Oct 30
Posted: under Activities, Plantlife, Wildlife.
Tags: Activities, beauty, dragonfly, native plants, natural water, photography October 30th, 2009
Instead of raining yesterday as the front came through, the sky slowly cleared from the west, and today dawned chilly and clear. While Richard worked on fence, I put on rubber boots and went out to see if anything’s drying out yet. [...more]
Instead of raining yesterday as the front came through, the sky slowly cleared from the west, and today dawned chilly and clear. While Richard worked on fence, I put on rubber boots and went out to see if anything’s drying out yet.

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Oct 27
Posted: under photography, Wildlife.
Tags: beauty, insect, native plants, natural water, odonates, photography October 27th, 2009
After the additional three inches of rain yesterday, the saturated ground is leaking water down every slope, making the grassland look like a marsh, or at least the margins of a marsh. [...more]
After the additional three inches of rain yesterday, the saturated ground is leaking water down every slope, making the grassland look like a marsh, or at least the margins of a marsh.
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Oct 24
Posted: under Activities, photography.
Tags: Activities, beauty, dragonfly, native plants, photography October 24th, 2009
We have a new species for the list, another bug (literally bug–a stinkbug found on a bush honeysuckle yesterday morning.) There were lots of them, in fact: all adults, this time. (You can tell by the wings folded onto the back.) [...more]
We have a new species for the list, another bug (literally bug–a stinkbug found on a bush honeysuckle yesterday morning.) There were lots of them, in fact: all adults, this time. (You can tell by the wings folded onto the back.)

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Oct 22
Posted: under Water, Weather.
Tags: beauty, photography, rain, Weather October 22nd, 2009
Last night we got another three inches of rain. [...more]
Last night we got another three inches of rain.
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Oct 20
Posted: under photography, Plantlife, Water.
Tags: beauty, grass, native plants, photography, prairie restoration, rain October 20th, 2009
An introduction to some more of our “big” grasses, now flowering beautifully after the rain. Two are climax tallgrasses, and one is (in my opinion) one of the most beautiful grasses in the country and deserves to be used more as a landscape accent. Meet Lindheimer Muhly (Muhlenbergia Lindheimeri). All the Muhlys are pretty grasses; […] [...more]
An introduction to some more of our “big” grasses, now flowering beautifully after the rain. Two are climax tallgrasses, and one is (in my opinion) one of the most beautiful grasses in the country and deserves to be used more as a landscape accent.
Meet Lindheimer Muhly (Muhlenbergia Lindheimeri). All the Muhlys are pretty grasses; some are more striking than others, but Lindheimer Muhly is the queen of the lot:

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Oct 19
Posted: under photography, Water.
Tags: beauty, natural water, photography October 19th, 2009
I came home to find the creek running clear… [...more]
I came home to find the creek running clear…
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Oct 12
Posted: under Plantlife.
Tags: beauty, native plants October 12th, 2009
For the past week, I’ve been in New York State, first visiting a friend in Oswego, with several walks through the woods at the Rice Creek Field Station, and then traveling by train down the Mohawk and the Hudson Rivers, and finally here in NYC, where I spent several hours yesterday at the Brooklyn Botanical […] [...more]
For the past week, I’ve been in New York State, first visiting a friend in Oswego, with several walks through the woods at the Rice Creek Field Station, and then traveling by train down the Mohawk and the Hudson Rivers, and finally here in NYC, where I spent several hours yesterday at the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens.
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Oct 08
Posted: under Climate Change, Plantlife.
Tags: beauty, climate October 8th, 2009
Taking the train from Texas to the NE has let me watch autumn develop: just starting in Texas, more and more advanced as we went north, and here, in upstate NY, gorgeous with sugar maples, sumac, poison ivy (leaves the size of dessert plates), things with berries I don’t know, green moss and ferns, russet […] [...more]
Taking the train from Texas to the NE has let me watch autumn develop: just starting in Texas, more and more advanced as we went north, and here, in upstate NY, gorgeous with sugar maples, sumac, poison ivy (leaves the size of dessert plates), things with berries I don’t know, green moss and ferns, russet this and golden that.
I chatted with another prairie person in St. Louis at the Ninc conference and in Oswego visited Rice Creek Field Station and met the new director, whose previous work was in Chihuahuan Desert ecology–and then walked the trails there. Perfect. She’s aware of research in Mexico on the effect of climate change and has promised to send me some references.
Meanwhile, I’m hearing reports from home of more rain and thus the creek may well still be running when I’m home again, a week from this Sunday.
Oct 03
Posted: under Water.
Tags: rain October 3rd, 2009
And I’m not there to photograph anything! I’m in St. Louis, while the Muscle on the place (husband and son) are home building a fence in the rain. So I had email that the creek was running a little, with the first inch of rain after I left, and yesterday they had a downpour of […] [...more]
And I’m not there to photograph anything! I’m in St. Louis, while the Muscle on the place (husband and son) are home building a fence in the rain.
So I had email that the creek was running a little, with the first inch of rain after I left, and yesterday they had a downpour of 1.2 inches in 20 minutes. Today it rained more, and the water level in the hand-dug well near the barn is within 5 feet of the surface.
And I’m not there. But in a few more weeks I will be and you can bet I’ll be out there seeing what comes up.