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Curious City

How a group of volunteers saved a rare Illinois wildflower

Curious City

WBEZ Chicago

Investigation, Chicago, Radio, Arts, Society & Culture, Public, Education, Curious, City

4.6661 Ratings

🗓️ 15 October 2025

⏱️ 20 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

The Kankakee mallow is one of the rarest plants on the continent, according to the Smithsonian Garden in Washington D.C. It’s a pink flower that grows on tall stalks and is native to just one small island in the middle of the Kankakee River, about an hour south of Chicago. But when botanist Rachel Goad paddled over to take a look back in 2014 with a group of native plant enthusiasts, instead they found an island overgrown with invasive honeysuckle. Was this special native plant gone for good? Perhaps, if not for the efforts of a small group of volunteers, initially led by conservationist Trevor Edmonson. “Hearing the phrase that the Kankakee mallow only grows on this island — anywhere in the world, like that is the extent of its remaining natural habitat — is such a draw for anybody, especially someone early on in their career,” Edmonson said. Today, reporter Claire Keenan-Kurgan from the Points North podcast at Interlochen Public Radio guides us on this floral rescue mission. Points North is a podcast that tells great stories from the Great Lakes. For more stories like this one, go to pointsnorthpodcast.org.

Transcript

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0:00.0

America is changing. And so is the world.

0:04.4

But what's happening in America isn't just the cause of global upheaval.

0:08.6

It's also a symptom of disruption that's happening everywhere.

0:12.4

I'm Asma Khalid in Washington, D.C.

0:14.7

I'm Tristan Redman in London, and this is the global story.

0:18.8

Every weekday will bring you a story from this intersection, where the world and America meet.

0:24.4

Listen on BBC.com or wherever you get your podcasts.

0:30.2

Curious City is supported by the Poetry Foundation, with a reminder that Chicago is the pulse of poetry.

0:37.5

Coming up, an evening of poetry and music, celebrating the Rapprary, Chicago's library, preserving rap and hip-hop as vital literary art forms.

0:47.1

October 16th at the Poetry Foundation Building in River North.

0:50.7

Learn more at poetryfoundation.org.

0:54.3

Sources and methods, the crown jewels of the intelligence community,

0:58.8

shorthand for, how do we know what's real, who told us?

1:02.6

If you have those answers, you're on the inside,

1:04.9

and NPR wants to bring you there.

1:07.1

From the Pentagon to the State Department to spy agencies,

1:10.3

listen to understand what's really happening and what it means for you.

1:14.0

Sources and Methods, the new National Security podcast from NPR.

1:18.6

Federal funding ended October 1st, and now it's up to you to keep your favorite programs on the air.

1:24.5

Every day this gap lingers, the shows and reporting you rely on are at risk. We've still got $400,000 left to close to the air. Every day this gap lingers, the shows and reporting you rely on are at risk.

1:29.1

We've still got $400,000 left to close our funding gap. The programs and conversations you

1:34.5

count on every day depend on your support. When you give now, you help close the gap and keep

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