Conservation Florida Conservation Florida

Nayfield Acres Conservation Easement

The conservation easement on the Nayfield’s property helps protect the Suwannee River watershed. Your support helps CTF manage such conservation easements across the state.

The conservation easement on the Nayfield’s property helps protect the Suwannee River watershed. Your support helps CTF manage such conservation easements across the state.

The conservation easement on the Nayfield’s property helps protect the Suwannee River watershed. Your support helps CTF manage such conservation easements across the state.

The 136-acre Nayfield Acres Conservation Easement adds to protected lands within the Suwannee River corridor. The land is adjacent to the Big Shoals Conservation Area, and contains a seepage spring and creek system that drains into the Suwannee River. These lands serve as a buffer to the protected state lands by providing additional wildlife habitat, protecting water quality, and preventing soil erosion, as well as providing scenic amenity to the hiking trails located within Big Shoals Conservation Area.The Nayfields have begun to restore the cleared portions of the property by planting long leaf pine. The property is used for recreational activities such as camping, hiking, hunting, and wildlife viewing.

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Harzig Santa Fe Conservation Easement

One of the most special aspects of the Hartzog easement is 29 acres of bottomland hardwood and approximately 2000 feet of undeveloped river frontage visible to the public from the Santa Fe River.

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Large, privately held, undeveloped parcels with significant river frontage on the Santa Fe River are a rarity today. These parcels are significant for many reasons, including protecting water resources, providing habitat to important species, and providing scenic amenity and open space in an increasingly developed landscape. The Hartzogs chose to donate a conservation easement on their 117-acre parcel on the Santa Fe River to protect these qualities on their land.

The Hartzogs are working to restore native long leaf pines to part of the property, and plan to use the property in a recreational and educational manner. They hope to be able to share their property with individuals who have limited contact with nature or who are handicapped.

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Webber Cedar Lakes Ranch & Nature Preserve

Maximizing wildlife habitat in the wooded areas of the Webber Cedar Lakes Ranch and Nature Preserve Conservation Easement is a management priority.

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The Webber Cedar Lakes Ranch and Nature Preserve Conservation Easement, donated to CTF on December 23, 2008, is a 54-acre parcel owned by Dr. Raymond T. Webber. The karst topography and nature of the property makes it a significant contributor to protecting water quality and quantity in Levy County, Florida, and the surrounding region. The property is adjacent to Devil’s Den, a spring, and popular diving destination.

One of the management goals is to maximize wildlife habitat of the woods and eliminate invasive exotic vegetation.

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CTF Project Moves Forward: Cabinet Approves Adams Ranch

Adams Ranch provides stewardship for a landscape-sized wildlife corridor connecting other managed lands.

Photo by Carlton Ward

Photo by Carlton Ward

The Conservation Trust for Florida, Inc. is excited to announce that the Governor and Cabinet approved the option to purchase a conservation easement on 1,536 acres of the Adams Ranch on Tuesday, December 9th!  
The Conservation Trust facilitated a joint acquisition project for the Florida Forest Service and the Natural Resource Conservation Service to purchase the conservation easement on the ranch. 

Adams Ranch, Inc. is the 12th largest cow/calf operation in the United States.  Their 24,000-acre Lake Marian Ranch lies in the heart of the recently authorized Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area.  This refuge seeks to protect the imperiled habitats and rare species of the Northern Everglades, much of which is on some of Florida’s largest ranches.
   
Adams Ranch not only manages a world-class cow/calf operation, but they are also tremendous stewards of a native landscape of hammocks, southern longleaf pine flatwoods, rare dry prairie, and a landscape-sized wildlife corridor connecting other managed lands.

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Quail Roost Conservation Easement

“I’ve also come to believe that each of us must assume the responsibility of preserving the wildness that remains — so that our children, and theirs, may come to know such beauty; and, quite possibly, for the very survival of us all.”

Following the death of his parents, just months apart in 2003, Kerry Heubeck worked with CTF to protect and limit development on approximately 800 acres of their 1,000 acre farm, Quail Roost II. A conservation easement was used to protect 200 acres, and deed restrictions controlled the possible development of another 600 acres. These protections were instituted as a memorial to his parents, Harriet and Elmer Heubeck, Jr. who both held a deep love for the land upon which they lived and worked.

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The Heubecks have long been recognized as pioneers in the Florida Thoroughbred Horse industry. Their name is routinely and justly associated with that of Rosemere, the first Thoroughbred farm in Marion County, as well as Hobeau Farm, for years one of the nation’s leading Thoroughbred breeding establishments and racing stables. Nevertheless, it was their own Quail Roost Farm to which family and friends attach their fondest memories. It was this original Quail Roost that was so unique, bringing together under their aegis one of Florida’s best known Thoroughbred breeding and training venues, a large purebred and commercial beef operation, and one of the finest private exotic game preserves in the nation.

In dedicating the Quail Roost Conservation Easement to their memory, Kerry stated, “Some sixty years ago my parents brought me to an exquisite land, where I had the luxury of growing up surrounded by lush green Florida hammocks, crystal-clear springs, and an abundance of wildlife unimaginable today. That particular landscape is now mostly buried beneath concrete and asphalt. Before they died, each of my parents spoke of protecting the land. I’ve also come to believe that each of us must assume the responsibility of preserving the wildness that remains — so that our children, and theirs, may come to know such beauty; and, quite possibly, for the very survival of us all.”

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Price's Scrub

Price’s Scrub is continuing ecological restoration and is open to the public for light recreation such as hiking and horseback riding.

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Working with the state Office of Greenways and Trails, CTF helped protect Price’s Scrub, a unique 952-acre sand pine and pond pine system with saw palmetto understory. Price’s Scrub is continuing ecological restoration and is open to the public for light recreation such as hiking and horseback riding. These properties are an important connection in the effort to create a recreational corridor, primarily for horseback riding, from Payne’s Prairie Sate Preserve to Goethe State Forest.

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Lochloosa Nature Preserve

The 1,388-acre parcel, surrounded by the Lochloosa Wildlife Conservation Area, boasts some of the best remaining longleaf pine flatwoods and sandhill habitat in the county.

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CTF nominated the Lochloosa Nature Preserve for acquisition by the Alachua County Forever land conservation program. The project was approved for acquisition in October 2003. The 1,388-acre parcel, surrounded by the Lochloosa Wildlife Conservation Area, boasts some of the best remaining longleaf pine flatwoods and sandhill habitat in the county.

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Barr Hammock Preserve

Overall, there are 5,719 acres to the Barr Hammock preserve, making it the largest of Alachua county’s conservation acquisitions.

In 2002, CTF nominated Barr Hammock for acquisition. Using Alachua County Forever funds, the Alachua County Commission purchased this prized property, furthering our commitment to help create a recreational, landscape-level corridor that runs through Alachua and Marion Counties. Overall, there are 5,719 acres to the Barr Hammock preserve, making it the largest of Alachua county’s conservation acquisitions. Barr Hammock connects Payne’s Prairie State Preserve to the Ocala National Forest and Goethe State Forest, keeping intact entire ecosystems, wildlife populations and the largest wetlands in Alachua County – Ledwith and Levy Prairies. Barr Hammock and its surrounding uplands are some of the most important ecologically intact examples of prairie/lake ecosystems in north central Florida. Its protection preserves significant prehistoric archaeological sites and will provide the citizens of Florida with a beautiful space for recreational activities such as bird watching and hiking.

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Hansen Preserve

“I worried about what would happen to it when I was no longer around. After a number of efforts, trials, and errors, the Conservation Trust for Florida solved my problem,” said Phyllis Hansen, landowner.

Phyllis Hansen (on left), recipient of a Land Conservation Award, was introduced by her long-time friend and fellow Cross Creek resident Kate Barnes. Photo by Ed Geers.

Phyllis Hansen (on left), recipient of a Land Conservation Award, was introduced by her long-time friend and fellow Cross Creek resident Kate Barnes. Photo by Ed Geers.

Cross Creek is a special place with a unique rural character, immortalized by Pulitzer Prize winner Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings. CTF was happy to accept a conservation easement on Phyllis Hansen’s 25-acre property on the shore of Orange Lake. The easement will protect the wildlife, waterfront, and water quality, as well as the dense forest on the property.

Phyllis wanted to protect the scenic beauty of the tupelo swamp on her property. “When I found this spot of land I knew I would never go anywhere else,” she wrote. “The beauty was more than I had ever imagined could exist in one place. I worried about what would happen to it when I was no longer around. After a number of efforts, trials, and errors, the Conservation Trust for Florida solved my problem and I thank them earnestly from the bottom of my heart.”

“I worried about what would happen to it when I was no longer around. After a number of efforts, trials, and errors, the Conservation Trust for Florida solved my problem… Phyllis Hansen, landowner

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Workshop: Keeping your Land Productive Through Conservation Easements

Join us for a workshop!

Event Date: Sept. 24, 2014

9:30 AM – 3:00 PM
Austin Cary Learning Center
10625 NE Waldo Rd, Gainesville, FL 32609 

FLYER

Join the Conservation Trust for Florida, the Forest Stewardship Program & Florida Society of American Forests – Suwannee Chapter to see how you can produce and harvest timber and agricultural crops with a conservation easement.

Join us to learn the benefits of conservation easements and other tools to keep land in agriculture, forestry and/or conservation. This workshop will cover the function of land trusts, how conservation easements work, how landowners can benefit, available technical and financial assistance, and alternatives for successional planning.

$15 fee, lunch and materials included.
Reserve a space at http://fsp-workshop092414.eventbrite.com/ or by contacting Lyndall Brezina, (352)375-1473, Lyndall@columbiatimber.com. Pay at the door with check payable to Florida Society of American Foresters.

This workshop has been approved for 4 Category 1 Society of American Foresters CFEs (Continuing Forestry Education).

Agenda

  • 9:30 am – Sign-in, meet & greet
  • 10:00 am – Welcome and Introduction: Land Trusts and Conservation Easements for Working Lands, Jib Davidson, Columbia Timber and Environmental Services & United Country
  • 10:15 am –  Land Trusts 101, Keith Fountain, Conservation Trust for Florida
  • 10:45 am – Conservation Easements 101, Charlie Houder, Natural Resource Planning Services and Saunders Real Estate
  • 11:30 am –  Appraisals for Conservation Easements, Zac E. Ryan
  • 12:00 pm Lunch (Suwannee Chapter SAF business and announcements at 12:30 pm)
  • 12:45 pm–  Donation vs. Sale of an Easement, Keith Fountain
  • 1:15 pm – Tax Benefits of Conservation Easements, Jib Davidson
  • 1:45 pm –  Technical and Financial Assistance Programs for Conservation and Ecosystem Services, Chris Demers, UF/IFAS School of Forest Resources and Conservation and Charlie Houder
  • 2:30 pm –  Panel Discussion, all
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CTF Makes the Case

As the Conservation Trust for Florida approaches its 15th Anniversary, there is a sense of urgency to act, and our new Case Statement describes how and why.

Over the next 5 years the CTF will engage private landowners in some of the most critical conservation areas of the state, and work to bridge conservation and private lands to protect Florida’s diverse wildlife, agricultural heritage, outdoor recreation opportunities and quality of life.

To request hard copies of this case statement to share, please contact us at 352-376-4770 or write info@conserveflorida.org.

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CTF's Family Nature Club Valentine's Hike

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Gainesville Ecotours led a Family Nature Club “Alphabet Hike” for children at the Barr Hammock Levy Prairie Preserve on Saturday, February 15, 2014. The event was sponsored by the Conservation Trust for Florida. Sixteen parents and 22 children set out to find, “A is for Ants, Alligators, and P is for Plants!”  The preserve is owned by Alachua County, but the Conservation Trust for Florida and Alachua County partner to provide outreach activities at the preserve.On the Alphabet Hike, children looked for nature items that began with the alphabet letters. They were allowed to stop for anything they saw or even sprint ahead to the next animal or plant that they wanted to see. This hike was guided by the children’s own exploration. If they were excited about an ant pile for 10 minutes or wanted to run around in a mud hole, they were given the freedom to explore at their own pace. This hike was designed to have a guided activity, but only to the extent that it helped the children explore, but more for the children to notice nature, get exercise, and fresh air. No lectures, no hurry, lots of fun!

Children climb on the snake shaped bike rack at Barr Hammock Levy Prairie Preserve. Sponsored by CTF and led by Gainesville Ecotours.

Children climb on the snake shaped bike rack at Barr Hammock Levy Prairie Preserve. Sponsored by CTF and led by Gainesville Ecotours.

Armed with children’s binoculars, the children first noticed, “A is for Ants,” along with “W is for Water and P is for Plants.” As they hiked they observed: “S is for Snake, P is for Poop, T is for Trees, G is for Grass, and D is for Dirt!” They observed weather in: “C is for Clouds,” and shapes of letters too in: “U is for a U shaped item” in the form of a tree branch in the shape of a U. They even used their binoculars to observe the, “P is for Poop” that was right at their feet. Little scientists in the making!

The children enjoyed their hike and loved going through their Valentine’s bags filled with stickers, wildflower seeds, CTF and Florida Wildlife Corridor brochures, Gainesville Birding and Nature Festival information, how to create a back yard bird feeder, and, of course, the chocolates! The weather was clear, sunny, and warm, and the children had fun too. It was a great day for parents to spend with their Valentines. 

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