Colorful Rolling Grasslands of Palouse
The Palouse is a region of the northwestern United States,
encompassing parts of southeastern Washington, north central Idaho and,
in some definitions, extending south into northeast Oregon. Located just
south of Spokane, the Palouse is a rich farming area of some 3,000
square miles primarily producing wheat and legumes. This area is
characterized by beautiful rolling hills, lush green dunes and rich deep
soil. For photographers, the Palouse is an exciting area to explore, in
large measure because it is comparatively unknown.
The peculiar
and picturesque silt dunes of the Palouse Prairie were formed thousands
of years ago during the ice ages. Blown in from the glacial outwash
plains to the west and south, the Palouse hills consist of more or less
random humps and hollows. The steepest slopes may reach 50% slope while
the lowest low ranges from 5 to 130 cm deep. Large areas of level land
are rare.
The vast expanses of the rolling Palouse hills were once
covered with native grassland before European settlers moved into the
area and began intensive farming. Unlike some other North American
grasslands, such as the short grass prairies of the Great Plains and
tall grass prairies of the Midwest, neither fires nor extensive grazing
by large herbivores were historically a part of the Palouse grassland
ecology. When European settlers moved into the Palouse at the end of the
nineteenth century, they brought both fire and grazers. These two
influences had a huge impact on the native plants.
Now the majority of the Palouse prairie is farmland and towns. It is estimated that less than 1% of the native Palouse vegetation remains making the Palouse prairie one of the most endangered ecosystems. Evidence of the Palouse prairie’s wild and diverse vegetation still exist along the roads, railroad tracks, corners of fields and lots, in pastures, along streams, open areas of pine forests and steep or rocky hills.
These amazing photos of the Palouse were taken by Ryan McGinty.
The following collection of photos were taken by Chris Froelich