Kaw Valley Almanac

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Jun2

This entry was posted on June 2, 2012, in Prairie, phenology, nature observation, June and tagged common milkweed, monarch butterfly, Venus transit. Leave a comment

Jun1

This entry was posted on June 1, 2012, in June, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged common milkweed, monarch butterfly, wheat harvest. Leave a comment

May31

This entry was posted on May 31, 2012, in June, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged common milkweed, monarch butterfly, Prairie Nature Center, prairie wildflowers. Leave a comment

May30

This entry was posted on May 30, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged common milkweed, monarch butterfly, nighthawk. Leave a comment

May29

This entry was posted on May 29, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged butterfly milkweed, common milkweed, monarch butterfly. Leave a comment

May29

This entry was posted on May 29, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged black-eyed susan, common milkweed, monarch butterfly. Leave a comment

May26

This entry was posted on May 26, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged eclipse, prairie wildflowers. Leave a comment

May25

This entry was posted on May 25, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged eclipse, Memorial Day, peonies. Leave a comment

May24

This entry was posted on May 24, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged eclipse, hackberry butterfly. Leave a comment

May23

This entry was posted on May 23, 2012, in May, nature observation, phenology, Prairie and tagged butterflies, butterfly milkweed, eclipse. Leave a comment

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Kaw Valley Almanac

Ken Lassman has been keeping this almanac for over a decade, providing daily installments for the drive through window of Z's Divine Espresso customers to provide them hints on what to look for in nature as they do their daily commute. He invites you to share your observations and photos in the comments section. You can find his book Wild Douglas County at The Raven Bookstore and The Community Mercantile in Lawrence. If you want to see these posts in person, visit either of Z's Divine Espresso locations and grab a freshly roasted cup of coffee while you're at it!

June: Buffalo Pawing Earth Moon

The Osage, like many of the eastern horticultural tribes who inhabited the woodland/prairie transition zone from Minnesota to Texas, planted extensive gardens in the spring, then left the children and grandparents to tend them while most of the tribe went west to hunt bison. This is reflected in the name of the summer moons, which chronicle the behavior of the primary protein source for these tribes.
from Wild Douglas County, by Ken Lassman, p. 59

A Memorial Day elegy

This Memorial Day, families across the country will go to cemeteries in droves to re-connnect with their predecessors, placing flowers and recounting stories about their husbands, wives, parents, grandparents and on and on. This practice has been a tradition in my own family and in many of my friends' family as well, going back generations. In the Kaw Valley, and many other places across the United States, one of the ways families planned for this day was to plant a wonderful perennial, the peony, amongst the gravestones in the family plot. These ornamentals pushed up its leaves in the spring, creating deep green bushes that would reliably produce buds that were tended by ants, opening up just in time for producing single or multiple layered blossoms on Memorial Day. When I was a child, there were peony gardens in North Lawrence where you could go and get bouquets of the extravagant blossoms to put at the graveside if your family hadn't planted them.


Most area cemeteries this time of year are still dotted with peony bushes, planted near so many loved ones who have passed away. But alas, a sad thing has happened in my lifetime: the seasonal shift caused by global climate change has shifted the blossoming time of the peony away from the last week of May to mid-May or earlier. This year, where we are seeing unprecedentedly early things, the peonies were in full bloom on May 5 and have been long gone by Memorial Day. The North Lawrence gardens that sold the peonies have disappeared not only because the changing practices of newer generations, but also because they, too have bloomed and disappeared by the appointed weekend. Back at the cemetery, the dark green bushes stand without blossoms, a testament on the one hand to the foresight of our ancestors, while at the same time a testament to the unanticipated consequences of humanity's impact on our planet.


Visit a prairie this week and you'll see the forward-shifted blossoms of many potential substitute peonies that we could start planting amongst the family graves, in anticipation of a warmer, earlier Memorial Day climate: the butterfly milkweed is a showy possibility, as is echinacea, or delphinium, or perhaps the longer blooming gaillardia, coreopsis, or naturalized oxeye daisy. The more drought tolerant yucca has a glorious blossom that has been blooming around Memorial Day this year, and might be a good hedge against the uncertainties of the climate shifts in coming decades and centuries.


But please don't dig up the peony bushes. Just as the grave markers remind us of those who came before us, the peony is a beautiful but poignant reminder of a climate gone by. Perhaps their blossoms in early May or even earlier in coming decades will draw us to our family plots to enjoy the fruits of our ancestors forethought and to ponder our relationship with the rest of our planet.


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Kaw Valley Almanac in Photos

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Almanac Over Time

  • June 2012
  • May 2012
  • April 2012
  • March 2012
  • February 2012
  • January 2012

Kaw Valley Links

Kansas Area Watershed Council
Kansas Birding Listserv
Sustainability Action Network
Lawrence Sustainability Network
Planet Drum Foundation
Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg Poet Laureate blog
Kansas Land Trust
Alliance for Wild Ethics
Heartland All Species Foundation
Stan Slaughter, Eco-Troubadour
Community Mercantile Educational Foundation
Earth Observatory Feature: The Carbon Cycle
Rolling Prairie Alliance

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