Showing posts with label Black Hills. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Black Hills. Show all posts

24 October 2010

Out standing in the field

Cottonwood reverie

There are things that you can't teach in a classroom. For me, that list is growing enormously. In paleontology, for instance, nothing takes the place of taking the class to the site, rather than struggling to bring a simulation of the site into the classroom. This is an observational science, not an experimental one. If we want our students to be leaders in the field, I would argue that we have to take them into the field in the first place, to develop their skills as observers, documenters and problem-solvers.

We did just that again last week, visiting some key sites nearby and letting the students start working on an actual annual inventory of fossil resources. Because these sites have been poached, we were able to combine the inventory learning with an impromptu lecture on why this was CSI: South Dakota and what they should be looking for in terms of illegal removal and vandalism. It was a tremendous opportunity for all of us to learn in a half-day what would take me many more hours to explain in a classroom.

We all learn best by doing, by handling and manipulating, by seeing everything in situ and interconnected rather than separated and shorn of context. At some point, abstraction has to be linked back to the reality that first gave rise to the concept.

Om top of that, it was a perfect fall prairie day. Enjoy the scenery.

Moving up the hill from the cottonwoods

The group on the ridge in slanting morning light

Main hazard on this site: solitary male bison. This one was not much of a hazard, though. 

Fall colors on the hills and prairies

Subtle fall colors up close

Another bison, just as unimpressed.

04 September 2010

A perfect week, part I: Black Hills

Mount Rushmore from Iron Mountain Road

This was the most wonderful week.

On Monday, Tartan Girl, Ralph and Shirley came into town to be part of the new building opening ceremonies on Wednesday. Ralph had asked only to see Mount Rushmore as part of the visit. The preparations for the grand opening of the new building (about which more tomorrow) were well enough in hand that I felt that I could--and friends and family thought I should--take the day to travel with the family through the heart of the Black Hills.

The early fall weather was perfect and the scenery was stunning. We don't have many chances to get together these days with the family, so this was a particularly precious day. Maybe we can do this again next year with all the siblings. 

Ralph gazing at George Washington's profile


Shirley playing dueling photographers. She always wins. At least I come by it honestly.

George Washington in profile. This was Ralph's favorite aesthetic moment of the whole trip.

Face-on view of Mount Rushmore. I could not convince the crew until they got here that this is only ~20 minutes from home for us.

The pigtail bridges on Iron Mountain Road, courtesy of the Civilian Conservation Corps. You drive on them and then under them in a close semi-spiral--an elegant design for a mountain road. Note: they are not kidding about the low clearance. Do not attempt to drive the whale-sized RV on this road. A lot of people do....

Tartan Girl checks her images on Iron Mountain Road.

Resting pronghorn family on the Wildlife Loop Road in Custer State Park. That one on the right of the tree is very young. Apparently lots of critters had a second litter this year.

Young sheep--in fact, a little bighorn--in Custer State Park. The irony was lost on no one in our group.

Part of the Custer State Park bison herd.


Posing pronghorn.

Shy, timid woodland creatures....part of the feral burro herd in Custer tries to shake us down for food. When their good looks and charm failed, they tried to eat the steering wheel.  

Another very young pronghorn.

Part II tomorrow. Stay tuned.

26 July 2010

Family recipe Monday: citrus delights


It's been a long, exhausting week of moving large heavy things in boxes, or on pallets, or by the truckload. The new building is filling up quickly. You'd think that we could plan better so that we are not moving large heavy things in the heat of July, but you'd think wrong, because here we are. Next time around, say, in another lifetime, I am going to focus on tiny fossil pollen grains rather than large fossil bones. I'm not giving up the book collecting, however. Some things are worth their weight in, well, weight.

Field season has started and people are coming into the Badlands and Black Hills from all corners--friends from Texas, Pennsylvania, Illinois and Colorado have come through in the last week alone--surveying, working in caves, and collecting yet more large heavy things for the new building. All too soon, it will be time for the 70th Harley-Davidson rally in Sturgis. Hundreds of thousands of bikers--literally--will be roaring through the area for a couple of weeks. The tourists are driving through in high numbers; a large number of them are heading toward Mt. Rushmore and environs. Mt. Rushmore, or MORU in govspeak, is one of the most frequently visited units in the National Park Service. Summer is frenetically busy like this up here every year.

Add to that a stray kitten who is showing no signs of leaving our deck...note to self: schedule that brisk talk with St. Francis soon. We need a kitten like we need a Harley, which is to say not.at.all. She purrs loudly enough to have her own slot in the rally, that's for sure. Stray animals find us at the oddest and most inconvenient times. We still have not found a home for the last kitten we took in temporarily....nine years ago. (Okay, so we never even tried...)

Our last stray: Mel Blanc in Delaware, age six months. Check those feet. He is twice this size now in all dimensions.

But the farmers' market is booming and the produce is wonderful. Last night was a locavores' feast: roast Hutterite chicken, roasted new potatoes with rosemary, and the first young corn of the season, followed by a raspberry cobbler, all locally grown or raised, nothing except the chicken ever refrigerated. The cats are apparently Hutterites themselves, because they thoroughly approved of the chicken. So did the kitten. Maybe I'm using the wrong methods to get her to leave? ...naaahhh...

Summer baking tends to focus on light dishes, desserts that can be served cool, and lots of fruit. Citrus-based treats are particularly appealing right now. Here are a few citrus-based desserts from the Simple Gifts files.The first two are variations on the same theme: orange cake with dried fruit (dates or raisins) included. The first is a sheet cake, the second a tube-pan cake. Notice that both use either juice or peel from citrus fruit, not extract-based flavorings. It's summer. Use the real thing.

Coy’s orange cake
Cream 1/3 cup butter, 1 cup sugar, 1 egg. Add 2 cups flour, 1 tsp baking soda, 1 cup raisins, ½ grated lemon rind, 1 grated orange rind, 1 cup buttermilk. Add 1 tsp cinnamon and nuts as desired. Pour into 9”x13” cake pan. Bake in moderate oven until done. For topping, pour ¼ cup lemon juice and 1/2 cup orange juice over 1 cup sugar. Let stand while cake is baking. Blend and pour over cake as soon as removed from oven. Let stand several hours or overnight. Serve with whipped cream.
—Coy McLean Brooks

Orange cake
Cream together 2 cups sugar and 1 cup shortening. Then add 4 eggs, one at a time. Then add 3 T grated orange peel and 1 tsp grated lemon peel. Sift together 4 cups flour, and 1 tsp baking soda. Add this to the mix alternately with 1 ½ cups buttermilk. Then add 1 cup dates, 1 cup nuts (chopped) and 1 cup coconut (a heaping T of flour sprinkled on these will keep them from settling). Bake in tube pan for about 1 hour at 325* to 375* F. Cake should be well browned.


For a change of pace, try these light cookies, which will keep for a week or two. These make thin, crisp cookies (as the name suggests). If you are not a margarine fan, you can experiment with butter to get the texture right. Remember that this recipe was being typed up by my mother in the 1940s, from older recipes, and rationing was on. Margarine was the main option then.

Orange crispies
1 cup margarine
2/3 cup sugar
1 egg
3 to 4 tsp. orange rind
2 ½ cups flour
Pinch salt
½ tsp. baking powder

Grease pan for first cooking. Pinch off tiny bits and mash with fork crosswise. Bake in slow to moderate oven.
--Vada Brooks Johnson

Happy Monday. Need a kitten?

15 May 2010

Black Hills sights

I have finally found my neighborhood...

I love telling out-of-state friends that I'm driving to Deadwood for the day. It makes them think that I really am living in Wild West Dakota Territory, with pistols and Bowie knives in hand, or in teeth, every time I leave the house. The truth is more prosaic: Deadwood is one of the state's most important historic preservation centers, and the annual Deadwood Historic Preservation Symposium yesteday and today focused on the effect of natural disasters on the Black Hills region's history. Since I have been somberly remembering the Lubbock tornado of 40 years ago this past week, attending this symposium seemed (and was) particularly timely.

The Black Hills themselves apparently act as a bad weather magnet, focusing blizzards and rains on the area. I particularly liked the rather terse quote one speaker cited from a newspaper editor describing the latest disaster: "Anything can happen here; this is the Black Hills."

All that happened today, though, was a terrific symposium on disasters and local history--I am no more living on a creek up here than I am moving to a houseboat in the North Atlantic, I can tell you that--and a great excuse for a meandering drive back, camera at hand.

Elementary school and cannon, two things not normally found in such close proximity.

Sign, Center City

Church building, Center City

Honest Abe as a road sign

Motorcycle in tree. No, I have no idea why, or how. Or why.

Roadside car

I have also found Shirley's neighborhood.

Water wheel, Nemo Road

Giant chair art, Nemo Road

Barn, Nemo Road

Doty Center volunteer fire department building

Here's hoping everyone is having an equally splendid weekend. Stay out of creeks, off high ridges, and away from the windward slopes. And watch out for the livestock....

09 January 2010

Wild and not-so-wild life: flora


Flora of the Badlands, September
Disclaimer: I am not even remotely a botanist. My friends who are botanists will be only too happy to confirm this statement and to pile on the details, gleefully. It took years for me to start noticing plant life in the way I had noticed animal life from day one. I did develop a decent appreciation of the importance of native plants and xeriscaping when I lived in the Texas Hill Country years ago, something I had not thought of before. When your water source is an aquifer with a slow recharge rate, you should hoard that resource carefully.

I always liked the plants of what I now know should be called a mixed grassland prairie. Not only were they familiar to me, they took root and set the stage for the rest of the ecosystem in a dry and sometimes harsh environment. Tough grasses held the fragile topsoil together. Cottonwoods found an anchoring point wherever there was water. I learned this without being aware of learning it.

Ask me to name it, though, and I may not do so well. Botany is  like a book I’ve only just started: I can't quote it very well. So here is a series of photos from the Badlands, Black Hills and surrounding region, some of which I can identify, some of which I, er, don’t know yet.


Disclaimer 2: We are the kind of nerds who have a huge bookcase filled to overflowing with nothing but field guides to just about everything. At the end of a long day's exploration, you can find us pulling them out left and right, happily arguing about what we saw that day. So, in putting this little essay together, I relied on the following: the lovely Dakota Flora: A Seasonal Sampler, by David Ode (http://www.sdshspress.com/index.php?id=21&action=912); Natural History of the Black Hills and Badlands, by Sven G. Froiland (http://www.librarything.com/work/133744); South Dakota Weeds (Agriculture Extension Service, South Dakota State College, 1956); and Plants of the Black Hills and Bear Lodge Mountains, by Gary E. Larson and James R. Johnson (http://www.blackhillsparks.org/plantsbhbl.htm). All of them were on the bookshelf already. Nerds.


Hand-tinted plates in a 1956 ag extension book on noxious weeds! We love old field guides....


As in most dryland areas, the Badlands and prairie flora look somewhat nondescript in the cold and dry times, exploding into bloom in a wet year. We have had two wet years after a prolonged and difficult drought, so the past two springs and summers have been a major symphony of green. The snowmelt and rains flooded the landscape, and there were pools of standing water in places that normally looked liked baked brick. We found shorebirds in the Badlands. Here at Agate Fossil Beds, the Niobrara is nearly choked by the water-loving river plants.



Even in the dry times, the prairie flowers find a foothold, or roothold, and blossom. This is Plains parsley, the type specimen of which, according to Ode, is at the Royal Botanic Gardens at Kew in London. That's an amazing story in itself. The explorations of this region in the early 19th century included a great deal of specimen collecting and transportation, both to the museums of the Northeast and to Europe. I was attracted by its three-way symmetry and the sharpness of its shadows; I had no idea it had a relative that traveled to England 200 years ago. (This is why I love museum work--every specimen is a story, if you dig deep enough.)


Sego lily is just one of the prairie lilies. They are unexpectedly delicate blooms in a harsh landscape. These are true lilies, native to the mixed grass prairie and surrounding regions, far tougher than their flowers look.


The gumbo lily, or (to be more botanically accurate) gumbo evening primrose, has nothing to do with a good Cajun gumbo, alas. As Ode says, it occurs on the gumbo-lands, the clays of the Pierre shales of this area. Gumbo soils are dark, brittle when dry, horribly sticky and clinging when wet, often full of selenium. Yet this graceful flower thrives here, blooming at night, closing in the early morning light, attracting the pollinators, anchoring the ecosystem.

Cottonwoods are just as lovely in the fall as I remember them from childhood. This one in a city park had an especially lovely form, bending down gently over the water, leaves trailing off one by one. Cottonwoods are our main source of fall color, and the conditions have to be Just Right. Just Right did not happen in 2009. Just before the leaves started to turn in early October, we were hit with snow and sub-freezing temperatures. The leaves fell off in large clumps without turning. I'm hoping for better conditions this fall.


Higher in the Black Hills, you find a wealth of botanical communities and rarities. And I find out the limitations of our camera. Bought for our trip to Iceland a few years ago, it's been a dependable workhorse. But it does not see blue flowers the way I do. I am sparing you several dozen pictures of washed-out or too-dark flowers that in life were a pure azure or royal or close-to-Prussian blue. I've tried every setting we have. You'll just have to take my word for it that this was a joyous blue mountain meadow. And still is, every spring.


The Black Hills are dissected by streams and springs, reflecting the abrupt uplift that created them. This is part of Roughlock Falls, a biological oasis in a steep canyon. In the Black Hills, the plants change rapidly with the altitude, and there are pockets of rare plants and animals all through the area. Every trail is different. 


The water is just as cold as you might think, but just look at the difference in the plant life. In this cool, humid microclimate, a wholly different community flourishes.

For me, it's like being in a foreign country with my usual Tarzan-level grasp of the language. There is so much to learn here, and every plant is its own story. It is a fascinating new chapter for me.





In every crevice and canyon, the plants find and define their niches. I wonder about this often, especially with the rare ones. Were they once more abundant, or have they just become established? What part do they play in this complex saga?

There are plants I want to find here just because I love their common names. That may or may not be a good reason for botanizing. Pearly everlasting, manyflower stickseed, flixweed tansymustard, textile onion, darkthroat shootingstar, candle anemone, poverty oatgrass...check back here in a year and I'll post my updated botany album. Maybe I'll learn this stuff yet. Since I have a student doing a major paleobotany project, I pretty much have to.

I'll leave you with a few images...


View of Bear Butte across the water, reflections of cottonwoods, August



I'd love to know what this is. The color rendering is good, much better than my identification prowess. This is in Spearfish Canyon.



I am intrigued by the shapes of the seed heads here.




A particularly tenacious survivor in western Nebraska. That cliff is indeed that steep.