Jennifer assisted Steve with stewardship on one of his far flung preserves in southern Ohio on a warm 50 or so degree day. A combination of geology, topography and geography result in a spectacular natural area with everything from dry oak uplands to hemlock-lined canyons to yellow buckeye-dotted valleys.
There is a memorial on the preserve: this speaks for itself!
Green stink bug, leaf litter and deer scat play their part in the a complex world underfoot - the forest floor.
Awesome foliose lichen with marginal cilia (resembles eyelashes - look closely at Jennifer's left index finger.)
Sprouting yellow buckeye (Aesculus flava)...
We both loved the hemlock lined gorge.
Steve noted a warbler nest over this gorge last summer. What an incredible place for a nest - attached to the very tips of a flimsy branch and over water for protection, with more than adequate food present, no doubt.
Can you say moss?! This moss was at least an inch thick. Jennifer couldn't stop touching it...the squishiness was just too cool.
Another warm day took us over to Lawrence Woods, a large (1,035 acres!) state nature preserve known for its red-headed woodpeckers, short-eared owls and...
one of our most favorite ecosystems ever...wooded wetlands.
This oak tree amazed both of us. Surely it was a Native American trail marker tree.
One of our favorite books helped us identify cool invertebrate signs. Here's a promethea moth cocoon, which will metamorphose in the spring into one of our beautiful large silk moths.
Bagworm cocoon, which also yields a type of moth...
Blister beetle (Meloe sp.)...
Often animals shy from humans, but the signs left behind say enough...
Sunset always comes too soon when we are on nature outings! We'll have to plan a backpacking trip soon so that we can stay outdoors past sundown...