I’ve been in a bit of a funk. I think largely because I’ve been busy with work to the point that I haven’t been spending enough time screwing around and playing with whatever is interesting to me in the moment.

All work and no play makes Jack a dull boy.

So tonight I’m hanging out with friends and wanted a hike beforehand. I took the opportunity to explore Northaven Trail by a friend’s house and was greeted with so many pocket prairies along the way.

27. Maximilian Sunflower | North Dallas | August, 2023

The prairie areas along Northaven Trail are maintained by Friends of Northaven Trail and provide a wonderful example of how so much of our land around North Texas could be better (and less expensively?) managed.

These pocket prairies capture and filter rainwater, sequester carbon, greatly reduce mowing, provide food and habitat for insects, small mammals, and birds, provide a sense of season and place, and are (arguably) absolutely beautiful to behold.

The whole of Dallas exists within the blackland prairie ecoregion of Texas. The blackland prairie is a tallgrass prairie, with grass plants up to 6ft tall, consisting of not only hundreds of species of grasses, but also hundreds if not thousands of different species of sedges and forbes as well. Trees and shrubs can also be found in this ecosystem dotting the landscape, and grouping around creeks and rivers.

28. Northaven Prairie | Northaven Trail, Dallas | August, 2023

There is currently less than 1% of the original blackland prairie ecosystem left. It has been systematically destroyed since the 1800s, starting with the European settlers who plowed the rich, black soil for agricultural use. The settlers had no real understanding of how Native Americans managed the land for thousands of years before them, and quickly destroyed everything, largely for a single cash crop: cotton. A prairie is a delicate ecosystem, and plowing it is akin to killing it.

We continue the destruction of our blackland prairie with continued development, while largely failing to do much of anything to account for the destruction of this ecosystem of abundance. We’re very good at building infrastructure, yes, but we do very little for the land and everything that depends on that land that we destroy in the process.

Most of our landscaping practices are akin to feeding our kids Happy Meals for literally every meal of their life. It’s not healthy, it’s not sustainable, and it’s sure to lead to problems over time. In fact, it already has. Luckily, we in Dallas seem to be in the beginning stages of changing our misguided land management practices.

29. Northaven Prairie | Northaven Trail, Dallas | August, 2023

When I come across areas that are landscaped well, that are restorative, abundant landscapes that give back more than they take, I get excited at sharing these spaces and the knowledge that goes into creating and maintaining them. I see a world that is very different from our current reality and is yet not so difficult to obtain — at least, technically so. But changing people’s perceptions is a difficult, time-consuming task. This is partly what this site is about — it’s why I’m here.

The walk itself was nice. We got a slight break from the heat and I saw plenty of people out walking and riding bikes through the neighborhood. And then I got a chance to hang out with some friends I hadn’t seen in a while. A great evening for sure.

DR.0008: Northaven Prairie | North Dallas | 2023.08.29 @ 19:18 | 2.78 mi | 56:49