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Sundrops on the Range
This past weekend I spent Saturday morning helping with wildflower tours at the Bison Range. The Friends of Sandsage Bison Range have this wildflower tour event every other year, so this was my first year participating. Despite the dry prairie conditions, I think we had a great time. It's amazing that just a week or two before the prairie was teeming with amazing wildflowers and now their gone.
Some of the plants we managed to find include spiderwort, sand lily, prickly poppy, purple poppy mallow, tall velvet gaura, purple prairie clover, sun drops, white aster, sand snowball verbena, buffalo gourd, sunflower, wild four o'clock, prickly pear cactus, pink barrel cactus (without flowers unfortunately), and a few others. I was excited because we saw 2 ornate box turtles, burrowing owls, a 6+ foot bull snake (who didn't appreciate being cornered under a sagebrush by a certain tour guide named Chelsea), 3 adult male turkeys, pheasants, quail, and of course bison. We had the whole herd walk by the tour trailer, and one of the cows had a cow when she couldn't find her calf who was on the other side of the trailer. I've never heard a bison grunt that much before! Oh, someone also found an intact snake skeleton! Too cool!
Then on Sunday I gave another tour to a youth church group from Kansas City. I think several of the teenage passengers were quite horrified when I found a dead turtle with the head and feet still attached. It's a really nice specimen and completely intact, so I had them pass it around to look at. For kids who live in Kansas City and wear flip flops to the prairie, it was probably pretty gross. I decided not to pass around the bison "meadow muffin" lest anyone jump out of the trailer trying to avoid it. Hopefully they will share those one-of-a-kind experiences with their friends and family and spread the appreciation for our native prairies!