Photo of the Week – January 8, 2015

I was able to take a trip up to the Niobrara Valley Preserve just after the first of the year.  Snow covered the ground and it was bitterly cold much of the time I was there, but there was one evening’s worth of good light and reasonable temperatures that allowed for some photography.  Here are two images from that evening that show the landscape from two vastly different perspectives.

The

Ice and snow covered The Nature Conservancy’s Niobrara Valley Preserve last weekend.  This is a panoramic image comprised of several photos merged together.  You can click on the image to see a larger version of it.

The Niobrara Valley Preserve is a place that feels big (and it is).  From some of the higher vantage points on site, you can see for many miles in every direction.  It’s easy to feel swallowed up by that expansiveness – something that I find exhilarating, but others find overwhelming.  At the same time, much of the beauty of the place is found in the smaller details, including simple things such as the top of a ragweed plant emerging from a glistening hole in the melting snow…

Ragweed in snow.  Niobrara Valley Preserve, Nebraska.

Ragweed in snow. Niobrara Valley Preserve, Nebraska.

I am very fortunate to be able to make regular visits to the Niobrara Valley Preserve.  Despite the cold, snow, and wind, this latest trip was one of my favorites.  I’m sure I will go back soon.

Photo of the Week – December 26, 2014

The sun finally reappeared this week after what seemed like a month of absence.  I figured the best way to celebrate the end of dreariness was a couple of prairie hikes. I started by wandering along a creek at our Platte River Prairies to see what the resident beaver family had been up to.  Green sunfish slipped in and out of hiding places in the deep pools behind beaver dams, but little else was moving in the water.  Later, the sound of frantic chirping turned my head in time to watch a sharp-shinned hawk just miss its prey.  I couldn’t tell what kind of bird the hawk was chasing because it didn’t stop flying until it was out of sight.  I also caught a quick glimpse of a small mouse scooting through the thatch, spotted a perched eagle in a far off tree and flushed a small flock of mallards from an backwater wetland.  Not a bad way to spend an afternoon!

Later in the day, I stopped at our family prairie and roamed around until the sun went down.  As the sun dropped, its warm light illuminated the golden brown prairie and I managed to take a few photographs – something I’ve not done much of lately.  Here are a few of those photos.

A stiff goldenrod seed is stuck in the velcro-like hairs on the stem of a plant of the same species.  Helzer family prairie, Stockham, Nebraska.

A stiff goldenrod seed is stuck in the velcro-like hairs on the stem of a plant of the same species. Helzer family prairie, Stockham, Nebraska.

A Flodman's thistle (native species) stands out against the sky.

A Flodman’s thistle (native species) stands out against the sky.

The spiny beauty of Flodman's thistle seed heads.

The spiny beauty of Flodman’s thistle seed heads.

Tall dropseed (Sporobolus compositus) in golden prairie.

Tall dropseed (Sporobolus compositus) in golden light.

Stiff goldenrod

A stand of stiff goldenrod and mixed-grass prairie.

Happy Holidays, and best wishes for your New Year!