As the days get shorter, you might be looking for off-the-beaten paths where you can soak up the rest of the season. I’ve got just the place for you—the Barbara Brown Nature Reserve.
![Barbara Brown Nature Reserve](/sites/default/files/images/blog/nature_reserve_path_landscape.jpg)
Tucked away on the ºÚÁϳԹÏÍø’s southeast side, just north of Dundee Road, the Reserve is relatively unknown, even to longtime visitors. As an assistant ecologist, I’m in the Reserve a lot, and often by myself. I’m always puzzled that so few people have discovered it.
Here are just a few reasons to visit:
The color purple—and more
The fall colors are amazing—purple asters, yellow goldenrods, reddish-purple nannyberry. Native goldenrods include blue-stemmed goldenrod (Solidago caesia), a wildflower with blue-green stems. Follow the winding paths through the Reserve’s aquatic, prairie, and woodland habitats.
The drama of birds for even non-birders
It’s fascinating to watch the migratory birds on their way south, or to just pick a quiet spot to observe . Look for great blue herons, perched on logs in the water and ready to hunt. They’ll sneak up on a fish, spear it, toss it in the air, and swallow it whole.
You can also keep an eye out for hawks and bald eagles, or come across a colorful wood duck. And if you’re lucky, you’ll see an elusive black-crowned night heron, fishing along the shoreline.
Nope, you’re not in a movie theater
If you’re in the Reserve’s prairie when the breeze is just right, you might pick up on the fragrance of prairie dropseed, a short, mound-forming prairie grass. It smells like burnt and/or buttered popcorn.
Call of the wild
After successful restoration work, thriving native plant species now provide food and habitat for wildlife, including short-tailed shrews, leopard frogs, moths, and butterflies.
A picture-perfect pond
The restoration work also allows visitors to get a great view of the 6-acre pond, framed with color. Look for swamp white oaks turning a nice burnt yellow, shagbark and bitternut hickories turning vibrant yellow, and hazelnut trees turning shades of yellow, orange, and red.
My favorite place in the Reserve is the southeast corner. I love the views across the pond, with the Garden’s other shorelines in the distance. Every day, I see something new, which makes it all the more exciting.