Photos of the Week – December 5, 2025

It has finally gotten cold enough for my favorite winter wetland to freeze over. Mostly.

I made two quick trips this week to the restored wetland at the Platte River Prairies. It’s a former sand and gravel mining site and we converted it from a sandpit lake to a stream with side channel and backwater habitats about 15 years ago. It’s one of my favorite places to visit, especially in the winter, when I can slide around on the ice looking for frost and ice patterns – and, of course, ice bubbles. The ice conditions haven’t been ideal for ice bubbles so far this year, but the frost has been very nice.

Sunrise, frost, and ice.

During my first trip, the ice was thick enough to support my weight across most of the wetland. Unfortunately, the exceptions were along the banks, making it difficult to make my way from shore onto the ice. Jumping over the thin ice and hoping the thicker ice would hold me didn’t seem like a smart move. Instead, I just patrolled the banks until I found a spot where the ice had frozen all the way to the edge of the water. Once on the ice, I spent more time army crawling than walking to help ensure I didn’t accidentally take a very cold bath.

The depth of the water was less than a foot, so the greatest risk was a very cold walk back to the truck, and maybe some wet camera gear, but still. By the second time I visited, the ice was thicker, but I still had to move carefully and backtrack when I heard cracking sounds. Who needs caffeine when you have cracking ice sounds to keep you alert?

The skies were clear when the sun first came up on my first trip, but some diffuse clouds moved in as the sun rose. That couldn’t have worked out much better – the early sun was soft and warm and then as the light intensity increased with the sun’s height, clouds helped soften it again. There were a few snipe hanging around patches of open water and schools of small fish in pools near beaver dams. A mouse scurried across my patch once, too. Otherwise, I seemed to have the quiet, cold wetland to myself.

A beaver dam on the stream as it enters the restored wetland area.

Beavers have found this wetland attractive since we finished the restoration work. We actually designed the wetland with beavers in mind, knowing that both they and floods would continue to mold the initial template we created. Because of that, I didn’t spend a lot of time on the finer details of topographic shaping. Instead, I made sure we created lots of potential paths for the stream entering the site to make its way through the restoration area, depending upon what beavers and flooding chose to do. As a result, the configuration of water and land changes quite a bit from year to year.

A little “frost tree”, made of frost accumulating on a little plant stem protruding from the ice.
Another of the many beaver dams on the property.

While the beavers are busily impounding water at the site, I also imagine they wished we hadn’t created quite so many potential paths for that water to flow. It takes a lot of dams to hold water back, and even then, there always seem to be little streams that find their way around those structures. If I was a beaver, that would feel pretty frustrating, I think. As an ecologist, though, I think that habitat variety is great!

A trickle of water circumventing a beaver dam (sorry, guys!).
Another look at the same little stream of water.
Cattail seeds on the ice. These any other invasive plants continually float into the wetland from upstream, making it a big challenge to maintain decent plant diversity in the restoration area.

Much of my time on the ice, during both my morning visits, was spent photographing frost accumulated on plants near the surface of the ice. I’ve had days with much more frost than I saw this week, but after many months of no frost at all, I was perfectly happy. Winter is a tough time to find wildflowers and insects to photograph, so frost (and ice bubbles – coming soon, I hope!) help keep me entertained.

Another frost tree.
A small frost forest.

I recognize that not everyone enjoys getting up early on frigid days to go slide around the ice looking for interesting frost accumulations to photograph. My family members, for example, have never shown any interest in joining me. That’s fine. Too many people on the ice would probably be a bad idea anyway.

However, if you’re looking for a way to get some fresh air this winter and you live in a place with frozen wetlands, I do recommend them as a place to explore. There’s always something interesting to see if you look closely. Just keep your weight spread out and be kind to the beavers.

Photos of the Week – November 19, 2025

Recently, I’ve spent some time mining my photo library for images to use in a couple different projects. While I was down that hole, I took advantage of the process to build some collections of some of my favorite photos and post them on their own web page. I hope the photos help inspire people to see prairies as something worth caring about. Feel free to send the link to anyone who hasn’t yet been bitten by the prairie bug. (Maybe don’t use that phrase with them, though.)

Now, on to this week:

One of the best things about being a photographer is that it encourages me to seek out and appreciate beauty in the world around me. The serenity that comes from that exercise has become a necessity in my life. Geez, that sounds sappy, huh? I can’t help it. It really is a big deal to me.

Silver maple leaf in Lincoln Creek.

Last week, I made two trips to my favorite stretch of Lincoln Creek, which runs right through town here in Aurora, Nebraska. It’s not what most people would call a “pretty” stream along most of its length. In fact, many people would probably call it more of a storm drain than a stream. In the fall, though, a lot of the bare dirt on its steep eroded banks is covered by fallen leaves. That spruces it up a little (even though the leaves are from silver maples, not spruce trees – hardee har har).

Here’s the section of Lincoln Creek where I spent a couple hours photographing floating leaves last week.

During my two visits last week, I spent a couple blissful hours admiring the many thousands of leaves floating on the water, searching for photo compositions I liked. I was able to forget about the rest of the world for a little while and just focus on finding beauty. I highly recommend it – with or without a camera.

Here is a very small selection (percentage-wise) of the photos I took during those two trips. If you want to make a little game out of looking through the photos, see if you can find the one leaf that’s included in two photos. I’m pretty sure there’s just the one. You’re also welcome to just enjoy the photos without trying to win a game. It’s up to you. Also, I’m really sorry about that awful “spruce it up” joke.