J“Demon Slayer: Kimetsu No Yaiba”: Fathom Events.JVirtual Trivia Night: Ann Arbor Adventure Club.JTuesday English Country Dance: Ann Arbor Community of Traditional Music and Dance.JPolka Jam Session: American Legion Hall.JMusic Series: A2 Summer Streets (Main Street Area Association).JHuron Valley Harmonizers Chapter of the Barbershop Harmony Society.J“The Book of Disbelieving”: Literati Bookstore.J“Kayla Powers: Place-Based Art”: Ann Arbor District Library Artist Talk.JTuesday Night Workouts: Ann Arbor Track Club.JDirt Rides: Ann Arbor Bicycle Touring Society. J“Dog and Suds Ride”: Ann Arbor Bicycle Touring Society.J“Beat the Heat: No-Cook Veggie Dishes”: The Farm at Trinity Health (formerly St.JPaint the Town-Summer Art Fair Prelude: CultureVerse/Main Street Ann Arbor/The Guild of Artists & Artisans.J“Nature Play Evening Pop-Ups”: Matthaei Botanical Gardens.J“Intro to 3D Design”: Ann Arbor District Library.JGame Night: Ann Arbor District Library.J2023 Cruise Nights: Chelsea Classic Cruisers.J“Fiddle 'N Fun with Mister Joel”: AADL Downtown.JEuchre: Pittsfield Township Senior Center.JBridge: U-M Turner Senior Wellness Program.J“Investigate Labs”: U-M Museum of Natural History.JChair Yoga Flow - Tuesdays with Paula Burke.J"Tai Chi For All Levels": Ann Arbor Senior Center.J“Argus Kids Camp: Build Your Own Salad”: Argus Farm Stop.J"Online Meditation Drop-In": U-M Turner Senior Wellness Program.JMah-jongg: Pittsfield Township Senior Center.Newborns will be up on their feet walking around within fifteen minutes after birth. Thirty-five or forty new calves are expected this year. The birthing season is April through June. It determines the animals’ position in the herd–the bovine equivalent of chickens’ pecking order. Crocker says each bison engages in this test of strength every day. If you do come, keep an eye out for animals going head to head, shoving each other back and forth. Visitors are welcome, however the best time time for bison viewing is between seven and eleven in the morning. We had assumed the bison were at Domino’s Farms primarily as a tourist attraction, but Crocker says they’re a tribute to Michigan’s historic landscape, with Prairie House tenants the primary audience. Unfortunately, the timing of this over-the-hill disappearance is not predictable. If they’re not there either, most likely they’ve roamed to the other side of the hill, where they’re visible only from the freeway. If they’re not in sight, walk north past the parking lots toward the model of the never-built “leaning tower of pizza.” The herd is sometimes spread out in that field or huddled at the base of the tower. Follow the signage for lobbies C-E, park, and look for bison. The bison are currently pastured just west of the Prairie House office building. Once the youngster matures, it will replace one of the adults.ĭrivers sometimes get a fleeting glimpse of the herd from northbound U.S.-23 and eastbound M-14, but for a better view visit the Domino’s Farms campus on Earhart Rd. The herd is about half-and-half cows and calves, plus two adult bulls and one bull calf. To prevent inbreeding, the herd is refreshed every year, with the vast majority of calves being sold off and new bloodlines introduced. Patz explains that Domino’s started out with two bison and currently has around eighty. Anyone can see this spectacle at Domino’s Farms, which hosts a bison herd year-round.ĭomino’s Farms’ John Petz, director of real estate and public affairs, and Todd Crocker, herd manager, filled us in. When they move, it’s like watching a field of one-ton boulders come alive. North America’s biggest land animals, bison can weigh up to 2,000 pounds. Woodland bison may have roamed here as late as the 1790s. But Phil Myers, emeritus curator of mammals at the U-M Museum of Zoology, tells us that these iconic animals were also native to Michigan. We have known since childhood that huge herds of bison–America’s national mammal–once thundered across the Great Plains.
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