About

Bill Kleiman started this blogsite n 2013. In 2024 I welcome Julianne Mason and Mike Saxton as co-administrators of this Grassland Restoration Network (GRN) blog.  Julianne’s day job is as a Restoration Program Coordinator with the Forest Preserves of Will County, Illinois.  Mike is the manager of Ecological Restoration & Land Stewardship of the Shaw Nature Reserve for the Missouri Botanical Garden.   Julianne, Mike and Bill encourage others to contribute blog posts.  By sharing lessons learned we help advance our field.   Whether you work in the Midwest, Great Plains or perhaps the Southeast or some other continent- share your lessons with us.

Top reasons to write a blog post:

  • It is easy and fun to do
  • It is free
  • Your ideas are stored with tags on the blog-site so they are easily found on web searches
  • You can include links in your post to longer reports or articles

The Grassland Restoration Network (GRN) is a loose affiliation of projects and project staff engaged in the restoration of diverse native grassland communities.  The Network was formed in 2003 by The Nature Conservancy but its members represent a wide variety of organizations, government agencies, and private landowners. There are three major objectives of the Grassland Restoration Network:

  1. Facilitate communication and cross-site learning among large-scale grassland restoration sites.
  2. Identify and close critical knowledge gaps regarding grassland restoration and measures of restoration success.
  3. Foster a “grassland restoration culture” that increases the quantity and quality of grassland restoration.

The Network sponsors annual workshops, generally in the summer or early fall, at which participants meet at a restoration site, tour nearby restoration projects, and discuss topics such as seed harvest and planting methods, plant propagation techniques, invasive species challenges, ideas for long-term prairie management, evaluation of restoration success, and research needs and results.

10 Responses to About

  1. Can someone direct me to some published literature on the efficacy (or lack thereof) of importation of topsoil (A horizon) for restoration of native vegetation? TIA

  2. Ann Werner's avatar Ann Werner says:

    Is anyone from Quad City area interested in gathering occasionally to share information on restoration work?

  3. Ann Werner's avatar Ann Werner says:

    Is anyone from Quad City area interested in gathering occasionally to share information on restoration work?

  4. Pete Jackson's avatar Pete Jackson says:

    I have an idea for a post on GRN if there is someone who can address this issue. The issue is, what is the best strategy for addressing the situation where aggressive, tall natives such as Eutrochium purpureum or Agastache spp. are seeded in and quickly become dominant in an oak woodland or savanna? A similar prairie scenario may occur with Arnoglossum atriplicifolium. Do we mow or cut them back and seed in shorter stature species? Also, going forward, I presume these species should not be included in seed mixes?

    • jmasonfpdwc's avatar jmasonfpdwc says:

      Hi Pete, that sounds like a good topic! Would you be willing to write a short article with a few photos? That will get the comment section and discussion flowing!

  5. Lucinda's avatar Lucinda says:

    Enjoying your site.

    i did some tests on areas in my 3yr old EQIP planting with spring clethodim to knock back the cool season grass (blue mostly), i really liked the results. I would like to spray the full 5 acres this next spring, but i am concerned about the impact to the pollinators. Literature says “practically nontoxic to birds and honeybees”. Your thoughts/experience?

    NE Wisconsin

  6. Morgan Hyde's avatar Morgan Hyde says:

    If someone wanted to get involved with this network, how would they go about doing that?

  7. Ash's avatar Ash says:

    hey, I’m in north Alabama but kayak and hike a lot. Is there any way for me to help spread seeds when I see clearings. I’d love to be sent some sends to spread anywhere honestly if that’s possible.

    • Seeds are powerful things, both good and bad. Seeds should not be spread from places more than say an hours drive away. And seed should not be planted without a landowner’s permission. The safest seed movement would be small amounts from healthy looking native populations to plant nearby in degraded places. You want to move native plants, not invasive plants that you mis-identified. You want to do good, not harm.

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