
Posted on January 11, 2019 by Ethan Freese
On the night of September 1, 2018, I was in downtown Lincoln, enthusiastically waiting to watch the first Cornhusker football game of the Scott Frost era. Right around kickoff, a large thunderstorm moved into Lincoln and lingered. After a nearly three hour delay, the game was canceled, a first since 1943. The rain continued for […]

Posted on December 17, 2018 by Carlee Koehler
Nature. It’s grand mountain valleys, and gusts of wind sweeping through streets past squinty-eyed businessmen. Music. It’s the anchoring drone of a cello and the tune of creaking trees. Mind. Consciousness- it’s in the future and the past; the world of what-if and the realm of what’s-it-like. The energy of them […]

Posted on December 10, 2018 by Erin McCready
Martha Shulski serves as the state climatologist for Nebraska. She grew up with a passion for weather and continues to show it in her work. Her goal is to help others understand how weather and climate affects them. We all talk about the weather. That’s something that is not controversial. Everybody can strike up a […]

Posted on April 6, 2017 by Ethan Freese
For thousands of years sandhill cranes have flocked to the Platte River Valley to replenish their energy reserves before they head north to their breeding grounds in the Arctic. The last two years I have been fortunate enough to regularly observe and photograph these prehistoric birds during their time in Nebraska. However photographing cranes comes […]

Posted on January 23, 2017 by Carlee Koehler
A swath of freezing rain was coming to glaze the central United States in a sheet of ice. The storm even earned itself a name- Jupiter. Fresh produce was clearing the shelves of the grocery stores, residents kept the salt or kitty litter close at hand, tarps and towels were tied over windshields, and fuel […]