Goose Pond

Fire Science and the Art of the Burn

I attended my first “burn” in 1992 while a graduate student at UW-Madison.  I was hooked.  The sights, sounds, smell and the skill exhibited by the burn team made me want to learn more.  Then life got in the way.

Fast forward to 2010.

In 2010 I retired from a career in Landscape Architecture and embarked on a new career path in Photography.  I began an ongoing project documenting the activity of local burn teams throughout the area.

The pandemic put a hold on burn activity for 2020, which gave me the opportunity to review my work and go forward when the world started opening up again.

Last year 2020 (fall) and this year 2021 (spring) I worked with Graham Steinhauer and the team creating imagery from several burns at the Goose Pond Sanctuary.

Photo by Carolyn Knorr

Photo by Carolyn Knorr

The question I get asked the most is “why”.

My reason for making these images is two-fold.  First, I want to document and bring awareness to the public of the importance of the science of burning.  Wisconsin is fortunate to have remnants of prairie, oak savanna and wetlands that are on conservation lands and are managed through burning.  These tracts provide shelter to a rich variety of plants and animals.  Habitats that would otherwise be overtaken by invasive species, if not for the burning.

The second reason I make these images is for the beauty and artistic nature of the burns themselves.  They are a metaphor for so many human emotions.  Life, death, rebirth, renewal to name a few.

My goal with this project is to heighten awareness of the importance of land management through burning and to ultimately present this project in book form and a traveling photography exhibit.

Written by Carolyn S. Knorr, fine art photographer and Goose Pond Sanctuary volunteer

Letting it snow in a Winter Wonderland

Letting it snow in a Winter Wonderland

Our good folks at Goose Pond and Faville Grove had a different and much healthier attitude toward the snow. On Friday morning, I was lucky enough to be among the dozen or so volunteers who finished sowing a new prairie at the newly acquired Benade tract just down the road from Goose Pond. Just about as the last bucket was thrown in the truck (I think you could make the case that buckets are among the most essential pieces of equipment for prairie management—you can't collect or sow seeds without them), a mix of rain and snow started. With the forecast of snow a near certainty, we couldn't have been happier. Nothing is better for a winter prairie planting then a nice blanket of new snow. It keeps the seeds in place and the freezing and moisture really help with germination.

Photo by Drew Harry

Searching for dragons and damsels

Searching for dragons and damsels

This year and next year we're going to put a special emphasis on dragonflies and damselflies. Our goal with your help is to find as many species as possible at Goose Pond, Erstad Prairie/Schoenberg Marsh, and Otsego Marsh.

Could you help us search, identify, and tally them? This is an independently completed citizen science project. Details and guidance are below!

Photo by Graham Steinhauer

Goose Pond - Mallard Pond - Swan Pond

On December 1st, Mark Martin and JD Arnston counted 12,500 mallards, 3,800 Canada geese, and 23 tundra swans at Madison Audubon's Goose Pond. The previous high mallard count was 5,000 mallards by John Romano on November 11, 2010. On December 2nd, Graham Steinhauer and Mark counted 1,149 tundra swans at Goose Pond breaking Carl Schwartz's record of 1,100 set on November 9, 2017. In early afternoon, Mark found a picked cornfield with 1,560 swans about 2.5 miles southwest of Goose Pond. The swans were about .5 miles from Meek Road and Highway I in the middle of about 600 acres of picked corn. Mark returned to Goose Pond and counted 1,050 swans on the pond. Graham watched the swans from the cornfield return to Goose Pond near dusk. The afternoon all time high record was 2,610 tundra swans!

Photo by Arlene Koziol

Our Pond Runneth Over

Goose Pond is a prairie pothole, a pond that is fed only by precipitation and run-off. Because of this, Goose Pond water levels change significantly only two or three days a year after a major run-off event. But right now, we’re seeing something we’ve never seen before! Goose Pond is normally four feet deep, but today, it’s at least seven.

Deep snow cover and ice, frozen ground, rain, and high temperatures resulted in record flooding and runoff levels. There is so much water in our above-ground system that you could now kayak from Ankenbrandt Prairie (east of Goose Pond) into Lake Mendota and only have to get out to maneuver around culverts.

Photo by Mark Martin and Sue Foote-Martin