Autumn on the Prairie

A few weeks ago on National Public Lands Day I went on a Prairie and Bird Walk at Wolf Road Prairie Nature Preserve, an 80-acre remnant prairie, wetland, and savanna complex that is part of the county forest preserve. Thanks to the Save the Prairie Society, it is now protected from development.
The prairie has an interesting history. This 80 acre parcel of land was originally planned as a 600 lot housing development in the 1920s. Sidewalks were laid in the south 40 acres but the project failed in 1929 during the Great Depression and was never completed. Since then the prairie has remained mostly undisturbed.
The prairie is surrounded by commercial development but is remarkably quiet and peaceful. In the photo above office buildings can be seen rising up in the distance. I could barely hear the traffic on the nearby four lane roads.
The sidewalks and three cutouts for streets still remain at the entrance to the prairie forming an eerie grid through an oak savanah before reaching the open prairie. Some of the sidewalks are intact but most have some damage from trees growing along side them. Above, a large tree has broken one of the sidewalks.
The prairie and it’s wetlands are home to over 150 species of birds, more than 360 native plant species plus amphibians, insects, butterflies, mammals and is a resting point for numerous migratory birds.
Many sparrows and hundreds of goldfinches were eating seeds in the prairie grass. Below is a Tree Sparrow, a migratory bird that makes its home here during the winter.
A Baltimore Oriole nest was hanging in a Cottonwood tree. The orioles were long gone having migrated south a month earlier.
A group of European Starlings were lounging in a dead tree. There were quite a few cavities in the tree and I was told by the bird monitor that they had taken over old woodpecker nesting sites.
This looks like a deer skeleton, but I’m not sure. Yes, it was a little creepy looking but I stopped and took photos anyway.
A walk through the prairie wouldn’t be complete without some milkweed.
These photos are from a few years ago. I didn’t take any pictures on my walk last month but these were taken at the same time of year.
Saturday Snapshot is hosted by Alyce at At Home With Books. Visit her blog to see more great photos or add your own.
© 2012 Under My Apple Tree. All rights reserved.














What lovely photos. The walks and activities you do sound so interesting. That oriole nest is fascinating.
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I’m kind of embarrassed to admit I’ve never been to a prairie. Your photos are lovely – I’m glad thast housing development didn’t make it.
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Prairies should remain undisturbed! The birds and other creatures appreciate it, I’m sure. Thanks for sharing….and here’s MY SATURDAY SNAPSHOT POST
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What lovely photos. I like all the muted colours, below that bright blue sky. The prairie looks beautiful, and very interesting finds.
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I really like the bird photos, but the deer skeletons kind of scare me. Very nice nature shots!
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What a fascinating place, and really beautiful photos. I especially love the ones of the Tree Sparrow and the milkweed. (And I’m like you…I would’ve taken the photo of the deer skull, too! Kinda cool. 😉 )
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I’ve never seen milkweed before. I love the photos of the sparrow and the nest the best.
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Your photos gave me that quite prairie feeling. Loved them. Here’s Mine
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Beautiful pictures!
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I love this post! The photos are wonderful, and the oriole’s nest made me smile and smile.
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Great photos! Makes me want to get out and about and see what I can see.
Here’s My SS
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Stunning photos!
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I like the milkweed… and what a wonderful name for a prairie nature reserve. There must be a day’s allowance in all that icing and decoration. My Snapshot is at http://goo.gl/qkrST
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I’ve never seen a pic of milkweed up close before – fascinating in a delicate alien kind of way!
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I love the skeletons, but I too have never been to a prairie.
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Bear With Me….the dried weeds and bare limbs signal the change of seasons…Happy weekend♫♪
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I admire how you can take bird photos so close up. Do you use a telephoto lens? 300mm or 400mm? These are all great photos, very atmospheric.
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Thanks. I have a lot of patience with the birds. The lens is a Canon 55-250mm f4-5.6 IS. This is one of the higher rated inexpensive lenses. I would love to have a better lens but for now this one will do. The pictures I get with it are sharp enough that I can crop the photo and enlarge the bird making it look closer.
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Hi Leslie,
Here in the UK, I guess that our own ‘Wetland’ areas would probably be the equivalent to your Prairie Lands
http://www.wwt.org.uk/
Living down south, as I do, we are lucky enough to four conservation areas quite close by.
You have some great shots there and personally, I didn’t find the skeleton at all offensive and thought you captured it brilliantly.
Glad that you had such a good trip and thanks for sharing.
Yvonne
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Those photos are gorgeous. Reminds me a little of a wetlands reserve near where I used to live. I think the skeleton is fine – fact of life.
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As I was looking at your pictures a question suddenly appeared in my head (that happens sometimes). I’m halfway through the movie The Big Year. Have you seen it and what did you think. I have to think it would appeal to bird watchers.
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