Cora Young, 8, holds her brother, Oliver, 4 months, as her brother Charlie, 5, stands next to her while their mother, Jessica Young, all of Edwardsville, makes a portrait on Friday at the Columbia Bottom Conservation Area in Spanish Lake.
July marks the season of firework spectaculars, summer fun and massive sunflower blooms in north St. Louis County.
The Missouri Department of Conservation for years has planted sunflowers in more than a dozen fields throughout the 4,300-acre Columbia Bottom Conservation Area in Spanish Lake.
The fields are part of the department's habitat management for mourning doves. The area becomes a popular destination for dove hunters each September.
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“The large flowers supply seeds that entice the birds, and their lofty stalks create cover for the hunters who pursue them,” the agency explains on its website. “Sunflowers also benefit a wide variety of other birds and pollinators.”
The blooms typically remain open from early July to mid-August, depending on weather conditions.
The site has become popular with for nature photographers and selfie enthusiasts alike. Drivers can easily spot the golden fields from Riverview Drive, north of Interstate 270.
Wanda Randolph, 66, of Fenton, stretches to make a photograph of an expansive field of sunflowers on Friday at the Columbia Bottom Conservation Area in Spanish Lake.
Sunflowers bloom on Friday at the Columbia Bottom Conservation Area in Spanish Lake. Missouri Department of Conservation staff have been planting sunflowers for years as part of their management for mourning doves, which inhabit the area each September.
Dan McKeever. 69, makes a photograph of Michelle McKeever, 63, and Murray, their 8-year-old beagle, all of Affton, in front of a field of sunflowers on Friday at the Columbia Bottom Conservation Area.