Let Them Run.A photographer's honest guide to family sessions at Mequon Nature Preserve — and why wild kids aren't a problem here. They're the whole point.
Mequon Nature Center Family Sessions in Mequon, WI are always where I seem to get true GEMS!! We start by capturing the kids playing and not asking them to change who they are in the session. They can even eat snacks!
Every family I photograph has at least one… The kid who doesn't sit still. The one who spots a frog the moment you find the perfect light. The one who is physically incapable of looking at a camera without pulling a face that makes everyone laugh — which is exactly the expression you should be capturing anyway, but which requires a location that can handle all of it!!
Mequon Nature Preserve is that location.
I love my families I take on a few each year and they always bring the fun. These are high energy sessions as kids are tossing the football, eating snacks, asking to use my camera to play photographer and we just hang out and get gorgeous family heirlooms captured.
Mequon Nature Center Family Photo Session 2025
With acres of restored prairie, wetlands, woodland trails, and open meadows on the western edge of Mequon, this place is not just a beautiful backdrop. It is a living, breathing playground for families who have decided that a real family portrait looks like their actual family — in motion, in joy, occasionally covered in mud, and completely, irreversibly themselves.
Why it works…
Why wild kids and Mequon Nature Preserve were made for each other.
Most family session locations are beautiful but fragile. A manicured garden doesn't love a six-year-old at full sprint. A downtown streetscape gets awkward when someone needs a five-minute break to examine a beetle. A studio is technically fine, right up until the youngest decides the backdrop is a cape.
Mequon Nature Preserve has no such vulnerabilities. It is not fragile. Kids who explore look better here. Kids who decide to wade into a creek in their good shoes look, somehow, absolutely incredible here.
"The preserve doesn't need your kids to behave. It needs them to be themselves… and then the light does the rest."
The visual variety is unmatched anywhere else in Ozaukee County. Within a single session, you can move from open prairie with that wide, cinematic sky pressing down to close, dappled woodland trails where the canopy filters the light into something that belongs in a film. From wooden boardwalks over wetlands to golden meadow clearings that catch the late afternoon sun in a way that makes even the most camera-shy kid look like they were born for this.
What to expect
What a family session at the preserve actually looks like.
It looks like a walk. A really beautiful one, with a photographer quietly keeping pace.
That's the honest answer. The best family sessions here don't feel like a photo shoot at all — they feel like a family outing that happened to produce extraordinary images. You arrive, you start moving, and somewhere between the first trail marker and the meadow clearing, something real happens. Someone laughs too hard. Someone holds someone else's hand. Someone stops to examine a dragonfly with a focus and intensity they've never once applied to a posed portrait. That is the image.
Wild kids thrive in this format because there's nothing to resist. Nobody is asking them to stand still. Nobody is arranging them against a wall. The instruction is essentially: go be yourself in this beautiful place, and we'll catch up with you.
The best family images I've ever taken here happened because a child stopped caring about the camera entirely. A sibling chase down a prairie trail. A dad swinging a kid by the arms in a meadow clearing at golden hour. A mom crouched down at a wooden boardwalk railing, looking at something in the water, while three kids pile in behind her. Nobody posed. Nobody performed. The preserve just let them be a family.
Best spots: The locations inside the preserve that photograph beautifully.
The prairie loop is where sessions tend to begin. Wide open, sky-heavy, with grasses that shift from green to gold depending on the season and the light. This is the place for movement — kids running, spinning, doing whatever it is they actually do when nobody is asking them to stop. The openness means the camera can breathe with them. No obstacles, no traffic, just space and light and family.
The woodland trails are the session's quieter chapter. Canopy light is the most flattering natural light that exists, and the preserve's established trees produce it in abundance. These are the spots where families tend to slow down naturally — a narrower path invites closeness, a root system invites sitting, a mossy bank invites exactly the kind of supervised climbing that produces images parents want on a wall forever.
The wetland boardwalk is underestimated by almost everyone who hasn't photographed here before. The reflection, the elevated sight lines, the way kids naturally line up along the railing to peer into the water below — it creates an effortless compositional structure that requires nothing from anyone. Just let them look.
Real talk
What to bring, what to skip, and what not to worry about.
A note on clothing: the preserve is not a studio. Layers work. Breathable fabrics work. Whatever your kids are comfortable moving in, works. The one thing that does not work is anything you're afraid to get dirty — because the preserve is alive, and the best moments happen close to the ground.
Comfortable layers — the prairie gets breezy and the woods stay cool
Closed-toe shoes for everyone — the trails are real trails
A snack in your pocket — the secret weapon of every great family session
Low expectations for compliance, high expectations for the images
Bug spray in summer — non-negotiable, completely worth it
Leave behind: the expectation that your kids will behave differently here than they do everywhere else. They won't.