Southern Idaho is made up of the sagebrush steppe - a wonderful ecosystem full of life and beauty. (Though I didn't think so when I first moved here in 1994.) The area is sometimes referred to as a cold or high desert. Many people see it as a wasteland, but if one looks, one can find vast amounts of beauty and life. Unfortunately, the sagebrush steppe is dwindling in size due to special interest groups. Much of what does remain is badly altered. Luckily, there are people working to preserve this amazing habitat.
Here is the riparian zone of North Cottonwood Creek - the creek's dry of course. Sadly, the cottonwoods are now far and few between.
This is opposite of the creek - quite a starling difference in flora and color schemes.
Looking to the right...
and looking to the left - quite the contrast!
Willows with their seeds surrounded in cottony down, ready to float in the wind and begin new life.
Which way, which way?
Looking Upstream...
I was very disappointed to find LOTS of trash - beer bottles, shotgun shells, plastic bags, pop bottles and cans, and the usual-out-in-the-boonies junk that seems to plague most isolated places. I can never understand how people can go out and enjoy these beautiful places and then leave their litter spread about. So careless and disrespectful they are!
Willows in a Sea of Sagebrush
Sun Shining Through the Cottonwood Tree
© 2007 SegoLily
2 comments:
oops; I left my comment on the previous post, but I meant it for this one. I love the South Hills too. There is so much beauty in nature that each person in any part of the world lives near some of that beauty. All worth preserving and caring about.
oooooo soooo pretty! i'm very glad you're doing this, paige. i look at those pictures and am instantly transported to my youth! so familiar and a part of me. of us all...
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