Home » Stories » Photography » Patterns from Above

Patterns from Above

aerial photography patterns crop field
Light and dark lines in an alfalfa field surround a wooded draw in Nance County.

Story and photos by Eric Fowler

I fell in love with flying in small planes when I was a little twerp, riding in the back seat of one my dad was piloting.

My first foray into aerial photography came during an internship at Chadron State College. That assignment was a big one: Photograph the entirety of the Oregon and California trails from Missouri to the West Coast. Wow.

So when I joined the staff at Nebraskaland Magazine 21 years ago, I quickly raised my hand when the editors were looking for someone to capture aerial photos of the Lewis and Clark Trail along the Missouri River. Ever since, I’ve spent hundreds of hours — I wish I had kept track — with my camera pointed out the window of a Cessna, capturing images for anyone at Game and Parks who asked.

Terraced crop field aerial
Terraces wrap around a hilltop in a hay field in Washington County. Photo by Eric Fowler.

Most flight plans have involved documenting Aquatic Habitat Program projects for our fisheries division. But there are always photo ops between the lakes. Rivers, tree rows, crop fields and highways contain or create interesting patterns and lines on the landscape below that beg to be photographed.

The perspective from 500 to a few thousand feet is entirely different than it is from the ground. It’s why some people pay extra for a window seat when they fly. And why my mantra is “You buy, I’ll fly.”  ■

A swirl of sandbars fade into the clear waters of Lake McConaughy from a sandy point at No Name Bay.
Hay field aerial
Hay bales dot a terraced field in Gage County.
Boats fish flooded trees rising above the surface of Lake Wanahoo.
Field spider web aerial
Buffer strips and terraces resemble a spider web in a crop field in Gage County.
Aki boat weaves its way across on Harlan County Lake.
Crop field patterns
An aerial photo shows patterns in a cornfield, evidence of the former course of the Elkhorn River near
Wisner in Dodge County. Meandering rivers often change course, and crops grow differently in the varied soil types that remain in their former paths.
Sandhills aerial
Wind-deposited sand dunes stretch out across a Sandhills pasture in northwestern Loup County.
Sandbar shark
In fall 2011, receding floodwaters from the Missouri River left a maze of sandbars on Schilling WMA in Cass County, including one that took on the appearance of a shark.
Pressey aerial
The intersection of harvested and standing crops in food plots, grasslands and rows of trees and brush
create a patchwork on Pressey Wildlife Management Area in Custer County.
Calamus River aerial
The meandering Calamus River snakes its way through Calamus WMA in Loup County.
Dryland crop field aerial
Wheat and other dryland crop fields checker the tablelands between the North and South Platte rivers in Keith County.
Smile pattern in field
Tree groves and a low spot form a smiley face in a cornfield south of Plattsmouth in Cass County.