DETAILS FROM THE HOLLOW


Stream at the bottom of the canyon, White Pine Hollow State Preserve, Eastern Iowa

White Pine Hollow, a densely wooded state preserve, is said to be the only old-growth patch of white pines still growing in Iowa. (source: Wikipedia) It is not very far from our home and last Sunday I thought it was time to revisit this interesting place of wilderness again. The old pines are impressive but it is the surrounding deciduous forest that gives the visitor at the bottom of the hollow a jungle-like feeling. A little caution is advised, especially if you hike with a dog, because at this time of the year you may have a good chance to pick up a tick in the woods. A nature lover who can overcome this fear is treated with a great wilderness experience. White Pine Hollow is said to contain 625 species of plants and two endangered species of animals. If macro or detail photography is your field of interest you will be in photographers heaven. A day with a slight overcast is perfect and I recommend to travel light, because it can be very humid in the canyon. Also a pair of good hiking boots and the use of common sense in this wild environment is not a bad idea for a trip to White Pine Hollow.

All images: Nikon Z6II, Nikkor 70-200mm / f4, FTZ adapter

Wild Geranium, easy to find almost everywhere

A mossy log of a fallen tree provides the base of life for this mushroom

 

A HIDDEN GEM


White Pine Hollow Preserve, Iowa

One of the hidden gems in the landscape of the driftless area here is White Pine Hollow State Preserve near the little town of Luxemburg, Iowa. You can’t drive in and I recommend some solid hiking boots if you like to explore this area. Except for the hollow that leads down to the bottom of the canyon there are no trails and some sense of direction is recommended. If you don’t mind a hike through washed out and rocky terrain and can master a couple of small river crossings, you will be rewarded with tranquility and the beauty of nature. And now, during these unusual times, it is a place where social distancing is easy to maintain. We hiked yesterday for 3 1/2 hours and didn’t see a single soul. Well, have a look what we found…

Snow Trillium (Trillium nivale)

Big patches of Wild Leek (Allium tricoccum)

Round-lobed Hepatica (Anemone americana)

AT THE BOTTOM OF THE CANYON


White Pine Hollow State Preserve, Iowa -----

After a week in Chicago I was longing for a real nature experience, away from urban areas, and I don’t know any better place around here than White Pine Hollow State Preserve near Luxemburg, Iowa. This is rugged terrain and getting down to the bottom of this canyon took some hiking efforts and requires solid boots and an outfit that can withstand thorns and stinging nettles. If you make it, you will be rewarded by solitude and a beautiful nature. The recent flash flood has changed the canyon, rocks have been moved and some of the gullies are a lot deeper. The leaves have started falling off the trees, although we don’t have really fall colors here yet.

Contrast becomes very high if the sun is out and exposure can be a problem. Starting the hike in the afternoon, when the light became softer but still reached the bottom of the canyon, was the way to go today.

NATURE CLICKS #293 - PICKEREL FROG


I do not like the very warm and humid weather we have this labor day weekend but this frog didn’t seem to mind it. I found this little guy on the bottom of a canyon in the White Pine Hollow State Preserve, near Luxembourg, Iowa. I’m not one hundred percent sure if this is a young Pickerel Frog because I only have this image from its side. In Iowa the Pickerel Frog is only found in the very eastern part along the Mississippi. There is a chance that this is its cousin, the more common Northern Leopard Frog, but it looks like this frog has a paired series of squarish blotches extending down the back between the dorsolateral folds. No other frog in Iowa has paired squarish blotches. (source: The Salamanders and Frogs of Iowa, by J.L. Christansen and R.M. Bailey, Nov. 1991). I guess next time I pay a little more attention to the details while I see the critter … 😉

Both images: Nikon D750, Nikkor 24-120mm / f4

The second photo shows the habitat, a slow running stream that runs between the rock walls of the canyon, and pools filled with crystal clear water. The reason I went to White Pine Hollow was because I wanted to try out a new photo technique that actually required fast running water. There wasn’t enough water coming down the creek this time and so this project had to be put on hold, but coming back with these photos was a nice reward for hiking into the canyon despite heat and humidity.