Navigation Menu

Chicago Nature Now! Alert
August 26, 2016

“Chicago nature info and news to help you discover the region’s finest natural wonders.”

Here’s what’s happening in Chicago Nature, right now!

Hummingbirds, Hummingbirds, Hummingbirds!

Hummingbirds are migrating and you can find them buzzing in profusion at many nature centers including: Sagawau Canyon, Pilcher Park (at the nature center and south of the greenhouse), and Little Red Schoolhouse.

Ferns, Ferns, Ferns Plus Canyon Tours!

Again, Cowles Bog Trail, Miller Woods, and Hoosier Prairie (all in northwestern Indiana) are jumping with gymnastic ferns—in celebration of the 2016 Summer Olympics. If you’d like to experience a beautiful fern-lined canyon, call Sagawau Canyon and sign up for their next canyon tour.

Visit a Tallgrass Prairie

The colors of the prairie are in a lull but will soon be shining with gold. Still, this is the perfect time to see a tallgrass prairie, where you’ll find yourself immersed in a sea of tall grasses. Big bluestem with its purple tassels and Indian grass and its tawny feathery plume can rise eight feet into the air. Here are some local tallgrass prairies:

  • Spears Woods prairies feature a nice display of tall grasses including Indian grass with feathery heads and miniature yellow flowers. Click here for the location of the trailhead that goes west into the prairies.
  • In addition to a soaring expanse of tall grasses, Fermilab Prairie currently offers towering forests prairie dock and compass plant. I measured one prairie dock plant at ten-and-a-half feet tall!
  • The connecting prairie to the south of Shoe Factory Road Prairie offers a long walk through the tall grass. Rough blazing star is blooming now, too.
  • Theodore Stone Preserve‘s prairie to the west of the preserve (the main entrance) is tall with grasses. On the east side dolomite prairie, look for patches of rough blazing star.
  • Bluff Spring Fen‘s prairie offers a great display rough blazing star on the “switchback” kame in the north-central portion of the preserve. Use the glossary to learn about what a “kame” is.) Along the prairie trails, you can find yourself engulfed under big bluestem and Indian grass.  The oak savanna at the entrance of the preserve features the tall plants of sweet Joy-Pye weed and golden wingstem. Note: The trails are very narrow and overgrown, which makes it hard to always know which way to go. Just do your best. If you accidentally find yourself off trail, don’t blame yourself. Blame the land managers who aren’t doing their jobs.
  • At Wolf Road Prairie in Westchester, Illinois, look for towering forests of compass plants.

 

See a Summer Sunset:

Saganashkee Slough is sensational for sunsets as our celestial star—a bright, burning brass ball—slowly sinks in the sky to start a sultry summer eve.

 

PHOTO SECTION

Sample photos of the ferns in some northwest Indiana preserves (from previous years):

Royal ferns in the light fog of the savanna at Hoosier Prairie in Highland, Indiana

Royal ferns in the light fog of the savanna at Hoosier Prairie in Schererville, Indiana.*

 

A forest of royal ferns thrives in a wetland that has formed at the base of a high dune.

In the Cowles Bog area, there are many different species of fern. Here, a forest of royal ferns thrives in a wetland that has formed at the base of a high dune.*

 

Lush ferns line the walls of Sagawau Canyon in Lemont, Illinois.

Lush ferns line the walls of Sagawau Canyon in Lemont, Illinois. But you can only see it if you sign up for their upcoming canyon tours. Register soon. They fill up fast.*

 

Example tallgrass prairie photo:

Big bluestem grass gives the true meaning to the term "tallgrass prairie."

Big bluestem grass gives the true meaning to the term “tallgrass prairie.”*

Check out the summer sunsets at Saganaskee Slough:

The sun sets on this hot summer afternoon at Saganashkee Slough in Willow Springs, Illinois near Chicago.

On this sweltering, sultry afternoon, a golden sun sets over Saganashkee Slough in Palos Hills, Illinois.*

* Photo is representational and was not recorded this year. Bloom times vary from year to year.

If you find this website useful, please consider donating or purchasing my nationally-acclaimed book that celebrates all of the preserves featured on this website.

—Mike

 

You CANNOT copy this COPYRIGHTED CONTENT.

error: Content is protected !!