[Magdalen] The Prairie in Winter

cantor03 at aol.com cantor03 at aol.com
Thu Dec 27 20:06:50 UTC 2018


I'm not sure that fire in, say, Eastern Montana, provokes theclimax prairie that predominates there.  There simply is notenough rainfall to sustain growth of trees.
That is not the case in Southern Wisconsin and Northern Illinois wherethe natural biome would be deciduous forest without human intervention.In the Prairie Wedge, that intervention was perpetuated by the AmericanIndians.
As much as I admire the American Indian (Native American) spirituality,and also feel strongly that they have been given a bum rap by the
dominant Western culture secondary to European immigration, AmericanIndians were not perfect in their husbandry in North America.  Theannihilation of quite a number of animal species due to over-hunting isone of those imperfections.
I can't help but be just a little amused at my own Alma Mater's fascinationwith the "restoration" of prairie which is actually an artificial and technicallyunnatural condition for the territory known as the Prairie Wedge.
Blame my tree mania for my feelings, here.  I'll take a deciduous forestover grassland any day.
I should mention here my best college friend, Charles Sommers, whocommitted suicide during the months I was in re-hab five years ago.He was a botanist by training, and a protege of Dr. Curtis, well knownUW-Madison botanist.  Charles loved the prairies.  As an undergraduate,he was brilliant, and could have easily walked into a medical career, butloved his plants too much.  I miss him terribly.
I would be remiss, however, not to compliment you on your photos.  It'shard to photograph prairie.

David S.
In a message dated 12/27/2018 2:01:24 PM Eastern Standard Time, jhandsfield at att.net writes:

All prairie is a fire climax biome.
 



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