Flowers in full bloom

Jared Gorrell

Lamp Editor

In the woods every year, an explosion happens.  This is not a firey explosion of pyrotechnics, but it is equally bright and beautiful in its own way.  It is the explosion of spring ephemerals.  An ephemeral is a special kind of plant that blooms for a short time, then dies away.  Tulips, daffodils, and crocuses are ephemerals grown in gardens. However, here in Illinois we have our own ephemerals, designed to grow, flower, and set seed just before trees leaf out in the spring. Unlike the bulbs we grow in our garden, most Illinois woodland ephemerals are dicots, a different group of plants  Other plants may keep their leaves after spring, but they, too, participate in the spring wildflower show. Once the leaves come on the trees, the show fades away with the light, and the woods become their shadowy self.  The explosion ends, to be renewed again next year.

Here are some of the plants you might see:

 

 

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Spring Beauty

Spring Beauties are our most common woodland flower, turning many of our parks white and pink in spring.  Every plant has slight variations in its flowers, ranging from pink and deeply veined to pure, unveined white.

 

Dutchman’s Breeches

Dutchman’s Breeches, one of our most humorously named wildflowers, are so called because early English settlers thought that the inflated flowers looked like the pants, or breeches, of Dutch settlers.  This ephemeral is closely related to the garden flower Bleeding Heart.

 

Blue-eyed Mary

Technically this plant can’t be found near Springfield, but look at those flowers and tell me again they cannot be on this list!  Blue-eyed Mary plants are annuals, only blooming for one spring before dying.  They grow along creeks and in lowland areas.

 

Bloodroot

Bloodroot is named for the sap in its roots, used to produce a red dye.  However, as this dye is toxic, it would be best to let the plant grow and admire its flowers.

 

Trillium

In trillium, the various parts of the plant, the petals, sepals, and leaves, are all in threes.  This unique symmetry is one reason I enjoy finding trilliums.  Another interesting fact about trilliums is that they take, on average, seven years to flower from seed.  As a result, trillium do not grow fast or spread quickly. If you find trillium in the woods, let them be.

 

Trout Lily

Also called Dogtooth Violet, Trout Lilies are neither lilies nor violets.  However, they do get a lot of common names, including adder’s tongue, yellow snowdrop, and fawnlily.  They grow in colonies, with only a limited number of plants within that colony blooming each spring.

 

Violets

Fun fact- not all violets are violet.  Violets can be yellow, white, purple, pink, green, or a mix of all of the above.  Violets, especially the pictured Common Blue Violet, actually bloom all year long.  They produce showy, pollinated flowers in the spring and often again in the fall.  During the summer, they have unopened flowers that produce seeds genetically identical to the parent plant.  With all their different flower types, violets have managed to self-sow themselves all across our landscapes.

 

Phlox

There are many species of Phlox, some of which bloom in the summer in our gardens.  However, the most common wild species seen locally is the Woodland Phlox, a light-blue flowered plant that is one of the later woodland plants to flower in the spring.

 

Students visits mosque, part 2

By Jacob Schmedeke

Lamp Writer

“Ten years from now, 20 years from now, you’ll probably remember going here,” said Tim McKenzie, outside a Springfield mosque. “ Having a little uncomfortable feeling, having to watch people bend over, doing it yourself, you know praying, taking off your shoes, the whole entire thing, you’ll remember that for years.”

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Students visit mosque, Part 1

By Jacob Schmedeke       

Lamp Writer

Springfield – As I arrived at the mosque, I was running behind as usual. Coming from a Lil’ Wayne concert the night before at the University of Illinois, the drive from Champaign to Springfield gave me time to recuperate. With the hangover subsiding, I was ready to experience a Friday noon prayer at the Islamic Society of Greater Springfield’s mosque once again. This would be the second time attending in a year with fellow students and my teacher Tim McKenzie, assistant professor of journalism and humanities.

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Mushroom season is here

By Cheyenne Gain

Lamp staff

JACKSONVILLE — Logan Scott found a morel mushroom this season that was 10 inches tall. Not quite a record breaker, but still one to keep a picture of. The 20-year-old was with his girlfriend when they found it, along with 9.5 pounds of mushrooms that day, and found another 10 pounds the next day.  

“We were walking along and there were some in the dirt roadway her grandparents had made, I looked in the woods a little and saw more. We went in a little farther and I saw it,” Scott said.

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Going near, going far

By Karlee Thompson

Lamp writer

SPRINGFIELD — As the end of the semester nears, Loggers’ futures are only beginning.

Students are not only anxious about summer, but their new life journeys as well. Many students are choosing to stay local longer, while others plan to go far from home. Student’s come from all different backgrounds with many different life and career paths in mind.

The Lamp recently caught up with five Lincoln Land student moving on this fall to find out where they’re going and what they liked about their time here.

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Madison Mings

Lamp Staff

Springfield— Lincoln Land Community College held there 2017 Juried Student Art Show on April 13 in the James S. Murray gallery exhibit.

The art show included 3-D designs, paintings, photography, life drawings, digital media and more.

There were sixty-four art students that submitted a total of 164 entries, representing 13 of LLCC’s studio classes.

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Farewell from the Lamp

Almost two years ago, I was asked to be a part of the Lamp. I never thought that I would one day serve as editor of the student newspaper, let alone for an entire year. I have learned so much in my time at Lincoln Land and feel prepared to take the next major step in my life. As I prepare to leave, I would like to share what I have learned, and write up a quick guide for the next editor of the Lamp.

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Scraping scrap

By Andrew Paisley

Lamp staff

As customers enter Ben Curtin’s shop in Stonington, they see the sparks fly, hear the exhaust fan wail, and feel the massive air compressor vibrate. They also hear the crisp sound of the CNC plasma cutter swiftly slicing through steel, producing the signs that many of you see on doors as you drive through not just the neighborhoods of Christian County, but all over the state of Illinois.

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