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  • The sun sets over a fence in the Sandhills of Nebraska.
    Environment08.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes over the Platte River in Nebraska at sunset during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group50.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes gather on the sandbars of the Platte River in Nebraska just after sunset during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group42.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes fly into the Platte River in Nebraska at sunset on their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group41.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-A Whitetail Deer fawn just after sunset. The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group106.JPG
  • Alaska2010.-The sunset glows off of the Talkeetna River as it setys behind Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
    Jacobson Legal Group88.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes fly into the Platte River in Nebraska at sunset on their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group43.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.- A group of Wild Bergamot (Monarda fistulosa) at sunset. The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group137.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Pale Purple Coneflower, (Echinacea pallida), sticks up high above the prairie at sunset. The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group126.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes over the Platte River in Nebraska just after sunset during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group48.JPG
  • Alaska2010.-The sunset glows off of the Talkeetna River as it setys behind Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
    _MG_1211.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-White Campion (Silene latifolia) at sunset. The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group112.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes fly into the Platte River in Nebraska at sunset on their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group40.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090022.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3077_WBNP.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3076_WBNP.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    1061_WhiteWilderness.JPG
  • table
    075_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    073_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • table
    074_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    071_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes, 500,000 strong, fly into the Platte River in Nebraska during their annual spring migration.  Cranes are the oldest living birds on the planet dating back 10,000 years.  The Platte River Valley is the most important stopover on the migration.  The river provides a perfect spot to rest and food is abundant in the nearby fields.  The energy gained along the Platte River allow the cranes to finish their migration as far north as Alaska.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    066_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    062_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    058_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    056_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes, 500,000 strong, fly into the Platte River in Nebraska during their annual spring migration.  Cranes are the oldest living birds on the planet dating back 10,000 years.  The Platte River Valley is the most important stopover on the migration.  The river provides a perfect spot to rest and food is abundant in the nearby fields.  The energy gained along the Platte River allow the cranes to finish their migration as far north as Alaska.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    050_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes, 500,000 strong, fly into the Platte River in Nebraska during their annual spring migration.  Cranes are the oldest living birds on the planet dating back 10,000 years.  The Platte River Valley is the most important stopover on the migration.  The river provides a perfect spot to rest and food is abundant in the nearby fields.  The energy gained along the Platte River allow the cranes to finish their migration as far north as Alaska.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    047_PlatteRiver.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3016_2014_Beargrease.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3015_2014_Beargrease.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3014_2014_Beargrease.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3010_2014_Beargrease.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    3002_2014_Beargrease.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes, 500,000 strong, fly into the Platte River in Nebraska during their annual spring migration.  Cranes are the oldest living birds on the planet dating back 10,000 years.  The Platte River Valley is the most important stopover on the migration.  The river provides a perfect spot to rest and food is abundant in the nearby fields.  The energy gained along the Platte River allow the cranes to finish their migration as far north as Alaska.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Environment07.JPG
  • A Sandhill Crane takes flight from a Canadian prairie.
    Environment09.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1174.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1152.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1147.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1131.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1132.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1130.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1129.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1126.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1122.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1121.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1117.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1116.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1097.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1092.JPG
  • Photographs of people and places in Wisconsin
    Wisconsin's Great Places_1088.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    TL-110922-Prairie-213619.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    TL-110726-Prairie-2136141.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-White Campion (Silene latifolia). The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    TL-110628-Prairie-2136159.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Oak Savanna.  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    TL-110617-Prairie-2136134.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Large-Flowered Beard Tongue (Penstemon grandiflorus) with dew.  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    TL-110617-Prairie-2136126.JPG
  • International Crane Foundation restored praire.
    _TL13125.JPG
  • International Crane Foundation restored praire.
    _MG_0397.JPG
  • 56th annual rodeo and fair on the Cheyenne River Reservation.
    Jacobson Legal Group161.JPG
  • 56th annual rodeo and fair on the Cheyenne River Reservation.
    Jacobson Legal Group159.JPG
  • 56th annual rodeo and fair on the Cheyenne River Reservation.
    Jacobson Legal Group155.JPG
  • 56th annual rodeo and fair on the Cheyenne River Reservation.
    Jacobson Legal Group152.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie  Fall has taken over on the prairie.
    Jacobson Legal Group148.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Looking to the sky from the floor of the prairie.  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group145.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    Jacobson Legal Group132.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Coreopsis (Coreopsis palmata) near Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa).  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group124.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Big Bluestem (Andropogon gerardii) with a drop of water over a Prairie Coreopsis (Coreopsis palmata).  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group123.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Common Spiderwart (Tradescantia ohiensis) holds water after a rain.  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group120.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Naked Sunflower (Helianthus occidentalis). The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group119.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Sunrise with ground fog.
    Jacobson Legal Group115.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Sunflower (Helianthuys pauciflorus) stands tall in the prairie.  The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group116.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-White Campion (Silene latifolia). The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group111.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group107.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-The International Crane Foundation's (ICF) mission is to conserve cranes and the ecosystems, or landscapes, on which they depend. In 1980 ICF began restoring native prairie, savanna, wetland, and woodland communities on the newly acquired 160 acre property north of Baraboo, Wisconsin.  The site now serves as an outdoor laboratory with over 100 acres of restored landscapes alongside another 60 acres of natural landscape, where the process of restoration can be explored and the lessons applied worldwide.
    Jacobson Legal Group102.JPG
  • Alaska2010.-The sun sets over Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
    Jacobson Legal Group83.JPG
  • Wisconsin's Last Great Places_2009.-Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group63.JPG
  • Wisconsin's Last Great Places_2009.-Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group61.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes do a mating dance in the early morning light along the Platte River in Nebraska during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group51.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes fly into the Platte River in Nebraska as the sun sets during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group49.JPG
  • A deer stands in the shallow water of the Platte River in Nebraska to look at Sandhill Cranes who have gathered their during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group20.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes over thePlatte River in Nebraska during their annual migration north.
    Jacobson Legal Group19.JPG
  • Alaska2010.-The sun sets over Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
    _MG_1170.JPG
  • Alaska2010.-The sun shines on Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
    _E1C1531.JPG
  • Alaska2010.-The sun shines on Denali the largest mountain in North America located in Denali National Park Alaska.
    _E1C1512.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2500.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2446.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2413.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2401.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2347.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2339.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2324.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_2302.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090068.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090067.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090059.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090057.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090055.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090047.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090038.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090034.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090032.JPG
  • Nebraska2009.-Sandhill Cranes and Prairie Chickens along with landscapes of the Great Plains.  Photo's by Tom Lynn
    Nebraska 20090031.JPG
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