Photo of the Week – November 23, 2012

No, they’re not orange blueberries…

Late horse gentian (Triosteum perfoliatum). The Nature Conservancy’s Rulo Bluffs Preserve – southeastern corner of Nebraska.

Also known as wild coffee because its fruits can be used as a substitute for coffee, late horse gentian’s orange fruits stand out in autumn woodlands.  I found a small group of these plants on the edge between prairie and woodland at our Rulo Bluffs Preserve a couple weeks ago.  They were pretty hard to miss – I saw them from about 20 yards away as I came up out of a deep wooded draw.  I was hoping to get some photos of the prairies before the sun went behind the nearby bluffs, but I couldn’t resist pausing a few moments to photograph this unique plant.

Photo of the Week – June 29, 2012

This week I visited a portion of one of our restored prairies that I hadn’t been to for a while.  During the last couple of years we’ve been grazing it fairly hard, so the wildflower displays haven’t been fantastic.  I was pleased to see that the rest we’re giving the prairie this year has allowed those wildflowers to do their thing.

The site was seeded in 2003, and included a number of excavated wetlands.  Portions of the upland seeding came in well and others have some issues, but for the most part, the wetlands look great. 

This year, for the second time since we seeded the site, some of the wetlands are experiencing an explosion of an annual plant called prairie gentian (Eustoma grandiflorum).  The plant is closely related to, but in a different genus than, the gentian species familiar to many tallgrass prairie enthusiasts.  Our gentian is an annual that shows up mainly in wet prairies, with an apparent affinity for alkaline soils.  It’s an awfully pretty flower, and when it’s blooming in abundance, makes for a spectacular floral show.

Prairie gentian blooming along the edge of a restored wetland slough. The Nature Conservancy’s Platte River Prairies, Nebraska.  You can click on this and any of the other photos in this post to see a larger, clearer, version of the image.

Click below to see more photos from yesterday morning.

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