Natural North Dakota

“When I was a kid, my mom told me to ‘Go play outside.’ So I did. And I have been enjoying it ever since!”
-Chuck Lura
Tune in each Saturday and Sunday at 8:35 am CT for Chuck Lura’s “Natural North Dakota” or listen online here (audio is posted shortly after the show airs).
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Autumn 2008 - Autumn 2009 - Autumn 2010 – Summer 2011 Archive Autumn 2011September 3 Mourning Doves September 10 Highbush Cranberry Jelly September 17 Mink September 24 Knife River Flint October 1 Sentinel Butte October 8 Rose Hip Tea October 15 Wooly Bears October 22 Small Birds. Long Migration. October 29 Autumn Leaves are Falling November 5 Apple Creek November 12 Whispering Juncos November 19 Bittersweet November 26 Birds and Berries |
Winter 2011-12December 3 Antlers and Horns December 10 Geminid Meteor Shower December 17 Winter Finch Forecast December 24 Pronghorn December 31 Snowy Owls January 7 Winter Constellations January 14 Shrikes January 21 Heritage of Pine January 28 Truffles February 4 Kidder County Outwash Plain |
Spring 2012 |
Summer 2012 |
About Chuck Lura: Chuck has a broad knowledge of “Natural North Dakota” and loves sharing that knowledge with others. Since 2005 he has written a weekly column, “Naturalist at Large,” for North Dakota’s newest newspaper, the Lake Metigoshe Mirror. His columns also appear under “The Naturalist” in several other weekly newspapers across North Dakota. A native of northern Iowa, Lura received an associate degree from Waldorf College in Forest City, Iowa. He then went on to receive his bachelor’s degree in biology from South Dakota State University in Brookings, South Dakota. After teaching high school biology in South Dakota and Iowa, he returned to SDSU to obtain his master’s degree and then on for his doctorate in botany from North Dakota State University in Fargo. Lura has been a biology professor at MSU-Bottineau since 1984. His teaching responsibilities have been principally biology, botany, and range management. He has also conducted and published research on ecological aspects of grasslands in the northern Great Plains. Chuck lives at Lake Metigoshe with his wife Mary (LD teacher at Bottineau High School), an Old English sheepdog, two cats, and lots of houseplants. They have three grown children: Erik, John, and Anna Sill. Since childhood Chuck has spent much of his spare time enjoying nature. In his spare time he can often be found exploring North Dakota’s prairies, forest, and waters. He is an avid cross country skier (perhaps compulsive) and cyclist. His other outdoor activities include “botanizing,” as well as canoeing, hunting, and fishing. Natural North Dakota is supported by NDSU Central Grasslands Research Extension Center and Minot State University-Bottineau, and by the members of Prairie Public. Thanks to Sunny 101.9 in Bottineau for their recording services.
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