but the first couple frosts of the season are usually my favorites because plants are still holding on to a lot of their seeds and leaves. An early frost that hits while wildflowers still have blossoms is incredible for photography, too, though not so great for the plants themselves. This year, I only found a couple gumweed flowers that still had petals. Everything else had already gone to seed.

Regardless of the photography, it felt good to bundle up and venture out into cold weather. That experience will get old before spring, but for now, it felt refreshing and new. Now we wait for snow…

Photo of the Week – December 28, 2017

Kim and I spent a few days at the Niobrara Valley Preserve this week, something that has become an annual holiday tradition for us.  As always, it was beautiful, peaceful, and we were alone in a big wild place – the three components of a perfect getaway.  We saw plenty of wildlife, including multitudes of eagles and deer, as well as flocks of meadowlarks, robins, tree sparrows, and grouse.  In addition, tracks of many other animals were abundant in the recently-fallen snow.  I kept hopeful eyes out for mountain lion tracks, but didn’t see any – though I did have a strong sense of being watched one night, while out photographing night scenes under a half moon.  It wasn’t just the cold temperatures that made me shiver a little.

A skeletal stick frames the rising sun over the frosty Niobrara River.

I spent one particularly nice hour or so exploring the partially frozen river one morning, and was able to get some photos before heavy overcast skies took over.  The temperature was hovering around zero, but it was nevertheless a pleasant calm morning.  I enjoyed the solitude and sunrise and then walked back up to a hot breakfast before Kim and I headed out for a longer hike.  Here are a few photos from my sunrise walk.

Tracks of some kind of water bird on a sand bar.  The individual toe prints were approximately an inch long, maybe a little longer.  

Slushy ice floats down the Niobrara River as the sun comes up.

I wish you all a wonderful and happy new year; something I’m very much looking forward to myself.