Blog Archives

Skunk cabbage

Friends, this is also one of the early blooms in Crex Meadows. It is Skunk Cabbage and grows in very wet ground along streams or flowages.  I got my feet wet shooting this image, but i think it was worth the effort. The difficulty in this shot is portraying the pod-like bloom with the purple husk alongside the bright green of the huge leaves.  The name skunk cabbage comes from its rotten smell when the plant is crushed or physically disturbed.  I didn’t touch and left it undisturbed.  til Tomorrow MJ

After the Rain

Friends, these cheery flowers are the first to bloom in Crex Meadows,  a favorite haunt of mine in Northwestern Wisconsin.  They are Pasque flowers and are a wild crocus.  They are a light blue when they first bloom but fade quickly in the early spring sunshine.  I especially enjoy their yellow centers before the pollinators beat them to a pulp.  Hope you also enjoy their cheerful faces. til Tomorrow MJ

Wild and Free

Friends, this beautiful youngster was loping through the prairie dog town and easily jumped a hole.  It is deep summer and he has shed his foaling coat to become a sleek wild horse in miniature.  He /she is the future.  If you wish to read more  these wild horses and efforts to domesticate and eventually rid the badlands of these beautiful animals see this blog http://wildhorsesoftrnp.blogspot.com/ These fine folk are dedicated to keeping tabs on the wild horses by riding the badlands, keeping a wild horse registry  as well as buying and training horses “culled” from the park. til Tomorrow MJ

More muleys

Friends, this big-eared mule deer doe is relaxing in the grasses of the badlands.  She is chewing her cud and checking out the photographer.  One of the characteristic traits of these deer are the large ears hence their name, mule deer with mule ears.  The image below is a fall image of a fawn that was born in the spring, if you look closely you can see remnants of his spotted coat. til Tomorrow MJ

Along the River

Friends, most of the badlands in North Dakota are very dry (arid) except the area directly adjacent to the Little Missouri River.  The Whitetail deer are found mainly along the river while Mule deer are found in the drier areas. This Whitetail buck posed for us in the fall with his antlers polished and ready to chase the girls.  White tails are smaller than mule deer and get their name from the white underside of  their tails that they flag when they flee from danger.  The bucks grow antlers every spring and summer, then shed their antlers every winter to begin the cycle over again.  The whitetails have antlers with tines coming off a main beam.  In this image you can see his all white tail and his antlers are quite typical for a whitetail buck.  Below image is the Little Missouri River bottom. til Tomorrow MJ

Wildflowers-Miniatures

Friends, these tiny blooms (Globe Mallow) are often overlooked because they are very tiny and sit very close to the ground in the North Dakota badlands.  To get this macro shot, one needs to lie on the ground with your nose very close to the blooms.  The camera was fitted with a 90 mm macro lens.  I did a little post-processing work to give it a fine art look, you know what that is, background dark and out of focus.  🙂  I love the bright orange colors and the blooms in all stages of opening, from the closed buds with their fine hair coverings to the full bloom.  The insects must also like them as evidenced by the pollen spilled onto the petals. til Tomorrow MJ

Stone Tree Stump

Friends, While this tree stump looks like wood, it has turned to stone.  Petrified tree stumps are found all over the badlands, and you would swear that they are made of wood.  The preservation of tree structure is so realistic, you can see worm holes and cell structures. These trees were redwoods and a forest of stumps is present in the western side of Theodore Roosevelt National Park.  The park roads do not pass close to this forest, but it is only a two mile hike across the flats to access a land of stumps still being eroded from the clay slopes.  Like bleached bones, their white is a stark contrast to the dark green of  living cedar trees. In the early days, stumps ten feet in diameter and 80 foot logs were found, a remnant of a tropical past. til Tomorrow MJ

 

Hot Rock

Friends,  this holey rock is part burned coal and part scoria.  Masses like these are prevalent and scattered throughout an area where a coal vein was burning in the recent past.   They resemble lava formed from volcanic activity and are highly vesiculated (new word for the day).  Walking the higher ridges around the coal vein area, great areas of the plains have sunk away as a result of the underground clay shrinking in the intense heat. The burned coal is a gray color and sometimes is tightly bound to the adjacent scoria as seen in this image. til Tomorrow MJ

Rivlets

Friends, I like to call this image “rivlets”, i know it isn’t a proper geological term, but it describes what i see.  These little rivlets are not yet rivers, but still display the properties of rivers.  The yellow stream on the left shows a braided formation while the middle shows a more meandering stream.  Both rivlets are washing yellow sediments downhill following the path of least resistance and going around the harder scoria (red) deposits as they are very resistant to erosion by water. The toadstool formations near the top of the image show the results of erosion on layers of  differing densities and hardness.  I love the colorful patterns after a rain or in this case, a snowfall,  melting and running downhill.  til Tomorrow MJ

Sandhill Sunrise

Friends, these Sandhills are taking off into the sunrise, pretty colors in the morning especially as the sun peeks over the horizon.  Now i am done showing any more crane images until next fall. Tomorrow i start in a new direction, i will still be doing the nature photography, but the location will change from the Wisconsin birds to North Dakota badlands.  I will show you the land, critters, wildflowers, lichens and tell you some natural history stories along the way.  Tune in for a fascinating journey into a land touched by the sun,wind and history.  til Tomorrow MJ