On
the way to the park we all chose a few animals we thought lived in the forest.
We saw everything we named except an owl. There were so many birds we didn't
know what we were seeing (or hearing). The deer are friendly and graze close
to the edge of the path and up near the road. They do not run away when
humans pass by. We even had our dog with us on a hike and they were not
intimidated by her either. Ducks swam nearby in the Illinois River. Bunnies
ate grass at the campground. The kids found caterpillars, spiders, snakes
and all sorts of fun creatures.
The area's lush vegetation supports an abundant wildlife and bird population,
including woodchucks, moles, vireos and catbirds. Wood ducks that nest
in hollow trees occasionally can be seen paddling along the river's edge.
Evidence of beavers and muskrats can be seen as you walk along the River
Trail.
Black
oak, red cedar and white oak, as well as white pine and white cedar, grow
on the drier, sandy bluff tops. Yellowbellied sapsuckers drill parallel
rows of small holes on cedar trees and return to feed on sap and small
insects. Serviceberry and northern honeysuckle--shrubs that prefer a well-drained
area--attract scarlet tangers and cedar waxwings.
Farther away from the bluffs, red oaks and hickories predominate in deeper
soils. Typical plants characteristic of the forest floor include the American
witch hazel, black huckleberry and bracken fern. Nuthatches and chickadees
feed on nuts, seeds and insects found in the bark of trees. Raccoons and
flying squirrels spend many hours searching for and gathering berries
and nuts.
At
the forest edge, bright blue indigo buntings flit through the wild crab
apple and plum trees that skirt the former glacial till prairie, while
cottontail rabbits scamper through the bluestem and Indian grasses. In
the sandy prairie soil, prickly pear cactus grows alongside lead plant,
compass plant and rattlesnake master. White-tailed deer come to munch
on the sumac, and red-tailed hawks soar overhead in search of voles and
field mice.
Throughout spring and summer, wildflowers are as plentiful and varied
as they are beautiful. Included in the floral array are colorful lichens
and mosses, marsh marigolds, wild iris, trillium and Dutchman's breeches,
plus purple-flowered spiderworts, nodding or orange columbine and the
magenta blooms of shooting star.
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