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  • Open mine hearing at the Wisconsin State Capital.
    people015.JPG
  • Flying after release.  Four Whooping Cranes take to flight to get their bearings after release.
    Hatch to Release 040.JPG
  • A juvenile Whooping Crane jumps up on an early morning walk.
    Hatch to Release 036.JPG
  • A group of Direct Autumn Release Whooping Cranes fly over the marsh.
    Hatch to Release 032.JPG
  • Whooping Cranes forage for food in a marsh under the watch of costumed aviculturists.
    Hatch to Release 030.JPG
  • Two of the Direct Autumn Release Whooping start to show their white feather as they mature.
    Hatch to Release 019.JPG
  • A young Whooping Crane takes some food from the puppet head of the costumed aviculturist.
    Hatch to Release 006.JPG
  • The light brigade protests the open pit mining law.
    Editorial02.JPG
  • Release day for the Whooping Cranes.  All 9 of the 2014 Direct Autumn Release Whooping Cranes were gathered into their boxes and taking away from their pen and released into the wild.  On there own for the first time.
    Hatch to Release 037.JPG
  • A costumed aviculturist looks out into the marsh for the 9 Whooping Cranes.
    Hatch to Release 035.JPG
  • The 2013 Direct Autumn Release Whooping Cranes walk through the prairie at sunrise.
    Hatch to Release 029.JPG
  • The puppet head of an adult Whooping Crane as worn by a costumed aviculturist.
    Hatch to Release 023.JPG
  • A young Whooping Crane stretches it's wings on a marsh walk.
    Hatch to Release 007.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _TL10523.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    Jacobson Legal Group144.JPG
  • Opposition to an open pit mine hearing held at the Wisconsin State Capital.
    Editorial01.JPG
  • Release day for the Whooping Cranes.  All 9 of the 2014 Direct Autumn Release Whooping Cranes were gathered into their boxes and taking away from their pen and released into the wild.  On there own for the first time.
    Hatch to Release 038.JPG
  • Release day for the Whooping Cranes.  All 9 of the 2014 Direct Autumn Release Whooping Cranes were gathered into their boxes and taking away from their pen and released into the wild.  On there own for the first time.
    Hatch to Release 039.JPG
  • The Direct Autumn Release Whooping Cranes are kept in a safe inclosure at night until the time of their release.
    Hatch to Release 034.JPG
  • A juvenile Whooping Crane adjusts its feathers.
    Hatch to Release 033.JPG
  • As the Whooping Crane grow and mature they fly further distances away from the costumed aviculturists.
    Hatch to Release 028.JPG
  • A juvenile Whooping Crane looks at the photographer using a camera while in a crane costume.
    Hatch to Release 026.JPG
  • A juvenile Whooping Crane stands in a prairie.
    Hatch to Release 025.JPG
  • As a young Whooping Crane takes flight and fledges for the first time as it follows two costumed aviculturists who are running and flapping their arms to simulate take off.
    Hatch to Release 022.JPG
  • A juvenile Whooping Crane shows off its feathers.
    Hatch to Release 021.JPG
  • As the Whooping Cranes grow they take longer walks and learn to feed themselves and become more independent.
    Hatch to Release 018.JPG
  • Young Whooping Cranes flap their wings showing of their primary feathers.
    Hatch to Release 016.JPG
  • The legs of a young Whooping Crane as it walks through a pond.
    Hatch to Release 014.JPG
  • A young Whooping Crane runs after a costumed aviculturist flapping its wings.
    Hatch to Release 013.JPG
  • Taking food from the parent is a natural event for a young Whooping Crane.  In the Direct Autumn release program costumed aviculturists raise the chicks just as a Whooping Crane parent would.
    Hatch to Release 009.JPG
  • A costumed aviculturist demonstrates how to forage for food in a pond to a young Whooping Crane.
    Hatch to Release 008.JPG
  • A costumed aviculturist takes a young Whooping Crane outside for the first time.  The endangered cranes are raised by humans in costume until there release into the wild.
    Hatch to Release 005.JPG
  • Exhausted after hatching from it's shell, a Whooping Cranes rests in an incubator at the International Crane Foundation.
    Hatch to Release 003.JPG
  • A young Whooping Crane looks toward a puppet for food in it's first month of life.  The Endangered Whooping Crane chicks are raised by aviculturists in costume until their release
    Hatch to Release 004.JPG
  • Kelly Maguire, aviculturist at the International Crane Foundation, listens for sound as she scratches a Whooping Crane egg.  The International Crane Foundations Direct Autumn Release program reintroduces the endangered Whooping Crane into the wild.  "Hatch to Release", is the story of Whooping Crane reintroduction.
    Hatch to Release 001.JPG
  • A endangered Whooping Crane pips it's shell during the hatch process.
    Hatch to Release 002.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    Jacobson Legal Group141.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    Jacobson Legal Group138.JPG
  • Stretching the wings in the morning sun.
    Hatch to Release 031.JPG
  • Taking flight.
    Hatch to Release 027.JPG
  • Juvenile Whooping Cranes take a prairie walk with costumed aviculturists.
    Hatch to Release 024.JPG
  • A costumed aviculturists feeds a juvenile Whooping Crane.
    Hatch to Release 020.JPG
  • A young Whooping Crane cleans itself.
    Hatch to Release 017.JPG
  • A young Whooping Crane forges for food.
    Hatch to Release 015.JPG
  • An endangered Whooping Crane chick takes a marsh walk with a costumed aviculturist learning to forge for food.
    Hatch to Release 011.JPG
  • Looking out from a blind window as an endangered Whooping Crane chick takes a marsh walk with a costumed aviculturist learning to forge for food.
    Hatch to Release 012.JPG
  • A Whooping Crane chick is given a vet check by a costumed aviculturists.
    Hatch to Release 010.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _TL10402.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    _MG_3829.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie
    Jacobson Legal Group142.JPG
  • Two Sandhill Cranes chicks take cover under their mother's wing as night fall.  Cranes nest in wetlands to have warning from predators.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group25.JPG
  • Two Sandhill Cranes with two chicks prepare their nest just after sunset.  Cranes nest in wetlands to have warning from predators.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group21.JPG
  • Two Sandhill Crane chicks stand on their nest with their mother at sunset.  Cranes nest in wetlands and take turns incubating the eggs until hatch about thirty days later.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group36.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes watch over their two eggs in their nest.  They nest in wetlands and take turns incubating the eggs until hatch about thirty days later.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group34.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes lead their chicks back to the nest.  Cranes nest in wetlands to have warning from predators.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group22.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes watch over their two eggs in their nest.  They nest in wetlands and take turns incubating the eggs until hatch about thirty days later.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group33.JPG
  • A Sandhill Crane with two chicks sits on her nest just after sunset.  Cranes nest in wetlands to have warning from predators.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group26.JPG
  • Sandhill Cranes chicks sit on the back of their mother who is on the nest.  They nest in wetlands to have warning from predators.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group24.JPG
  • A Sandhill Crane chick peaks out from it's mothers back as she sits on the nest.  Cranes nest in wetlands and take turns incubating the eggs until hatch about thirty days later.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group35.JPG
  • A Sandhill Crane leads two chicks back to the nest.  Cranes nest in wetlands to have warning from predators.  Photo by Tom Lynn
    Jacobson Legal Group23.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.-A butterfly makes the rounds through 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 Group146.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Grass at sunrise looks like it is on fire.  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 Group143.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-A Sandhill Crane before sunrise.  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 Group139.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
  • ICF_Prairie.-A butterfly makes the rounds through 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.
    TL-110808-Prairie-21361164.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Grass at sunrise looks like it is on fire.  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-110808-Prairie-21361162.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-A web with heavy dew at sunrise. 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 Group140.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
  • 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.-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
  • ICF_Prairie.-Dragon Fly sits on top of a stem. 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-110822-Prairie-2136154.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-An amazing cloud formation over 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.
    TL-110712-Prairie-21361105.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.
    TL-110712-Prairie-21361103.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.
    TL-110711-Prairie-2136178.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Butterfly Weed (Asclepias tuberosa) with an incoming storm. 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-110711-Prairie-2136172.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.- Western 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.
    TL-110628-Prairie-2136150.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Wild Lupine (Lupinus perennis). 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-110602-Prairie-2136114.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Smoke (Geum triflorum) and Wild Lupine (Lupinus perennis). 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-110602-Prairie-2136116.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Dropseed (Sporobolus heterolepis), rounded clump of prairie grass. 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.
    _MG_0422.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.- A group of Wild Bergamot (Monarda fistulosa). 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 Group136.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
  • ICF_Prairie.-Clouds form over 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 Group122.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Water gathers on leaves 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 Group118.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Common Spiderwort (Tradescantia ohiensis). 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 Group114.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Indian Grass (Sorghastrum nutans).  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 Group108.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Beard Tongue (Penstemon grandiflours) with heavy 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.
    Jacobson Legal Group101.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Wild Lupine (Lupinus perennis). 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 Group99.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Prairie Smoke (Geum triflorum) and Wild Lupine (Lupinus perennis). 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 Group98.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Sunrise with gound fog. 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-110713-Prairie-21361112.JPG
  • ICF_Prairie.-Wild Bergamot (Monarda fistulosa). 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-110713-Prairie-21361116.JPG
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