Gratitude/forest bathing walk with interpretive naturalist Sara Holger, director of Project Get Outdoors. Meet at the park’s main picnic shelter. Sponsor: Frontenac State Park Association and Project Get Outdoors.
Join me in exploring the Driftless areas of Minnesota, Wisconsin and Iowa. You'll find hiking suggestions, tips and information on making the most of this area, no matter your age or physical condition.
Friday, October 24, 2025
Let's Get Hiking and Learning - November 2025
Gratitude/forest bathing walk with interpretive naturalist Sara Holger, director of Project Get Outdoors. Meet at the park’s main picnic shelter. Sponsor: Frontenac State Park Association and Project Get Outdoors.
Tuesday, October 21, 2025
In Conversation with the Prairie
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| May's prairie smoke |
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| Butterfly milkweed |
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| Deptford pink |
| Bluebirds checking out accommodations |
It wasn't just the plants that spoke to me as they grew though. Part of the conversation involved the rich web of life supported by the prairie.
The birds returned and began their mating calls and nesting in mid-April. Their songs accompanied my walks in late spring and throughout the summer. When the songs began to fade with the first migrations in September, it left a lull in the conversation that I missed.
| Common eastern bumblebee |
So began a new line of discussion with the prairie's insect life added to my understanding - and homework - as I slowly added to species that I could reliably identify. I began to identify and note more precisely the favored blooms that insects gathered pollen and nectar from. When the more inscrutable (to me)* crickets, grasshoppers, and and other orthoptera began to rule the day in late summer and early fall, my conversations were again full of chatter.
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| Milkweed seeds |
During that pause, I'll have a chance to do a little studying and learning sparked by the observations and phenology notes I've made over the past eight months.
I think that will give me fresh eyes and topics to bring back in spring when the prairie and I can meet again and celebrate next year's seasons together.
I can hardly wait for the conversation to begin again.
Here are a few views of the prairie's regrowth after the prescribed burn:
| April 12, 2025 The green fuzz has begun |
| May 30, 2025 So many hoary puccoons |
| June 28, 2025 Coneflowers and prairie coreopsis dominate to the west |
| August 3, 2025 Tall grasses in their glory |
| September 10, 2025 Goldenrods continue their strong showing |
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| October 12, 2025 Grasses and plants gone to seed |
Sunday, October 19, 2025
Invite to Public Input Meetings on La Crosse Zoning Codes
This is an opportunity to provide input/feedback especially in light of how future zoning codes might affect natural areas in La Crosse WI
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Friday, October 10, 2025
Naturalist's Corner - Fungi Fun
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| A wreath of turkey tails around a stump |
We often hunt for mushrooms for tasty eating. Who can resist a morel, chicken of the woods, chanterelle or lobster mushroom? But there is much to be said for simply delighting in and learning to identify the mycelium network's endless parade of interesting fungal fruit.
Fruit? Yes, fruit.
Mushrooms and fungi are the fruiting bodies of the vast, intricate mycelium network that stretches underground, often for miles. Mushrooms use enzymes to break down organic material rather than photosynthesis. They are the great decomposers of the earth. The material that is broken down eventually becomes soil. We see that decomposition work in every branch or tree trunk covered in fungi that we pass along the trail. And, if we stay alert on the sides of the trails we hike, there are many delightful fungi to catch the eye.
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| Looking at the inside stem of a chanterelle mushroom on a guided hike |
As a newbie, I often see a mushroom on the trails that I can't identify. I take photos from different angles and then head home to work on more accurately identifying the fungi. Apps like Picture Mushroom, Shroom ID, Shroomify can help to get a first general ID but can be pricey. Seek can sometimes come in handy but often can only do a generalized identification.
Below are a few of my favorite fungi pictures from the last several months. I hope you keep your eye out for the next few weeks while you're leaf-peeping and see what you can find!
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| The common but always beautiful dryad's saddle or pheasant back mushroom |
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| Jelly tree ear fungus |
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| A herd of orange mycena mushrooms |
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| Fluted elfin saddle mushroom |
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| Very tiny purple fairy finger mushrooms |
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| Not cheetos, but delicate golden club mushrooms |
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| Chicken of the woods |
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| Dog's nose fungus |
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| Snow jelly fungus |
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| An "old" old-man-of-the-woods |
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| Scarlet waxy cap mushroom |
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| Lung oyster mushroom |
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| Indigo milkcap mushroom |
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| Purple-gilled laccaria |
Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Lansing Bridge Closure Update
If you are a hiker who often goes between Lansing IA and the Wisconsin side of the river, you know how important the Black Hawk bridge is. Please consider giving the river towns along both sides of the river some extra spending love over the next year and a half to help them weather what could be critical financial downturns. Here is the latest news release on the Lansing Iowa Bridge closure timing and plans:
Iowa 9/WIS 82 Mississippi River Crossing Project Announces Bridge Closure Date and Plans for Car Ferry ServiceLANSING, Iowa – Oct. 7, 2025
- The existing bridge (also known as the Black Hawk Bridge), will close to traffic at approximately 7 a.m. on Monday, Oct. 20.
- Iowa DOT and WisDOT will initiate a free car ferry starting in early November to provide alternative service until the new bridge is projected to open in spring of 2027.
“We are very pleased that federal and state agencies, including the U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service and the city of Lansing, could work together and quickly approve the necessary steps to allow us to provide this critical service,” stated Iowa DOT Director Scott Marler. “These approvals will allow us to install the infrastructure needed for a car ferry to keep our communities connected when the old bridge needs to be closed.”
The free car ferry will provide an alternative way for vehicles to cross the river. A new bridge is being constructed alongside the existing bridge. Iowa DOT, WisDOT, and the contractor have determined that future construction stages on the new bridge pose a risk to the safety of the existing bridge. Once the existing bridge closes on Oct. 20, crews will start to demolish and remove the old structure so construction on the new bridge can meet the planned 2027 opening.
“We are providing a new and modern structure that stretches across a beautiful and scenic stretch of the Mississippi River,” noted Wisconsin DOT Secretary Kristina Boardman. “The state
The project will need to install car ferry landings on both sides of the river. Ferry landing construction is already underway, and the exact start date for the ferry will be announced as the work progresses. On the Iowa side, the landing will be located at the Lansing marina, while the ferry will land on the Wisconsin side just south of the new bridge and adjacent to the construction staging area. Planned site improvements including installation of ferry docks, vehicle queuing areas, directional and informational signs, variable message signs, lights, and other features. On the Iowa side, improvements to railroad crossings at the entrance and exit points of the marina have been completed. (A conceptual map is attached to this release.)
In addition to the car ferry, there will be marked detour routes when the bridge closes. The nearest highway bridge is approximately 30 miles south at U.S. 18 connecting Marquette, Iowa, to Prairie du Chien, Wis. The car ferry will serve two-axle vehicles, motorcycles, bicycles, and pedestrians, but will not be able to accommodate trucks, buses, trailers, or other large vehicles.
The bridge closure date and car ferry service date will continue to be announced through the project website, the project Facebook page, local media, on digital message signs on either end of the bridge, and through 511ia.org.
For more information on the construction of the new Mississippi River Bridge as well as updates on the existing bridge status, go to iowadot.gov/lansingbridge. Individuals may also sign up to receive e-mail updates and view the Facebook page www.facebook.com/LansingBridge/.
The latest traveler information is available anytime through our 511 system. Visit 511ia.org; call 511 (within Iowa) or 800-288-1047 (nationwide); stay connected with 511 on Facebook or X
(find links at https://iowadot.gov/511/511-social-media-sites
); or download the free app to your mobile device.
For questions about this news release, please contact Clayton Burke at 515-290-2376 or clayton.burke@iowadot.us.
Wednesday, October 1, 2025
I Spy on the Trails - September 2025
| Foggy morning start on the bluffside Image - Kris Lawson |
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| At Frontenac State Park Nature School |
- alyssum, hoary

Dewy white heath aster - aster, blue wood
- aster, calico
- aster, Drummond’s
- aster, hairy
- aster, large-leaved
- aster, silky
- aster, smooth blue
- aster, white heath
- aster, white panicle
- black-eyed Susan
- blazing star, rough
- boneset, false
- buttercup, prairie
- cardinal flower
- cliffbrake, western dwarf

Drug eyebright
Ely MN - compassplant
- coneflower, grey-headed
- everlasting, pearly
- eyebright, drug
- fern, brittle bladder-
- fern, bulblet bladder-
- fern, interrupted
- fern, lady
- fern, northern maidenhair
- fern, sensitive
- fern, spinulose wood
- fern, sweet
- fleabane, prairie
- hawkweed, narrowleaf
- hawkweed, orange
- hawkweed, smooth
- Jerusalem, artichoke
- jewelweed, orange
- jewelweed, yellow
- goldenrod, Canada
- goldenrod, elmleaf
- goldenrod, field
- goldenrod, giant
- goldenrod, gray
- goldenrod, Missouri

Whorled milkweed flower - goldenrod, showy
- goldenrod, stiff
- goldenrod, tall
- goldenrod, zigzag
- milkweed, whorled
- primrose, evening
- snakeroot, white
- spurge, flowering
- sunflower, fewleaf
- sunflower, false
- sunflower, stiff
- tansy, common
- thistle, field
- vervain, blue
- vervain, hoary
- violet, bird’sfoot
- wild bergamot
- wormwood, field
- woundwort, marsh
- yarrow
- bushclover, roundhead
- cinquefoil, tall
- coreopsis, prairie

Goat’s rue, Ely MN - fameflower
- goat's rue
- goldenrod, showy
- Jack-in-the pulpit
- leadplant
- loosestrife, fringed
- milkweed, common
- partridge pea
- Pasqueflower, eastern
- puccoon, hairy (Carolina)
- sagebrush, white
- sweet cecily
- tarragon,
- thimbleweed, cylindrical
Fruited:
- bittersweet, American
- carrionflower, midwestern
- cucumber, wild

Midwestern carrionflower fruit - prairie rose
- Solomon's seal, false
- spikenard, American
- cattail
- flatsedge, tall
- grass, bluestem big
- grass, bluestem little
- grass, eyelash
- grass, beardless wildrye
- grass, Canada wildrye
- grass, prairie dropseed
- grass, smooth brome
- indiangrass, yellow
- lovegrass, purple
- panicgrass, Scribner’s
- switchgrass
- cryptobiotic soil crust (cyanobacteria, mosses, lichen, algae, microfungi)
- feathermoss, red-stemmed
- forkmoss, broom
- lichen, eastern specked shield

Chicken of the woods - lichen, hooded sunburst
- lichen, mortar dot
- lichen, orange firedot
- mushroom, amanita, false death cap
- mushroom, artist's conk
- mushroom, blew it
- mushroom, bolete, slippery jack
- mushroom, chicken of the woods
- mushroom, deceiver, purple-gilled
- mushroom, dryad's saddle
- mushroom, fairy fingers, purple
- mushroom, flat oysterling
- mushroom, funnel cup
- mushroom, golden trumpet (fuzzy foot)
- mushroom, honey
- mushroom, inky
- mushroom, lactarius (milkcap)

Stocking webcap mushroom - mushroom, lobster
- mushroom, mycena, orange
- mushroom, oyster
- mushroom, puffball
- mushroom, rosy russula
- mushroom, shaggy mane inky cap
- mushroom, stocking webcap
- mushroom, russula, rosy (bloody brittle gill)
- mushroom, turkey tail
- mushroom, yellow club
Birds:
- blackbird, red-winged
- blue jay
- bluebird, eastern
- cardinal, northern
- cedar waxwing
- chickadee, black-capped
- crow, American
- eagle bald
- finch, house
- goldfinch, American
- grosbeak, rose-breasted
- grouse, ruffed
- hawk, red-tailed
- killdeer
- kingfisher, belted
- lark, horned
- nuthatch, red-breasted
- nuthatch, white-breasted

Palm warbler
Image - Merlin Bird ID - ovenbird
- owl, barred
- pheasant, ring-necked
- raven
- robin, American
- sparrow, house
- sparrow, Lincoln's
- sparrow, savanna
- sparrow, swamp
- sparrow, vesper
- sparrow, white-throated
- thrush, hermit
- thrush, gray-cheeked
- thrush, water
- vireo, red-eyed
- vireo, yellow-throated
- warbler, palm
- warbler, yellow-rumped
- wood pewee, eastern
- woodpecker, hairy
- woodpecker, pileated
- woodpecker, red-bellied
- woodpecker, red-headed
- crane, sandhill
- goose, Canada
- heron, great blue
- loon, common
- pelican, American
- teal, blue-winged
- wood duck
- beetle, end band net-winged
- beetle, goldenrod soldier

Leonard’s skipper butterfly
Image - Kris Lawson - bumblebee, brown-belted
- bumblebee, common eastern
- bumblebee, half-black
- bumblebee, two-spotted
- bumblebee, yellow
- butterfly, clouded yellow
- butterfly, Leonard’s skipper
- butterfly, pearl copper
- butterfly, pearl crescent
- butterfly, regal fritillary
- butterfly, Monarch
- butterfly, mourning cloak
- caterpillar, milkweed tussock moth
- damselfly, tule bluet
- dragonfly, autumn meadowhawk
- dragonfly, green darner
- dragonfly, black saddlebags
What are YOU seeing on your hikes?
A month of hikes
Hikes below in colored, bold type or underlined have links to previous posts OR descriptions/location of the trails found online.
Bluffside Park, Winona MN (2); Holland Sand Prairie, Holmen WI (2), Frontenac State Park, Old Frontenac MN (2); Weaver Sand Dunes, Kellogg, MN (2); Wagon Wheel Trail, La Crescent MN; Hubbard Hills, Viroqua WI; Riverside Park/Marsh Trails, La Crosse WI (2); Amnicon Falls State Park, Superior WI; Echo Trail Road, Ely, MN; Gunflint Trail Road, Grand Marais, MN; Lytle's Landing, Brice Prairie WI, La Crosse River State Trail, La Crosse WI
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| Undulating sand dunes at Kellogg Weaver Dunes Image -Nola Larson |
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.
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| What bee is that? Image - Kris Lawson |


































