Shoreline Plants

Plant Science &
Conservation

Garden Stories

Splendor in the Tallgrass

When my mother first moved from England to Chicago in the late 1950s, she鈥檇 never heard of a prairie. In England, a grassland is called a meadow. But every kid in the neighborhood near Chicago鈥檚 Midway Airport called the empty, overgrown lots between buildings, and the grassy areas in the giant railroad yard, 鈥渢he prairie.鈥 
 

Prairie Splender - flowers in Chicago pavement

And that鈥檚 where we played, tracking tadpoles in the spring, collecting bunches of wildflowers, and using homemade butterfly nets in late summer to catch monarchs as they sipped nectar on goldenrod. They weren鈥檛 鈥渞eal鈥 prairies, of course, because by then, most had disappeared.

Prairie Splender

To make a prairie
Emily Dickinson (1830-1886)

To make a prairie it takes a clover and one bee,
one clover, and a bee.
And revery.
The revery alone will do,
If bees are few.

Long before urban sprawl鈥攁bout 225 years ago鈥攖allgrass prairie spanned more than 170 million acres. In Illinois, where Indigenous Peoples were the original stewards of the land, more than 22 million acres was covered in prairie grasses and wildflowers, some that reached 10 feet tall and had roots that easily grew 11 feet deep. (At the time, the Chicago region was home to the Council of Three Fires: the Odawa, Ojibwe, and Potawatomi Nations.) 

Today, only 2,300 acres of that precious original Illinois habitat remain鈥攊n both private and public lands, many of them state natural areas, in small pioneer cemeteries, in random spots along railroad tracks, and in botanical gardens.

You can get a little taste of tallgrass wildness at the Garden鈥檚 Dixon Prairie鈥攁 15-acre re-creation of six prairie habitats found in our state: tallgrass prairie, bur oak savanna, sand prairie, gravel hill prairie, fen, and wet prairie.

The goal has been to exhibit and develop the different types of prairie communities that once made up the state鈥檚 northeastern tallgrass prairie, remnants of which still exist.

鈥淎ll of these habitats are part of the prairie mosaic,鈥 says Joan O鈥橲haughnessy, the Garden鈥檚 prairie and river senior ecologist. It鈥檚 challenging for her to suggest the 鈥渂est鈥 time to visit the prairie because it鈥檚 constantly changing鈥攅very week, every month, there鈥檚 something different to see, hear, and smell.

鈥淚 love the changing palette of the prairie, changing not only daily but with the seasons and from year to year.鈥

 

Prairie Splender - Spring

Prairie Splender - Summer

Prairie Splender - Fall

Prairie Splender - Winter

 

The Dixon Prairie is a recreated prairie. 鈥淭he soils and the hydrology are the foundations for the different habitats,鈥 she explained. 鈥淭hese different types of prairies are communities of plants and other organisms. The composition of the communities may change over time because they aren鈥檛 suited to the conditions, due to, for example, plant competition, and other factors favorable to some plants and unfavorable to others.鈥 The prairie is like a jazz melody where the players improvise, coming and going, and making a splash at different times during the year-long performance.

鈥淚 like the open space of a prairie,鈥 O鈥橲haughnessy said. 鈥淭he wet prairie on Marsh Island provides a glimpse of the prairie鈥檚 vastness. Dixon Prairie has so many types of prairie, all of which can be seen along the prairie paths,鈥 she said. It鈥檚 taken a great deal of thought and effort to bring it to life since it was constructed and planted on "engineered" soils between l982 and l998. Different soils were brought in to develop the different prairie habitats鈥攇ravel for the gravel hill, sand for the sand prairie. Parts of the mesic prairie and bur oak savanna were developed with prairie soil "rescued" from development projects.

Prairie Splender

Prairie Splender

Prairie Splender

Prairie Splender

One of O鈥橲haughnessy鈥檚 favorite times in the prairie is the early spring. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 when plants are just emerging, the green vegetation just breaking the prairie soil.鈥 The first to rise above this layer are the striking flowers of shooting stars (Dodecatheon meadi). As weeks progress, more things pop up. 鈥淣ext are the blues of Ohio spiderwort (Tradescantia ohiensis) a contrast to the yellow of ragwort (Packera paupercula), followed by the whites of foxglove beard tongue (Penstemon digitalis) and so on.鈥

The gravel prairie has a rich display of wildflowers from mid-June through early July. 鈥淚 love that prairie鈥擨鈥檓 drawn to it, and it鈥檚 one of our richest areas in terms of diversity.鈥 Many plants have purplish or blue flowers such as Ohio spiderwort and purple prairie clover (Dalia purpurea), just two of the many under-appreciated and underused plants in home gardens. 鈥淏y mid-July there鈥檚 quite a range of wildflowers, the yellow-grey coneflower (Ratibida pinnata) and one of our native roses, the pasture rose (Rosa carolina).鈥

Prairie Splender

Prairie Splender

Prairie Splender

Prairie Splender

Come autumn, the prairie features colorful asters, goldenrods, and native grasses鈥攄ifferent ones in the many prairie habitats. There鈥檚 much more to see鈥攎ore than 250 species of native plants on this open, rolling landscape surrounded by water. O鈥橲haughnessy also enjoys working in the early morning at the prairie. 鈥淚 like going out then when the dew is on the plants, the rising sunlight shining on the droplets.鈥

When the prairie moves into winter dormancy, there are still many things to admire. 鈥淭here鈥檚 snow highlighting the structure of the plants鈥攖he standing dead vegetation and the prior season鈥檚 seed heads. They provide texture to the prairie.鈥 It鈥檚 another good reason to stroll through this unique habitat any time of the year, starting right now.