We had a great time at the Grassland Restoration Network meeting at Konza Prairie this week. The long-term research going on there is phenomenal, and we were blissfully overwhelmed with knowledge and data about prairie ecology. I will try to synthesize some of that information into a blog post or two, but it might take me a while to digest it and figure out how to share it.
In the meantime, one of many highlights of the trip for me was the hour or so of early morning photography I managed to squeeze in right around the headquarters of Konza Prairie. As the sun came up, I wandered around prairie full of compass plant (Silphium laciniatum), a plant that sorta looks like, but isn’t, a tall sunflower. There were lots of other plants and animals around too, but compass plant was clearly the star of the show, standing at least three or four feet taller than the surrounding vegetation and blooming audaciously. It was hard to point my camera toward anything else. As a result, today’s post is a kind of tribute to compass plant…

This tree cricket was one of many creatures, including lots of bees, enjoying the pollen of compass plant flowers.