“The article-as-numbered-list has several features that make it inherently captivating… there’s little that our brains crave more than effortlessly acquired data.”–Maria Konnikova
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Dishes are piled in the sink. Freelance work needs completed; evinced by piles of paper and notes everywhere. Unread library books, now overdue, rattle around in the back seat of my Honda. My to-do list now spans several pages.
What to tackle first? None of these. Time to go for a prairie hike. Here are 10 reasons why:
#10: July’s prairie bouquets. Combine gray-headed coneflower, wild bergamot, and the various white prairie wildflowers. Result? Spectacular.
#9. The mesmerizing sounds of a prairie stream. This stream at Nachusa Grasslands was linked to a beaver pond until the beavers abandoned it last season. In only a year, the changes in the landscape are impressive.
#8. Unbelievably beautiful butterflies float the July prairie, like this black tiger swallowtail.
Sometimes you get a bonus: a double dose of fritillaries.
#7. Summer is all about springwater damselflies. This one’s a male.
#6. July is a great time to see different species of blazing star wildflowers in bud…
…and in bloom.
#5. Compass plants send their profusion of periscope blooms across the prairie.
#4. The delightful freckled wild horsemint is reason enough to hike the prairie right now. I think the flowers look like the circus came to town. What do they remind you of?
#3. Those July blues…blue vervain, that is. Almost purple, isn’t it?
#2. Signs of hope are everywhere. But especially here.
#1. And everywhere you look on the July prairie is the promise of future adventures.
My to-do list will still be there when I return home. But the July prairie won’t wait. Every day is different. Every day is full of surprises. When I look back on how I spent this day….
…I won’t have any regrets.
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The opening quote is from Maria Konnikova, whose article “A List of Reasons our Brains Love Lists” from The New Yorker explains these little scraps of paper I have laying around everywhere. Check it out.
All of the photos and the video clip this week are from Nachusa Grasslands, a Nature Conservancy site in Franklin Grove, IL, except the compass plants from Fermilab as noted (top to bottom): gray-headed coneflowers (Ratibida pinnata), wild bergamot (Monarda fistulosa), and various white wildflowers; old beaver pond turned stream; black swallowtail butterfly (Papilio polyxenes); two meadow fritillary butterflies (Boloria bellona)–thanks Doug Taron for ID help; springwater dancer damselfly (Argia plana); rough blazing star in bud (Liatris aspera) ; blazing star in bloom (Liatris spp.); compass plants (Silphium laciniatum) at Fermilab Natural Areas, Batavia, IL; horsemint (Monarda punctata villicualis); blue vervain (Verbena hastata); monarch (Danaus plexippus) on swamp milkweed (Asclepias incarnata); gravel two-track through the July prairie; prairie in my Honda’s rear view mirror.