Nebraska
The Northern Catalpa Tree | Nebraskaland Magazine
By Gerry Steinauer, Botanist
The northern catalpa is a tree you likely recognize but may not know by name. Perhaps you’ve seen it adorned with striking clusters of large, white flowers, standing out like a snow cone amid otherwise green woodlands. Or maybe, as a child, you were grudgingly sent outside to rake up its huge fallen leaves cluttering the yard. Most memorably, you and your friends may have ventured into the woods, plucked a few of the catalpa’s cigar-shaped seed pods and pretended to smoke them.
The tree is native to the central Mississippi River valley where it is called the Catawba tree (cuh-tah-buh). For reasons unknown, early settlers or botanists in this region named the tree after the Catawba people, a local Native American tribe. The northern catalpa has been widely planted in the eastern half of Nebraska, mainly as an ornamental and as a source of fence posts, where it has escaped cultivation and now grows in the wild in moist bottomlands with well-drained soils.
Several years ago, I gathered seed pods from a catalpa tree growing near an abandoned house up the road from our farm. I planted seeds in pots and transplanted several seedlings into our yard. I’ve been impressed by the trees’ rapid growth, shapely form and diversity of pollinators attracted to the flowers. Recently, I read that catalpa worms, a prized catfish bait, live on the trees. This summer I plan to pay even closer attention to this interesting tree … as I love to catfish.

Natural History
The northern catalpa is a stout-trunked tree that, in Nebraska’s drier climate, can reach about 40 feet in height and live up to 150 years in age. Its pale-colored wood is weak yet durable when in contact with the soil, making it historically popular for fence posts. To form the best post, saplings were cut back to the ground after the first or second year of growth and then only one or two of the best sprouts were left un-thinned to grow to post-size.
The tree’s telltale heart-shaped leaves can reach an impressive 4 to 10 inches long and 3 to 8 inches wide. The bell-shaped, 2-inch-long flowers bloom from late May to mid-June. The seed pods, which can reach an amazing 20 inches in length, ripen from green to purplish-brown in late summer and hang from the tree through winter. These distinctive pods give the tree two of its other common names: the Indian bean tree and cigar tree.
The nectar-rich flowers attract a variety of pollinators including hummingbirds, native bees and bumble bees, and night-flying moths. The lower flower petal has purple lines and yellow blotches that act as guides for incoming pollinators, which are drawn to the blooms by their sweet, citrus- or jasmine-like fragrance. Honeybees also swarm to catalpas, making the trees a beekeeper’s delight.
In Nebraska, the northern catalpa can only be confused with its cousin, the southern catalpa. The latter is native to the Gulf Coastal states, is less suited to the rigors of the Plains and has been planted sparingly in our southeastern towns and cities. A few distinguishing characteristics: the northern catalpa has larger and more pointed leaves, larger but fewer flowers, and longer, thicker seed pods than the southern catalpa. Interestingly, their leaf scents also differ — when crushed, northern catalpa leaves emit a sweet fragrance, while their southern cousin’s leaves produce a foul odor.
While the southern catalpa has never escaped cultivation in Nebraska, the northern catalpa escape into the wild has raised concerns among conservationists. For instance, along the central Platte River valley, the tree is taking hold along wet riverbanks and sandbars, displacing native vegetation.
In addition, this stretch of the Platte River is critical spring roosting habitat for migrating sandhill and whooping cranes. There, the open, sandy channel provides the birds with a clear view of approaching predators and encroaching trees obstruct this visibility, reducing the cranes feeling of safety and potentially limiting their use of the area. Local conservation groups are cutting and grinding larger catalpas and other invasive trees on the riverbank and disking sandbars to uproot saplings in an effort to maintain an open channel.
Catalpa Worms
The catalpa sphinx moth is named for its caterpillars, called catalpa worms, which feed exclusively on catalpa leaves, sometimes defoliating entire trees. The moth has migrated northward and westward from its native range, following planted catalpas. Over the past two decades, my friend Mark Brogie, who attracts moths with night lights, has photographed several catalpa moths in his backyard in Creighton in Knox County. “A catalpa tree just down the street is the likely source of these moths,” Brogie said. If the catalpa sphinx moth has reached as far northward and westward as Knox County, it could be present wherever catalpas grow in Nebraska.

In spring, the female moths lay masses of eggs on the underside of catalpa leaves. Typically, two broods of caterpillars hatch each summer. Mature caterpillars can reach 2 inches in length and are usually black on the back with a broad yellow stripe along the side. They have a single thorn-like, black horn at the tail end. When fully developed, the caterpillars drop from the leaves and burrow into the soil where they overwinter, metamorphosize and emerge as adult moths the following spring.
In the South, these caterpillars are called Catawba worms, and anglers prize them as bait for bass, bluegill, catfish and other fish. Fishermen pick the worms individually from the underside of leaves where they hang out or shake a branch or tree to collect entire coffee cans full of the fallen worms. Some anglers turn the worms inside out on the hook, claiming that their soft, juicy insides better entice fish. Lastly, it’s rumored that smart fishermen never reveal the location of their favorite Catawba worm tree.
It’s likely that northern catalpa trees will continue to spread in Nebraska. How much of a nuisance they become remains unknown. On the positive side, in the coming decades, Nebraska anglers may have a new go-to fish bait.
Nebraska
Cale Jacobsen scores 15 and No. 9 Nebraska beats Iowa 84-75 in overtime after blowing late lead
LINCOLN, Neb. (AP) — Cale Jacobsen came off the bench to score 13 of his 15 points after halftime and hit the tiebreaking 3-pointer in overtime, and ninth-ranked Nebraska matched its program record for wins in a season with an 84-75 victory over Iowa on Sunday.
Sam Hoiberg, who scored 15 points and had five steals on his senior day, hugged teammate Pryce Sandfort near halfcourt as time ran out and then heaved the ball high into the stands. He and his father, coach Fred Hoiberg, embraced and a short time later the rest of the Huskers came out of the tunnel to salute the sellout crowd at Pinnacle Bank Arena.
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Nebraska (26-5, 15-5 Big Ten) led by 10 points with five minutes left in regulation but missed five of its next seven shots and a couple of late free throws to let the Hawkeyes back in it. Kael Combs scored Iowa’s last eight points of regulation, including a second-chance 3-pointer that tied it 70-all with 2.7 seconds left.
After Cooper Koch tied it at 75-all in overtime, Jacobsen made a 3 from the corner and the Huskers went on to score the final nine points. The Huskers beat Iowa (20-11, 10-10) for the first time in five meetings and split the season series.
Sandfort, who transferred from Iowa after last season, scored 15 points and Rienk Mast added 14 for the Huskers.
Combs and Koch had 18 points apiece for the Hawkeyes, who committed 19 turnovers.
Up next
Iowa: The Hawkeyes are the No. 9 seed in the Big Ten Tournament and play Oregon or Maryland on Wednesday.
Nebraska: The Huskers are the No. 2 seed and play Friday.
Nebraska
Carey’s Two Home Runs Help Nebraska Baseball Stomp Michigan State, Sweep Weekend Series
The first Big Ten Conference series of the year for NU ends in a sweep.
Nebraska baseball pounded Michigan State in Sunday’s series finale at Haymarket Park, 12-2, in seven innings. The Huskers improved to 10-5, while the Spartans fell to 3-11.
With Sunday’s victory, NU moves to 3-0 in the league.
- The Game
- The Stats
- What’s Next
- Nebraska Baseball’s 2026 Schedule
The Game
Down 2-0 in the series, Michigan State needed a spark early to try to salvage at least one win in Lincoln. In the top of the first inning, first baseman Randy Seymour took a 3-1 pitch from Gavin Blachowicz to right center and over the fence.
But, for the Spartans, that spark was quickly extinguished.
Nebraska loaded the bases with no outs on a walk, a single, and a single. Case Sanderson then doubled to score them all. He would cross home plate two batters later when Preston Freeman smacked a 1-0 pitch down the left field line for a two-run homer.
Already up 5-1, Dylan Carey lifted a two-run home run in the second inning. The Huskers would tack on one run in the third, one in the fourth, two in the fifth, and one more in the sixth. At the end of the game, Nebraska scored in every inning in which it went to the plate.
Blachowicz sat down 11 batters from the second through fifth innings. A leadoff double in the sixth inning helped Michigan State add one more run to its tally.
In the top of the seventh inning, with a 10-run rule waiting to be enacted, the Spartans got a one-out single before being put down via a fly out and a fielder’s choice to end the game.
The Stats
Blachowicz pitched the entire 7.0 innings Sunday afternoon. He allowed two earned runs on three hits, walking one and striking out 11.
The Huskers, who rattled off 11 hits, were aided by five Spartan errors. That helped bring home extra runs, with four of the 12 runs scored being unearned.
Carey led the way at the plate for the Big Red. The shortstop went 3-for-4 with four RBI, two home runs, and three runs scored.
Nebraska left seven runners on base, while Michigan State stranded just two.
What’s Next
Nebraska’s nine-game homestand continues with a midweek contest against North Dakota State.
The Bison are 1-14 on the year and coming off a sweep at Vanderbilt. The lone victory was 5-1 over Monmouth at the Stetson Tournament on Feb. 21.
First pitch from Haymarket Park on Wednesday is slated for 6 p.m. CDT. The game will be streamed on B1G+.
Have a question or comment for Kaleb? Send an email to kalebhenry.huskermax@gmail.com.
Nebraska Baseball’s 2026 Schedule
- Feb. 13 Nebraska 12, UConn 2 [7 inn.] (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 14 Nebraska 7, Northeastern 4 (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 15 Nebraska 9, Grand Canyon 1 (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 16 Stanford 11, Nebraska 6 (MLB Desert Invitational)
- Feb. 20 Louisville 4, Nebraska 2 (Amegy Bank College Baseball Series)
- Feb. 21 Kansas State 3, Nebraska 3 FloCollege (Amegy Bank College Baseball Series)
- Feb. 22 Nebraska 10, Florida State 1 (Amegy Bank College Baseball Series)
- Feb. 27 Nebraska 9, Auburn 8 [10 inn.]
- Feb. 28 Auburn 15, Nebraska 4 [7 inn.]
- Mar. 1 Auburn 12, Nebraska 3
- Mar. 3 Nebraska 8, Omaha 5
- Mar. 4 Nebraska 5, South Dakota State 4
- Mar. 6 Nebraska 5, Michigan State 4 [10 inn.]
- Mar. 7 Nebraska 3, Michigan State 1
- Mar. 8 Nebraska 12, Michigan State 2 [7 inn.]
- Mar. 11 vs. North Dakota State 6 p.m.
- Mar. 13 vs. Maine 6 p.m.
- Mar. 14 vs. Maine 2 p.m.
- Mar. 15 vs. Maine 12 p.m.
- Mar. 17 at Wichita State 6 p.m.
- Mar. 18 at Wichita State 2 p.m.
- Mar. 20 at Michigan 3 p.m.
- Mar. 21 at Michigan 1 p.m.
- Mar. 22 at Michigan 12 p.m.
- Mar. 24 at Kansas State 6 p.m.
- Mar. 27 vs. Indiana 6 p.m.
- Mar. 28 vs. Indiana 2 p.m.
- Mar. 29 vs. Indiana 12 p.m.
- Mar. 31 at Creighton 6 p.m.
- Apr. 3 vs. Penn State 6 p.m.
- Apr. 4 vs. Penn State 2 p.m.
- Apr. 5 vs. Penn State 12 p.m.
- Apr. 7 vs. Kansas 6 p.m.
- Apr. 10 at Oregon 7 p.m.
- Apr. 11 at Oregon 4 p.m.
- Apr. 12 at Oregon 2 p.m.
- Apr 14 vs. Creighton 6 p.m.
- Apr. 17 vs. USC 6 p.m.
- Apr. 18 vs. USC 2 p.m.
- Apr. 19 vs. USC 12 p.m.
- Apr. 21 at Kansas 6 p.m.
- Apr. 24 at Illinois 6 p.m.
- Apr. 25 at Illinois 3 p.m.
- Apr. 26 at Illinois 1 p.m.
- Apr. 28 vs. Kansas State 6 p.m.
- May 1 at Ohio State 5 p.m.
- May 2 at Ohio State 2 p.m.
- May 3 at Ohio State 12 p.m.
- May 8 vs. Iowa 6 p.m.
- May 9 vs. Iowa 2 p.m.
- May 10 vs. Iowa 1 p.m.
- May 12 at Creighton 6 p.m.
- May 14 at Minnesota 6 p.m.
- May 15 at Minnesota 6 p.m.
- May 16 at Minnesota 1 p.m.
- May 19-24 Big Ten Tournament
Home games are bolded. All times central.
Nebraska
Nebraska Secures a ‘Grand’ Sweep in Front of Sold Out Crowd
GRAND ISLAND, Neb. — Press release courtesy of LOVB Nebraska:
The state of Nebraska once again proved why it’s the Volleyball Capital of the U.S. as a sold-out Heartland Events Center played host to a LOVB Nebraska sweep of LOVB Salt Lake (29-27, 25-16, 25-22) on Saturday night in Grand Island, Nebraska.
Outside hitter Jordan Larson shined once again for Nebraska (5-7), recording her third-straight match with 15+ points. The Hooper, Nebraska, native tallied 14 kills on a season-high .385 hitting efficiency, tacking on 13 digs for her second double-double in three matches.
“I think I’ve always kind of played like this,” said Larson. “You never know when the last could be, and so to me it’s just like how can I continue to leave it all out there. How do I continue to show up and let my body do it? I’m really trying to enjoy this as much as I can.”
The other half of Nebraska’s dominant outside hitting tandem, Anne Buijs, was close behind Larson, securing 13 points on 13 kills. Opposite hitter Kimberly Drewniok rounded out a trio of Nebraska athletes in the double figures for points and kills, also scoring 13 points on 13 kills.
The true highlight of the match were the fans that filled the Heartland Events Center. Central Nebraska showed up and made it known, creating a tough environment for Salt Lake while continuously energizing the home bench.
“We’re thrilled to be in Grand Island. That’s the best crowd we’ve had all season,” said Nebraska head coach Suzie Fritz.
“You could feel the energy. I think they helped us with a couple points. They really do make a difference and it’s really impactful for us to hear that and be a part of it,” said Larson.
“When Jordan got announced in the starting lineup, I told her I got goosebumps because the fans were just so amazing,” said Drewniok.
Salt Lake (8-6) continues having midseason struggles, extending its losing streak to five matches and now falling one game back of first place. Outside hitter Claire Hoffman led all athletes on the floor tonight with a match-high 16 points and 15 kills.
“Unfortunately, really frustrated after the match,” said Salt Lake head coach Tama Miyashiro. “We gotta look forward and no one’s feeling sorry for us. We’re going to try to get back to work and fix a couple things.”
LOVB Nebraska will look to continue its hot streak next Thursday, March 12, against LOVB Madison for a 7 p.m. Central first serve at the Alliant Energy Center in Madison, Wisconsin. The contest will stream on ESPN+.
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