Fire Season

Life is about not knowing, having to change, taking the moment and making the best of it, without knowing what’s going to happen next.” -Gilda Radner

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The smell of smoke drifts through our open windows. A few miles away, a white plume rises.

Fire! Prescribed fire.

At the forest preserves, the Arboretum, and conservation sites, flames creep along the woodland floor. Embers smolder. A tree chain smokes.

It’s prescribed burn season in the woodlands, and even on a few prairies and wetlands. In the Chicago region, a stream of blessedly warm, dry days have made conditions right for fire.

Ashes, ashes, we all fall down.

Fall burns are a management tool stewards and site staff use to encourage healthy natural areas. Spring burns will follow in 2021. In late winter or early spring, we burn the tallgrass prairies.

Because of COVID in 2020, many prairie stewards and staff were unable to gather in large groups to use prescribed fire. For those of us used to seeing this predictable cycle of the prairie season, the unburned prairies—now tangled and tall—were one more curveball in an unpredictable year.

I missed the usual spring dance of fire and flammable grasses; the swept-clean slate of a newly-burned prairie this March. Early wildflowers were difficult to find, buried under the thatch of last-year’s Indian grass and big bluestem. The prairies, untouched by flame, seemed out of kilter all summer. Alien.

This spring, prairie willows flowered. For the first time in remembrance on one prairie where I volunteer, prairie roses put on second year growth. Now, in November, the willows are thick and tall. Bright rose hips are sprinkled through the brittle grasses.

Although I’m not working on the fire crews this season, I feel a rush of adrenaline when I see the tell-tale towers of smoke in the distance. They tell me life is back on track again. That there is some semblance of normality. Welcome back, prescribed fire.

Out with the old, in with the new. Sweep away this year. Let’s start over.

Fire can be a destructive force. But these fires are healing.

They bring the promise of rejuvenation. I know next spring and summer, the prairies, savannas, and woodlands will brim with color. Motion. New life.

As I hike the trails and drive through areas being burned, I watch the flames lick the ground clean of the remains of 2020. Hikers stop and gawk. Through the haze, cars move slowly. Driver’s rubberneck. A yellow-slickered volunteer talks to two walkers, waving her hands as she explains why they are torching the woodlands.

It’s a seeming grand finale for the plants on the woodland floor. But under the ashed soil, the roots of wildflowers and grasses wait for their encore. Spring.

Change is on the way.

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Last week, as Jeff and I hiked the prairie trails, we saw them. Woolly bear caterpillars! These forerunners of the Isabella tiger moths were a delightful appearance in the midst of a chaotic week; a sign that the regular rhythm of the seasons was in play. Their appearance was calming. I knew these woolly bears—or “woolly worms” as some southerners call them—were looking for an overwintering spot.The woolly bear’s stripes, according to folklore, predict the coming winter weather.

The small cinnamon stripe I saw on this one points to a severe winter. Hmmm.

Last autumn, the woolly bears I found had a larger cinnamon stripe than this season, indicating a mild winter. I riffled through the old digital records on Google and discovered that in 2019-2020, we had the fourth-warmest December through February period on record.

Way to predict the weather, woolly bear! Although science doesn’t put a lot of stock in these caterpillar forecasts, it’s a fun idea. It will be interesting to see how the 2020-2021 winter season shakes out, stripe-wise.

We like to know what’s coming. We want to know the future. Yet the past eight months, we’ve learned to live with ambiguity. Each day has brought its particular uncertainty—perhaps more than many of us have ever had—in one big gulp.

Life is full of ambiguity, even in the best of times. This year—when even simple rituals like meeting a friend for a morning at the coffee shop have been upended—it’s been draining. Fear and anxiety are constant companions for many of us. Some have lost loved ones. Others have grappled with an illness our medical professionals are still trying to get a handle on. And yes, even the comforting work we do on prairies and natural areas came to a stop for a while.

I’m grateful for the woolly bears, and the normal rhythm of life they represent. I’m also grateful for the fires I see, although for the 100-acre Schulenberg Prairie—like many other prairies—the prescribed burn will be set in the spring. But the mowed firebreaks are a foreshadowing of what’s to come.

New beginnings are ahead.

I feel my spirits lift, thinking about a fresh start. A new season.

I’m ready. Let’s go!

*****

The opening quote is from Gilda Radner (1946-1989) an original cast member of the comedy show “Saturday Night Live.” One of her best-quoted lines, “It’s always something.” She died from ovarian cancer.

All photos and video copyright Cindy Crosby and are taken at The Morton Arboretum in Lisle, IL, unless otherwise indicated (top to bottom): smoke plume from prescribed burn, East Woods; video of prescribed burn, East Woods; tree on fire, East Woods; smoke in the East woods; ashes after prescribed burn, East Woods; Schulenberg Prairie prescribed burn (2013); Willoway Brook, Schulenberg Prairie; New England aster (Symphyotrichum novae-angliae), Schulenberg Prairie; rose hips (Rosa carolina), Schulenberg Prairie; Indian grass (Sorghastrum nutans), Schulenberg Prairie; burned over prairie dropseed (Sporobolus heterolepis) on the Schulenberg Prairie parking lot strip; Schulenberg Prairie Savanna in summer; prescribed burn in the East Woods; woolly bear (Pyrrharctia isabella), Hidden Lake Forest Preserve, Forest Preserve District of DuPage County, Downer’s Grove, IL; woolly bear (Pyrrharctia isabella) on stiff goldenrod (Oligoneuron rigidum), Schulenberg Prairie (2019); prescribed burn sign; mowed firebreak on the Schulenberg Prairie; bridge at Hidden Lake Forest Preserve, Forest Preserve District of DuPage County, Downer’s Grove, IL; possibly a red-tailed hawk (Buteo jamaicensis), West Side prairie planting.

*****

Join Cindy for a classā€”or ask her to speak virtually for your organizationā€“now booking talks for 2021. Email Cindy through http://www.cindycrosby.com.

Register for Cindyā€™s Literary Gardens Online: Friday, Dec.4, 1-2:30 p.m.CSTā€“ Join master gardener and natural history writer Cindy Crosby from wherever you live in the world for a fun look at great (and not-so-great) gardens in literature and poetry. From Agatha Christieā€™s mystery series, to Brother Cadfaelā€™s medieval herb garden, to Michael Pollanā€™s garden in ā€œSecond Nature,ā€ to the ā€œsecret gardenā€ beloved of childrenā€™s literature, there are so many gardens that helped shape the books we love to read. Discover how gardens and garden imagery figure in the works of Virginia Woolf, Elizabeth Goudge, Rumer Godden, May Sarton, Mary Oliver, Elizabeth Gilbert, Henry Mitchell, Barbara Kingsolver, and Lewis Carrollā€“and many more! This class is online. Register here through The Morton Arboretum.

Just released in June! Chasing Dragonflies: A Natural, Cultural, and Personal History. Order now from your favorite indie bookstore such as the Arboretum Store and The Bookstore of Glen Ellyn, or online at bookshop.org, direct from Northwestern University Press (use coupon code NUP2020 for 25% off), or other book venues. Thank you for supporting small presses, bookstores, and writers during these unusual times.

Want more prairie? Follow Cindy on Facebook, Twitter (@phrelanzer) and Instagram (phrelanzer). Or visit her website at http://www.cindycrosby.com. See you there!

12 responses to “Fire Season

  1. “Change is coming.”Ā  Yes indeed, in so many ways.Ā  Burn season is the emblematic transition btwĀ Chicagoland’s two meta seasons, springsummer and fallwinter.Ā  For millennia, the ancient tradition of deliberately setting fire to natural areas was practiced and celebrated by the original inhabitants of the region.Ā  Only recently, relativelyĀ speaking, was a prescribed burn considered a destructiveĀ practice that had to be squelched.Ā  Fortunately, the also relatively recent change in awareness of a prescribed burn’sĀ value has ignited mindful science-informed ecological restoration practices which champion the judicious use of fire to enhance biodiversity.Ā  Congrats to the Arb for stewarding its land in ancient, natural ways.Ā  Thank you, Cindy, for sharing not just the incredible images, but also for the information about the restorative power of controlled burns.Ā  Change can be very good.Ā Ā 

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    • Thank you for reading — and for your thoughtful, informative message. Here’s to change — may we all gracefully accept it in our lives and move forward through the challenges we face. Take care, Julie! — Cindy šŸ™‚

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  2. Thanks for the info about woolly bear caterpillars, Cindy. I saw a few on a walk on the prairie near Waubonsee Community College. I continue learning from you.

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    • Those woolly bears! Aren’t they so interesting? I can’t see them without thinking of the Isabella Tiger moths we found on our moth night at the prairie. Keep up your good work, Marcia, and thank you for reading and dropping me a note! — Cindy šŸ™‚

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  3. The miracle that a controlled burn is necessary to give birth to renewed life – what a metaphor for 2020 – what seems like disruption and devastation in all that was familiar in our lives may very well be a clearing of the way for new growth to occur. I think Iā€™ll take that thought with me. Thank you for leading me to it.

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  4. Love this! I miss watching the controlled burns at Herrick Lake, right across the street from our old home. Thanks for your beautiful words and pictures!

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    • Thank you for reading, Pam, and for your kind note. I think of you when I drive past Herrick — you are missed! I hope your holidays ahead are wonderful in your new home. Hugs! Cindy šŸ™‚

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  5. Jeanne M Iovinelli

    I walked the east side at the arboretum on Monday afternoon. Lots of burning go on. It was comforting to see the prescribed fire. Thanks for your blog Cindy!!

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    • I felt the same way, Jeanne — comforted by the prescribed fire, and the knowledge that the cycle of the seasons was moving along, even when there is so much chaos right now. Thanks for reading, and for the amazing work you do for the natural world. — Cindy šŸ™‚

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  6. Very nice, thank you

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