Chicago Sun-Times

PULLED IN BY THE PRAIRIE

More people recognizin­g the magic of Midewin

- DALE BOWMAN dbowman@suntimes.com | @BowmanOuts­ide DALE BOWMAN/FOR THE SUN-TIMES

Yellow and white rolled over the greens toward the horizon, and I unwound. Usually, I wade into Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie on my summer visit when there’s more purple and blue. This year I visited earlier, and yellows (false sunflowers, yellow coneflower, rosinweed) and whites (daisy fleabane, Queen Anne’s lace) flowed. Tick trefoil splashed spots of purple. Compass plants, strikingly as tall as 10 feet, towered over the other prairie plants.

I should be able to ID more prairie plants on my own. But I checked these with Allison Cisneros, The Nature Conservanc­y’s Midewin project manager.

Learning to appreciate prairie has been a life learning experience for me, largely because of Midewin, the 19,161 acres north of Wilmington in southweste­rn Will County. I grew up on a farm. My initial response to prairies was to wonder, “What’s the big deal? They’re overgrown pastures.”

Far from it. Through my visits with people from TNC and The Wetlands Initiative, who are working on restoratio­n projects, I learned how much variety in plant life there is in a tallgrass prairie, and how many links there are between plant and animal.

On July 7, I had a four-hour window between dropping our youngest at a Yu-Gi-Oh! tournament and picking him up. When I rolled into the Iron Bridge Trailhead on Route 53 north of the Welcome Center, it was jumping. Visitors to Midewin spiked after bison were reintroduc­ed in the fall of 2015. Laura Lewis had figures from the Welcome Center and Iron Bridge (counted seasonally) showing that average attendance from 2010 to 2014 was around 6,000. It jumped to 9,200 in 2015. In 2016, the first full year with bison, it was 12,629.

I am not alone in being drawn more to Midewin.

Midewin is also, as Rob Abouchar put it while looking at my smiling selfie, “one of your happy places.” By far, my happiest place is the darkness the hour before shooting time on opening day of deer season. After that, it would be hiking/ fishing a remote mountain stream for native brook trout; wet-wading the Kankakee River and casting topwaters for smallmouth bass; doing anything by the “South Rocks” at Montrose Harbor; then Midewin.

Midewin is growing to be a happy place for many. I bumped into more first- or second-timers than ever before.

A couple bicycled past — another growing trend. Donna Barrie of Double B Ranch in Scherervil­le, looking quite regal on her 19-year-old Tennessee Walker, raved about the wonders. She learned of Midewin because of the nearby Abraham Lincoln National Cemetery.

A couple from Decatur said the first time they were at Midewin, it reminded them of Colorado. I see the prairie connection.

Swallows, dragonflie­s and damselflie­s flew. I heard birds I should know by call. I did recognize the trilling of red-winged blackbirds and the crowing of rooster pheasants.

A couple from Morgan Park, married for 56 years, came with their daughter. Time disappeare­d chatting with them.

It was time.

The ranger trailer at Iron Bridge is open 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekends through Oct. 28. That’s the best starting place, and volunteers lead guided hikes to see bison. Be aware, the bison are not always where they may be viewed. There is far more than just bison, though.

Read more on Midewin at fs.usda.gov/midewin.

 ??  ?? Whites and yellows are the dominant colors at Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie. Allison Cisneros identified the whites as daisy fleabane, and most of the yellows are false sunflowers with yellow coneflower. Midewin is one of Dale Bowman’s “happy...
Whites and yellows are the dominant colors at Midewin National Tallgrass Prairie. Allison Cisneros identified the whites as daisy fleabane, and most of the yellows are false sunflowers with yellow coneflower. Midewin is one of Dale Bowman’s “happy...

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