Nebraskaland

Dec 2025 Singles for Web

NEBRASKAland Magazine is dedicated to outstanding photography and informative writing with an engaging mix of articles and photos highlighting Nebraska’s outdoor activities, parklands, wildlife, history and people.

Issue link: https://mag.outdoornebraska.gov/i/1542285

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32 Nebraskaland • December 2025 Black Walnuts The Value Of Story and photos by Gerry Steinauer, Botanist y earliest memory of black walnuts is the sharp crack of a hammer striking their shells. My dad loved black walnut (Juglans nigra) nutmeats in his brownies, a taste he likely developed during his childhood in Pawnee County, where this native tree is common. As a kid, sitting on the driveway, I would crack the nuts' tough shells with a hammer and dig out the kernels from their tangled chambers to fulfill my job in brownie making. Not all the kernels made it into the brownies; I ate plenty right out of the shell, savoring their sweet, earthy flavor. In college, I lived with friends in Vermillion, South Dakota, where tall walnut trees shaded the backyard. On autumn weekends, while grilling on the porch, we gathered fallen walnuts in their green husks and hurled them at a metal garbage can 30 yards away, scoring points for landing a walnut in the can or hitting the outside. It was great fun. Later in life, as a botanist, I came to know black walnuts in a more professional light. During plant surveys and prescribed burns at Indian Cave State Park, I was awed by the occasional giant growing in deep, moist, never-logged ravines along the Missouri River bluffs. Their massive, branchless trunks, the envy of loggers, filled my mind with thoughts of primeval forest. The morning sun highlights black walnuts in Walnut Grove Park in Millard. The grove was planted in the late 1800s and used as a picnic spot by the early 1900s. M

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