“Let us go on, and take the adventure that shall fall to us.” — C.S. Lewis
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Wolf Road Prairie! How could anyone resist visiting a nature preserve with a name like this one? It seems ripe with possibilities for adventure.
The sunshine over the 80-acre preserve is welcome, although the wind makes the temperature seem colder than the high 20s.
Jeff and I drive around the preserve, unsure where where the trails are. We can see prairie plants, so we know we’re in the right place. Hmmm.
Time to ask directions. A helpful member of the “Save the Prairie Society” is shoveling snow, getting ready for an open house at the historical structure on the property. He greets us warmly, and shows us where the trails begin.
We see right away we’re not alone on the prairie. Look at those tracks! Rush hour.
Little critters have left their imprints, like sewing machine stitches, across the prairie.Who made the tracks? We wonder. Prairie voles? Mice? Difficult to tell.
We cross through a wetland…
…and see other signs of the preserve’s inhabitants.
A nest of a bird, long flown.
I’m puzzled by the interesting galls on the sunflowers. My gall knowledge is limited. Sunflower crown gall, maybe?
There’s a goldenrod bunch gall–sometimes called a rosette gall—I recognize on the other side of the trail. Like a dried out winter flower of sorts.
I make a mental note to refresh my gall knowledge—at least of the goldenrod galls! There’s so much to learn while hiking the winter prairie. Always something new, something different. Later at home, I’ll chase down different bits of information, based on our hike. Crown gall. Bunch gall. Adventures of a different kind.
As we hike the south-side prairie savanna remnant…
…we find sidewalks, left over from a pre-Depression Era time when this acreage was slated for a housing development. The contractors got as far as putting in the sidewalks before the project was scrapped. Jeff, who’s a history buff, is delighted.
I’m excited, too. According to an excellent article by the Salt Creek Greenway Association, the preserve was threatened again by a proposed housing development in the 1970s. The Illinois Department of Natural Resources and Forest Preserve District of Cook County were able to acquire the acreage and save the fine examples of savanna and black soil prairie remnant. What a success story!
In January 2019, the story continues. Although the cooler palette of Wolf Road prairie in winter tends toward white, brown, and blue, with bits of pale yellow…
…little bluestem warms up the tallgrass with reds and golds. Its last clinging seeds sparkle in the sunshine.
Winter on the prairie brings certain plants into focus. Little bluestem is only one example.
In the summer, I appreciate pale purple coneflowers for their swash of pink-purple color across the grasses. In January, I find myself focusing on a single plant’s structure.
Culver’s root, bereft of summer pollinators and long past bloom, takes on sinuous grace and motion in stark relief against the snow.
Even the rough and tumble goldenrod assumes a more delicate beauty in silhouette.
I imagine what this prairie, savanna, and wetland preserve will look like in a few months. Covered with wildflowers. Limned with birdsong. Full of diverse color and motion. Still, seeing Wolf Road Prairie under a layer of snow in the sunshine has its own beauty.
We almost lost this prairie. Twice.
I’m grateful to hike it today.
In a time when so many of our natural areas are threatened, Wolf Road Prairie Nature Preserve stands as an example of what can happen when people care. What other prairies or natural areas should we speak up and protect today, which might otherwise be lost, underfunded, or developed? These are adventures in caring. Adventures in making a difference.
Somewhere, a new prairie adventure is waiting.
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The opening quote is from The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, a book in the series “The Chronicles of Narnia,” by C.S. Lewis. I love this series, and read it out loud to my adult children when they were growing up.
All photos this week are from Wolf Road Prairie Nature Preserve, Westchester, IL; copyright Cindy Crosby (top to bottom): sky over the wetland; compass plant (Silphium laciniatum) in the prairie display garden; hiking the north side of Wolf Road Prairie; small mouse or vole tracks in the snow; cattail (Typha latifolia, Typha angustifolia or Typha x glauca); unknown bird’s nest; possibly sunflower crown gall (a plant disease); goldenrod gall bunch or rosette—made by a goldenrod gall midge (Rhopalomyia solidaginis); prairie savanna with bur oaks (Quercus macrocarpa); old sidewalk under the snow in the savanna; snow shadows on the prairie; little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium); pale purple coneflower (Echinacea pallida) seedhead; Culver’s root (Veronicastrum virginicum); goldenrod (possibly Solidago canadensis); sign for Wolf Road Prairie; trail headed south with little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium), a rusty orange haze along the trail and in the distance.
Thank you to the members of the Save the Prairie Society and Heritage Project Committee who so generously pointed out trails, gave us a tour of The Franzosenbusch Prairie House Nature Center and Museum, and were warm and welcoming on our visit there. Check out their Facebook page and other social media.
Thanks for calling my attention to galls. So visible in the winter! Have to learn more about them.
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I learn so much from your weekly e-mail, Eileen! Our little Tuesdays in the Tallgrass prairie group has a talk about galls, usually in the fall. It’s always a challenge for me to get up to speed. Thanks for reading and taking time to comment– and for your good work for our natural areas!
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Cindy, thank you for the beautiful photographic tour of Wolf Road Prairie. It has been years since I have been there, and never in winter. I especially enjoyed the photo of the Little Bluestem because it so closely shows the slight crescent shaped petiole(?) of its seed head — something I tried to describe in a poem and tried to photograph often, but failed. ( I also admit I am unsure of the botanical terminology) May I use this photo (with photo credit to you, of course) to go with the poem? If you like, I can send a copy of the poem to you in a less public correspondence.
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Thank you for reading, Mary! I would be delighted to have you use the credited photo — and thank you for asking. I would love to read your poem! Please do send it to me — phrelanzer@aol.com. Thank you for sharing about prairie through your poetry — we need more prairie poets!
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I admit I don’t even know what galls actually are! Jack and I need to do some research! Beautiful photographs as usual. I love seeing conservation success stories like this. I so appreciate large swaths of preserved land when I see them. We all need to continue to fight to make sure they stay that way!
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I love imagining you and Jack checking out galls! We’ll have to go on an exploration of PA’s galls! Fun times ahead. Miss you all! Thank you for taking time to read and send me this note!
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Stunning photography, as usual.
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What a lovely compliment, Patricia! Thank you for reading and taking time to leave a note. Happy January!
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I enjoyed your post. Your question about how best to save remaining prairies is important. It seems to me that there are really two approaches: a groundswell of support for targeted acquisition of prairie by a public agency, or focused efforts by prairie enthusiasts and/or NGOs to pool money to purchase prairie remnants and ensure their protection through an easement, ultimately to be transferred to a public agency or NGO. I think we tend to spend too much time hoping the first approach will work. With limited funds and some landowners or neighbors opposed to public purchase of private land, the second approach needs to be more seriously considered. Of course this would require more significant investment by individuals, but I would argue the legacy it leaves is worth it. The question is how to identify those parcels and acquire them effectively, and once acquired, how to manage them. More questions than answers I’m afraid. I wonder whether there have been any effective e-funding campaigns to something like that.
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Thank you for reading, and for so thoughtfully addressing the issue of saving remaining remnant prairies and natural areas. Grateful for people who care, and who want to think about how to best address the loss of these special places. Keep asking those questions, and maybe together, those of us who love prairies will find the best possible answers.
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I grew up near this prairie in the 1960s. And I remember playing there as a young child. Even after all these years, the pretty flowers and butterflies are still indelible in my mind. My love for nature and prairies began with that prairie; and now I volunteer to restore State Natural Areas and I promote shoreline buffers on lakeshore properties in Wisconsin–the seed was planted early for me in that prairie. I haven’t been back to Wolf Rd since my teenage years, but I mean to do so soon. Thank you for stirring up some very fond memories from childhood.
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What a lovely reflection on Wolf Road Prairie, Theresa! So inspiring. It’s wonderful to hear how growing up near a prairie influenced you later as an adult. Keep up the awesome natural areas restoration in Wisconsin! Thank you for reading and taking time to share your memories and your good work.
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