Thursday, July 3, 2025

Going to Nature School - Guided Hikes


A friend recently sent me this meme and I had to laugh. Substitute “naturalist” for “botanists” and you have me. I am notoriously slow while hiking, looking for all the goodies nature shares on each hike in every season.

It wasn’t always like this.

When I first started hiking many decades ago, "getting there" was the point for me. Exercise and hauling out on the trails were the means and the ends. I heard the birds - but didn't hear them. I saw the flowers/fungi  - but didn't see them. I noticed geological features - but didn't notice them.

The Driftless Drifters hiking group
Joining my first hiking group after retirement introduced me to many people who hiked with an eye and ear to the surrounding forests and prairies. They identified bird songs, trees, flowers, fungi, leaves, insects and other natural phenomena. 

That slowed me down and helped me begin to put the puzzle of nature and her interconnectedness together. Hikes were no longer important for aerobics and how fast I could get somewhere but for what was on the trailsides, woods, sky and prairies. Learning to notice and identify what I saw and heard became my focus, Becoming a MN Master Naturalist volunteer jumpstarted my learning in earnest but by no means ended it.

One of the ways I have continued to strengthen my knowledge is by “going to nature school” or more simply, participating in guided or interpretive hikes. I found many opportunities for free, or reasonably priced, guided hikes offered by organizations like the Mississippi Valley Conservancy, The Prairie Enthusiasts, Iowisota Nature Education Center, Friends of the Blufflands, The Natural Resource Foundation of WI, and other local and regional nature centers, state parks, trail associations and outdoor organizations. 

Jon Rigden sharing Hixon prairies info
Each hike, led by knowledgeable naturalists, biologists, impassioned enthusiasts and scientists, has been invaluable in slowing me down and helping me understand more about nature, ecosystems, plant, fungi, bird and insect identification and geology as we have walked along. The hikes have also given me deeper insight into the history of the land and the great work that goes on to preserve, maintain and enhance these precious natural areas. It’s the best and easiest kind of hands-on learning.

Brown-belted bumblebee




Not only that, the participants in the hikes - birders, botanists, fungi-hunters, forb-pro’s, insect masters - also share their expertise as we walk along. It's a great way to learn by doing and seeing and having the luxury to ask questions and have curiosity piqued or satisfied.



The hikes are so valuable that I began my monthly Let's Get Hiking and Learning column, listing learning and guided hiking opportunities available to all of us in the Driftless area. We're fortunate to live in the MN-WI-IA tri-state area so we can take advantage of these Driftless offers. But I know that, no matter where you live, there are opportunities to learn within an hour’s drive for you.

Learning about karst sinkholes
In the interest of inspiring all of us to take a guided hike and learn even more deeply about the nature we hike through, I will be sharing some of the "nature school" hikes I've been on in coming weeks. It will give me a chance to highlight not just what these hikes are like but shine a bright light on the organizations that sponsor these hikes so you feel comfortable participating too!

Join me at "nature school" and let’s learn together. 

See you on the trails!


Images, unless noted - Marge Loch-Wouters
 


Tuesday, July 1, 2025

I Spy on the Trails - June 16- 30

Sweat bee nectaring
on a Solomon’s seal blossom


The rain that started our month has continued off and on during the past two weeks. Some with light sprinkles off and on; some more substantial. We experienced 3" of rain in just two days last week  (and up to 6" in some spots) with some tornadoes coming through southeastern MN and southwestern WI. That's almost a month's worth of rain for a typical June in just those two days!

Windy climb up Rush Creek Bluff 
on a TPE guided hike in the 90s


These weeks also had more wind and much higher dewpoints for more humid days with temps lingering in the 80s. There were also a few extreme heat days with temps in the mid-90s and heat alerts with temps that felt like over 100F. Quite the change from the first two weeks of the month in terms of heat. Tomato plants loved it. Me? Not so much. I will say the winds made some of the hottest/most humid days somewhat hike-worthy so that was a plus!



Plants certainly responded. The forests, trails, prairies and roadsides are lush with growth. Some of my favorite flower friends, like this delicate Deptford pink to the right, seen on MVC's Holland Sand Prairie trails, are beginning to make their appearances. Beautiful hikes are ahead.

See you on the trails!

Plant Observations
Flowering/Mature plants:

  • alyssum, hoary
  • anemone, candle (cylindrical thimbleweed)
  • anemone, meadow (Canadian)
  • avens, white
  • beardtongue, large
  • black-eyed Susan
  • blacksnakeroot, clustered
  • camus, mountain death
    Tall cinquefoil
    with incoming sweat bee
  • cinquefoil, tall
  • clover, purple prairie
  • clover, white prairie
  • columbine
  • coneflower, purple
  • coreopsis prairie
  • Deptford pink
  • fern, bracken
  • fern, bulblet bladder
  • fern, lady
  • fern, maidenhair
  • fern, interrupted
  • fern, ostrich
  • fleabane, daisy
  • fleabane, prairie
  • harebell
  • hawksbeard, narrowleaf
    Indian Paintbrush
  • honewort, Canadian
  • indian paintbrush, scarlet
  • leadplant
  • lily, wood
  • lobelia, palespike
  • milkweed, butterfly
  • milkweed, common
  • milkweed, purple
  • milkwort, racemed
  • motherwort
  • plantain, prairie
  • plaintain, wooly
  • puccoon, hairy
  • puccoon, hoary
    Heartleaf skullcap, a new forb for me
  • rose, prairie
  • skullcap, heart-leaf
  • Solomon's seal
  • skullcap, Leonard’s
  • spiderwort, Ohio
  • thimbleweed, tall
  • yarrow

Sprouts/unbloomed/past bloom:

  • alumroot, Richardson's
  • anemone, candle
  • aster, asomatic
  • aster, blue
  • aster, western silver
  • aster, white panicle
  • bergamot, wild
  • betony, wood
  • blazing star, rough
  • boneset, false
  • coneflower, grey-headed
    Virginia ground cherry, past bloom


  • compass plant
  • Culver's root
  • geranium, wild
  • germander, American
  • goldenrod, Canada
  • goldenrod, early
  • goldenrod, gray
  • goldenrod, prairie
  • goldenrod, showy
  • goldenrod, stiff
  • groundcherry, Virginia
  • hyssop, giant yellow
  • Jack-in-the-pulpit
  • lettuce, Canada
  • milkweed, clasping
  • milkweed, green comet
  • milkweed, whorled
  • pussytoes, plantain
  • rattlesnakeroot, white
  • sagewort, field
  • Solomon's seal, false
  • spurge, cypress
  • sunflower, woodland
  • sunflower, hairy
  • sunflower, woodland
  • verbena, hoary
  • violet, birdfoot
  • wormwood, field

Grasses/Sedges:

  • bluestem, big
    Baby big bluestem
  • bluestem, little
  • dropseed, prairie
  • grass, prairie blue-eyed (past)
  • grass, timothy
  • indiangrass
  • junegrass, prairie
  • needlegrass, porcupine
  • panicgrass, broadleaf
  • panicgrass, longleaf
  • panicgrass, Scribner's
  • ryegrass, perennial
  • sedge, broom
  • wedgegrass, prairie

Fungi/Moss/Lichen:

  • moss, American tree
  • moss, silvery thread
  • moss, waterside feather
    Lung oyster mushroom
  • moss, woodsy thyme
  • mushroom, lung oyster
  • mushroom, pheasant back (dryad’s saddle)
  • mushroom, platterfull
  • mushroom, puffball
  • mushroom, scarlet elfen cup 

Wildlife Observations (seen, heard, detected)
Birds:
  • blackbird, red-winged
  • blue jay
  • cardinal, northern 
  • catbird, gray
  • cedar waxwing
  • chickadee, black-capped
    Dickcissel at Great River Bluffs
     (MN) State Park
    Image - Susan Otterson
  • dickcissel
  • flycatcher, blue-gray
  • flycatcher, great crested
  • goldfinch, American
  • indigo bunting
  • meadowlark, eastern
  • meadowlark, western
  • nuthatch, white-breasted
  • oriole, Baltimore
  • oriole, orchard
  • ovenbird
  • owl, barred
  • redstart, American
  • robin, American 
  • sandpiper, upland
  • sapsucker, yellow-bellied 
  • scarlet tanager
  • sparrow, chipping
  • sparrow, clay-colored
  • sparrow, field
  • sparrow, house
  • sparrow, song
  • sparrow, Vesper
  • titmouse, tufted
  • towhee, eastern
  • vireo, Bell's
  • vireo, red-eyed 
  • vireo, yellow-throated
  • warbler, yellow
  • woodpecker, downy
  • woodpecker, hairy
  • woodpecker, red-bellied 
  • wood-pewee, eastern 
  • wren, house 
  • yellowthroat, common

Waterfowl:
  • Blue heron
  • Snowy egret

Reptiles/Amphibians:
  • toad, American
Insects:
  • beetle, longhorn
    Widow skimmer dragonfly

  • butterfly, monarch 
  • butterfly, silvery checkerspot
  • butterfly, small white
  • damselfly, stream bluet
  • dragonfly, green darner
  • dragonfly saddlebag
  • dragonfly, twelve-spotted skimmer 
  • dragonfly, widow skimmer (male and female)
  • fly, crane
  • moth, white-striped black

What are YOU seeing on your hikes?

Two weeks of hikes
Hikes below in colored, bold type or underlined have links to previous posts OR descriptions/location  of the trails found online

Hixon Forest, La Crosse, WI; Bluffside Park, Winona MN; Riverside Park, La Crosse WI (2); Marowsky's Bluff, Ferryville WI; Rush Creek Bluff, Ferryville WI, Holland Sand Prairie, Holmen WI (2), Vetsch/Stoney Point Park, La Crescent, MN; 

Leadplant finally blooming

The "I Spy on the Trails" column is a phenology (the study of seasonal changes in plants and animals) journal to chronicle year-round the weather, plant life and wildlife I observe while hiking. It is very useful in helping me compare observations from year-to-year. The column is published monthly from September through April and then twice-a-month from May through August when warm weather brings the natural world back to vibrant life.

         Images, unless noted - Marge Loch-Wouters

A part of the small remnant prairie at the 
Stoney Point overlook of Vetsch Park.