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Conservation Florida Saves 615 Acres in the Florida Wildlife Corridor
Conservation Florida and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s Division of State Lands have completed the conservation of Crippen Ranch, a 615- acre property in the Northern Everglades.
Conservation Florida and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection’s Division of State Lands have completed the conservation of Crippen Ranch, a 615- acre property in the Northern Everglades.
Located in north central Okeechobee County and connected to the Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park, the property is within a key region of the Northern Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area – a mosaic of seasonally wet grasslands, longleaf pine savannas, and cattle ranches that sustain one of the most important assemblages of imperiled species in the southeastern United States. The conservation easement placed on the ranch permanently prohibits development on the property while allowing cattle ranching operations to continue uninterrupted.
Partnerships are critical in making this type of boots-on-the-ground conservation happen. "Securing a conservation easement on Crippen Ranch is a win for Florida’s environment, rural economy, wildlife, and more,” said Traci Deen, President and CEO of Conservation Florida. “We are grateful to landowner Scott Crippen for his commitment to conservation and thank our partners at the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Division of State Lands, as well as our donors, for their tremendous support in our shared mission to conserve a wild slice of old Florida."
A pivotal moment for this project occurred at a cabinet meeting in August 2022 when Governor DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet, in its role as the Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund, allocated funding from the state's Florida Forever program to purchase a conservation easement on the property.
“This acquisition was made possible by collaboration between the state of Florida, nonprofits, and private stakeholders who are dedicated to conserving wild Florida,” said Shawn Hamilton, Secretary of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. “The department remains committed to continuing our efforts to acquire and preserve conservation lands for generations to come.”
Crippen Ranch is located within the Kissimmee-St. Johns River Connector Florida Forever project, which ranked No. 7 in the Florida Forever Less- Than-Fee category, located within the Northern Everglades, Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape, and the Florida Wildlife Corridor. Adjacent to the vast Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park, the ranch is an extraordinary example of a property’s protection supporting many conservation goals. The Kissimmee-St. Johns River Connector Project is intended to provide a habitat and hydrological connection between the Fort Drum Marsh Conservation Area, the Kissimmee Prairie State Preserve, and the Ordway-Whittell Kissimmee Prairie Sanctuary. This protection area will conserve high-quality, natural habitats for a wide variety of wildlife and plants.
Properties in the region provide critical habitat for species such as the Florida grasshopper sparrow, Florida black bear, crested caracara, gopher tortoise, and other imperiled wildlife species. It is also estimated that more than 50% of all habitats used by panthers in the Northern Everglades are on private lands.
Conservation Florida worked with the landowner Scott Crippen and the Department of Environmental Protection to negotiate the deal. “Conservation Florida has been a pleasure to work with,” said Crippen. “I am a huge advocate for preserving wild Florida. I will rest easy knowing our family’s ranch will be appreciated, as it is now, forever. I sincerely hope other ranchers and landowners take this path in conserving what is left of our wild and beautiful state.”
Projects Conservation Florida targets in this region will help filter surface water flowing from the north before it reaches Lake Okeechobee. In addition to contributing to the clean drinking water supply for millions of people, the land provides shelter for many species of neotropical birds during their spring and fall migrations. Conservation Florida is proud to have worked with the Department of Environmental Protection to see this property conserved forever.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
It's a Family Tradition
To others, my grandma’s house may seem like an unassuming plot of agricultural land with a comfortable home on it. To me, it’s so much more. It’s a place to disconnect from reality, a place to feel loved, and a safe space that holds some of my dearest memories and traditions.
To others, my grandma’s house may seem like an unassuming plot of agricultural land with a comfortable home on it. To me, it’s so much more. It’s a place to disconnect from reality, a place to feel loved, and a safe space that holds some of my dearest memories and traditions.
I grew up riding the four-wheeler with Grandpa to feed the cows, picking blueberries every summer, getting tadpoles from the back pond to bring to class and watch them grow, and eating entirely too much every Christmas – just to lay on the living room carpet and open presents.
To me, conservation is more than protecting wildlife and green space – it’s protecting history, memories, and traditions. I am one of the few who are lucky enough to share memories on the same property as my great-great-grandma, and I hope to one day share them with children of my own.
As a proud ninth-generation Floridian, it’s fascinating to learn more about how my family has witnessed the state evolve from purely agriculture and swampland to what it is now. My ancestors started in St. Augustine during the pre-revolutionary war, then relocated southwest to Starke and Palatka before ending up in Gainesville.
I recently had the honor to sit down with my grandma, Ethel Newmans, for the sole intent of taking a walk through our family history. I had so much fun giggling over stories of her childhood and adulthood growing up in Florida. It is a life well lived and worth sharing. I hope you all enjoy it as much as I do.
Chelsea: How long has this property been in the family?
Grandma Ethel: We are not entirely sure how long the property has been in the family. But we do know my dad was born here in 1906, and he was the youngest of seven siblings. So, we have at least been here since the late 1800s.
Chelsea: Do you know how the family came to acquire the property?
Grandma Ethel: I think it may have been from Mr. Mize selling the property. Mr. Mize was a wealthy man around here and he had a commissary where people would get things on credit. Mr. Mize would cut and sell turpentine trees; I remember being able to see people cutting turpentine trees from the house.
Chelsea: Do you have any historical documents?
Grandma Ethel: I have the deed from the train tracks running through the back of the property (evidence of the train tracks is still there), and I have the census from my dad’s family. He’s listed as Gideon...I always thought his name was just Gid!
Chelsea: What was an average day like growing up?
Grandma Ethel: We would go to school, come home, have a short break, and then work in the field. Lots of hoeing. Hoeing peanuts or whatever we had. Then we would feed the chickens and gather the eggs. I had fun doing that except for setting hens.
They would fluff up so big and be mean. Occasionally, hawks would try to steal the chickens. Mama did not like that and she was not scared to use the 12-gauge. Daddy also had geese, but they would attack you.
Chelsea: What is your favorite childhood memory?
Grandma Ethel: On Saturday afternoons, the whole family went into town. We all had to do our chores first like sweeping the yard, but then we took a bath and got to go to a movie, while Mama and Daddy went shopping. It
was all in the courthouse square at the Lyrics Theater. During the summer, we could get a snow cone from the cart and that was a real treat. I also loved chasing lightning bugs. We would trap them in a jar and just loved it.
Chelsea: You have seen a lot of things change! What do you think is the most drastic?
Grandma Ethel: Oh Lord, I could say everything has changed. First, Grandma’s house had a well but Daddy had it covered because he was afraid we were going to fall in. Grandma also had a hand pump, a bucket, a pan, and a dipper with a long handle on the porch, which was the handwashing station. Of course, we had no electricity and used kerosene lamps. Mama had a wood heater and a wood stove.
Washing clothes is a story in itself. All the linens were white. We had to boil all the white clothes, so you know they were sanitary. Laundry day was always busy. We had to haul all the clothes from our house over to Grandma’s water pump. Clothes were all cotton and had to be corn starched and ironed using irons made hot by the fire.
We had smokehouses for meat – mostly pork – and the meat would not spoil. It was marvelous. Daddy built a house over in the corner of the property. You could see through the roof, almost see the stars, but it never leaked.
Chelsea’s note: My uncle also lives on the property and my great-grandpa built the house he lives in in the 1930s. It still has the original metal roof and has never leaked.
Chelsea: What kind of wildlife do you see out here?
Grandma Ethel: Deer, turkey, and cranes. We used to have gophers, but I don’t see them as much anymore.
Chelsea: As you look to the future, what are your hopes and dreams for this special property?
Grandma Ethel: Well, that is in the works, but I hope it can stay whole and stay in the family. For more generations to enjoy.
Rooted in heritage and legacy, I approach conservation holistically. I want to protect the land that built me, I want to protect my family’s legacy, and I want to know that 100 years from now, there will be Newmans riding four-wheelers to feed the cows and pick the blueberries. I hope this story inspires you to consider the legacy you are living and leaving.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Moving Conservation Forward
Since our founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has led the way in strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved more than 30,000 acres of critical habitat through the acquisition, facilitation, and incubation of conservation projects.
Since our founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has led the way in strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved more than 30,000 acres of critical habitat through the acquisition, facilitation, and incubation of conservation projects.
We are working on tens of thousands of acres more. Our vision for the future is large-scale, and we are 100% committed to conservation in the state of Florida – for nature, for people, forever!
EAGLE HAVEN
Located in the Florida Wildlife Corridor, Eagle Haven is an ecological gem spanning 2,909 acres that include four miles of Lake Kissimmee shoreline. Formerly named Lost Oak, this area contains six different habitats for roughly 200 species, including the beloved Florida scrub jay. Meanwhile, 300-year-old live oaks dot the landscape while Eagle Haven’s swamps and marshes work around the clock to purify water for the Kissimmee River. Conservation Florida is working to acquire a conservation easement to ensure the permanent protection of this habitat.
LAKE MARION PRESERVE
In 2021, an anonymous conservation buyer allowed Conservation Florida to quickly outbid a developer to purchase 700+ acres of high-priority property on Lake Marion in Polk County. The significance of this location cannot be overstated. Lake Marion Preserve falls within the boundaries of the Florida Wildlife Corridor and Conservation Florida’s H2O: Headwaters to Okeechobee, and contains federally listed and state-listed plants and animals, including a rare habitat known as Rosemary Scrub. As habitat management is undertaken on the preserve, experts predict more listed species will return to the area. Conservation Florida is working with the landowner and partners to protect this land forever.
PHILLIP RUCKS CITRUS NURSERY
Florida roots and a reputation for finding creative and commonsense approaches to land conservation brought Conservation Florida to a landowner in Polk County interested in conserving their land and legacy. Thanks to the leadership of Polk County Parks and Natural Resources Division and the Department of Defense, this property is now protected forever. The partnership secured funding to create a conservation easement for Phillip Rucks Citrus Nursery, which provides protection for rare upland wildlife and plant species. An easement is an agreement that permanently protects land with no expiration date, meaning it is conserved in perpetuity and will never be developed – but will remain productive agricultural land. Phillip Rucks Citrus Nursery in Frostproof, Florida, is home to critical habitat within the Arbuckle Tract of the Lake Wales Ridge State Forest and Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape, as well as a high-priority puzzle piece helping connect the Florida Wildlife Corridor.
XL RANCH LIGHTSEY COVE
With exceptional habitats such as wet prairie, scrub, and cutthroat grass, this 537-acre property is a high-protection priority. Located on the northwest edge of Lake Istokpoga, the landscape offers a glimpse of prehistoric Florida with ancient oak hammocks and sand pine scrub scattered among vibrant marshes and endangered grasslands.
GILCHRIST CLUB
Gilchrist Club is a private reserve spanning more than 23,000 acres of stunning natural beauty in Trenton, Florida. The property has been carefully managed for wildlife and timber, which is beneficial to not only quail, but a host of other resident species as well, such as the southern fox squirrel, swallow-tailed kite, and eastern indigo snake. The property falls within the Florida Ecological Greenways Network (FEGN), which is the science and data set used to guide the Florida Wildlife Corridor boundary. The property is part of a wildlife corridor of statewide ecological significance connecting Goethe State Forest to the Santa Fe and Suwannee rivers. By tapping into the power of partnership, we’re advancing land conservation that directly protects water, wildlife, and wild spaces.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
1,250-Acre Arbuckle Creek Ranch on the Path to Permanent Protection
Partnership brings Conservation Florida, Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape, and NRCS together to protect vital wildlife habitats and help sustain military readiness activities
Partnership brings Conservation Florida, Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape, and NRCS together to protect vital wildlife habitats and help sustain military readiness activities
As a dynamic driver of statewide land conservation, Conservation Florida and our partners at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), are in the process of conserving 1,250 acres that will protect vital wildlife habitats on the eastern edge of the Lake Wales Ridge in Highlands County, Florida.
The property is a major connector piece in the Florida Wildlife Corridor, linking environmentally important and protected properties in the region. Arbuckle Creek Ranch is critical to protect and beneficial to the public because it helps filter and replenish drinking water within the Lake Istokpoga watershed, which drains into the Kissimmee River and on to Lake Okeechobee. It also As a dynamic driver of statewide land conservation, Conservation Florida and our partners at the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s (USDA) Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS) and the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD), are in the process of conserving 1,250 acres that will protect vital wildlife habitats on the eastern edge of the Lake Wales Ridge in Highlands County, Florida.
The property is a major connector piece in the Florida Wildlife Corridor, linking environmentally important and protected properties in the region. Arbuckle Creek Ranch is critical to protect and beneficial to the public because it helps filter and replenish drinking water within the Lake Istokpoga watershed, which drains into the Kissimmee River and on to Lake Okeechobee. It also supports local agriculture, aids military readiness, and provides habitat for native plants and wildlife.
“This easement to be held by Conservation Florida is 1,250 acres, but the benefits of conserving Arbuckle Creek Ranch extend well beyond its boundaries,” said Traci Deen, Conservation Florida’s President and CEO. “It contributes to the health of the entire Greater Everglades Ecosystem and adds to the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The property protects a mile of Arbuckle Creek, hundreds of acres of critically endangered grass, and supports a working cattle ranch – all while supporting our military readiness. We could not be more proud to work together with our partners and the Butler family to see this conservation project through."
The resulting $3.2 million conservation easement purchase was completed thanks to the support of Conservation Florida's supporters, the DoD, through the U.S. Air Force’s implementation of DoD’s Readiness and Environmental Protection Integration (REPI) Program, and the USDA's NRCS Agricultural Conservation Easement Program for Agricultural Land Easements (ACEP-ALE).
The ranch is within the boundaries of the Avon Park Air Force Range (APAFR) Sentinel Landscape. This vast landscape is centered around the Air Force’s “largest primary air-to-ground training range east of the Mississippi River,” according to APAFR. In addition to the water, wildlife, and habitat benefits, the protection of Arbuckle Creek Ranch benefits the Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape by reducing residential development that interferes with military operations.
Conservation Florida has been working to protect this property since the landowners, R.D. and Rosa Butler, met with Conservation Florida in 2019. In 2020, the group secured a contract for the purchase of a conservation easement on the property that gave the nonprofit time to seek funding. An easement is a binding legal agreement that permanently restricts development activities and permanently protects a property's conservation values.
“Conservation Florida’s suite of resources and genuine affinity for conservation in the state helped navigate areative solution that best meets everyone’s needs,” said landowner R.D. Butler. “My wife Rosa and I couldn’t be happier for the legacy of our family than to know this special place will be protected forever.”
“When private landowners, nonprofits, and agencies work together, we can protect critical ranchlands within the Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape. Partnerships such as this one are helping to keep the ranching industry viable in Florida while protecting threatened ecosystems and wildlife,” said Juan Hernandez, NRCS state conservationist for Florida. “We have several NRCS programs that offer financial and technical assistance to enhance and benefit wildlife through conservation."
“We are extremely grateful to Conservation Florida for working toward acquiring this easement, and the NRCS for their support and partnership, and look forward to seeing this project through. Working in conjunction
with NRCS and Conservation Florida to acquire a conservation easement on Arbuckle Creek Ranch would be a success, protecting working lands, promoting conservation, and enhancing mission sustainability at Avon Park Air Force Range,” said retired Air Force Lt. Col. Buck MacLaughlin. “Protecting this property will buffer the flight path into Arbuckle Airfield and protects nighttime military training by limiting sources. The ability to operate at night is a distinct advantage that our military forces use while serving our country.
At a time when Florida is facing intense development pressures, ranchlands are sought after for conversion into large housing developments and planned communities. Conservation Florida has made ranchlands in the Northern Everglades a top protection priority within its Headwaters to Okeechobee regional land and water conservation initiative.
“Arbuckle Creek Ranch is an exceptional property,” said Adam Bass, Vice President of Conservation at Conservation Florida. “It's been a real pleasure working with the Butlers and our partners to get this project to the finish line. At the end of the day, this property's protection is meaningful to the region, and we are proud to be working to see this through."
Arbuckle Creek Ranch is a family-run, cow-calf operation where a herd of cattle is managed with the goal of raising calves to sell. It is also home to an endangered cutthroat grass community that spans 300 acres. Cutthroat grass is endemic to Florida in the United States and is limited to just five counties in the Central Florida peninsula. The natural habitat on the property is also ideal for Florida scrub jays, eastern indigo snakes, and gopher tortoises. Florida panthers, and other endangered Florida species, have been documented on the ranch.
The Arbuckle Creek Ranch conservation easement project is one of many that Conservation Florida is working on in the Greater Everglades ecosystem. Protecting Arbuckle Creek Ranch reiterates the alignment between Conservation Florida's protection priorities and the DoD’s REPI and NRCS’ ALE programs. Requirements, goals, and funds of each entity were combined to support the same conservation mission, soon to achieve joint outcomes, and the conservation of agricultural land and water resources while strengthening the Air Force mission by protecting land around the high-value military testing and training area.
Arbuckle Creek Ranch is anticipated to be just one success story of the many conservation projects to be permanently protected by Conservation Florida within the Florida Wildlife Corridor in the Northern Everglades region. The Corridor is nearly 17.7 million acres. Of that, 8.1 million acres still need to be protected. This vibrant landscape contains historic cattle ranches, sweeping vistas, and vast ecosystems. Because it forms the headwaters of the Greater Everglades, its protection is critical for the future of Florida’s freshwater supply.
Conservation Florida is Florida’s Land Conservancy
As Floridians, we spend endless hours along the world's best coastlines, exploring countless springs, and hiking thickly wooded trails, while carefully dodging too-close-for-comfort encounters with snakes. From the subtropical hammocks to the sandhills to the swamps, Florida is one of a kind. Florida is wild. And we intend to keep it that way.
Brama Island on Lake Kissimmee by Chuck Palmer
By Sarah M. Collins, Vice President of Communications + Philanthropy
As Floridians, we spend endless hours along the world's best coastlines, exploring countless springs, and hiking thickly wooded trails, while carefully dodging too-close-for-comfort encounters with snakes. From the subtropical hammocks to the sandhills to the swamps, Florida is one of a kind. Florida is wild. And we intend to keep it that way.
Thanks to your support, we have built an impressive and bold land protection project portfolio – moving more than 101,000 acres closer to the finish line in the last year alone. Currently, we have over 60 incredible projects that would protect tens of thousands of acres across the state.
At Conservation Florida, we are focused on saving the places Floridians love. Our work protects land, water, and plants and animals – but we need YOUR help.
We are increasingly cognizant of the fact that we have a limited window of opportunity to protect the future of our state for the benefit of all – people and wildlife alike. It's going to take all of us, the collective impact, to preserve the best of Florida for future generations.
Modern-day conservation in Florida is built on the backs of familiar heroes, unsung champions, activists, artists, philanthropists, politicians, and – perhaps, most notably – everyday Floridians who just love where they live.
As Clay Henderson so perfectly stated in his recently published book, Forces of Nature: A History of Florida Land Conservation, “The lure of conservation is that one person can make a difference...”
I hope you take time to go to the coast, swim in the springs, hike the trails, and find that special place that you want to protect for future generations.
It’s time to join us on the frontlines, and be the difference you want to see for this wildly unique state. Conservation Florida needs you, and Florida needs you. Now’s the time to fund land conservation like the future of Florida depends on it... because it does.
Let’s keep Florida wildly beautiful – together.
For more information about specific giving opportunities, please contact Sarah Collins at sarah@conservationfla.org or (352) 376-4770.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
For the Love of Florida
I firmly believe that Florida is the best place to live, work, visit, explore, and more. I want to live here, raise a family here, and will continue to be a champion for our state’s prosperity. It’s no surprise to me that others want to be here, too. But, as we grow, we have to keep a keen eye on what we save, and what we pave.
I firmly believe that Florida is the best place to live, work, visit, explore, and more.
I want to live here, raise a family here, and will continue to be a champion for our state’s prosperity. It’s no surprise to me that others want to be here, too. But, as we grow, we have to keep a keen eye on what we save, and what we pave.
Freshly grown food, breathable air, fishable lakes, and swimmable beaches are not guaranteed. We must be good stewards of our land and water today. That’s why Conservation Florida’s team is working to protect Florida’s natural and agricultural landscapes for future generations.
IMPACTFUL, BOOTS-ON- THE-GROUND WORK
Conservation Florida is a statewide land conservancy grounded by a deep love for Florida and a history of impactful, boots-on-the-ground land conservation that is working to conserve natural and agricultural lands. We are a land conservancy founded by Floridians, with a statewide service area dedicated to the protection of our water, wildlife, and wild places, and to connecting the Florida Wildlife Corridor. From Pensacola to the Florida Keys, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection since our founding in 1999.
We are helping cattle ranchers in the Florida Wildlife Corridor and in the Greater Northern Everglades place conservation easements on their family lands so that they can continue to operate in our state. We are establishing preserves in densely developed urban areas to provide access to nature and open spaces. We are also working with businesses, civic groups, municipalities, and residents to save places of special cultural, historical, or ecological significance in communities throughout Florida. Thanks to you, our generous donors and partners, we are truly shaping Florida’s conservation future.
In 2020, we formed the H2O, a regional conservation partnership spanning six counties in the Avon Park Sentinel Landscape. The H2O partnership includes communities, state agencies, landowners, and the Avon Park Air Force Range. As a direct result, thousands of acres of high- priority habitat in this region will be permanently protected.
In 2021, our targeted advocacy played a substantial role in the passage of the Florida Wildlife Corridor Act and the allocation of $400 million to the state’s Florida Forever land protection program.
Currently, your Conservation Florida team has more than 60 active conservation projects, totaling over 100,000 acres, underway in support of Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature- based recreation. You make this work possible, and we are grateful every day for your support.
FLORIDA’S GREEN WAVE
Conservation Florida is proud to support local conservation ballot measures. Floridians of all stripes – red, blue,
and independent – voted to pass such measures in Polk, Brevard, Indian River, Alachua, Pasco, and Nassau counties during the November 8 election.
“Floridians don’t always agree, but we do find common ground in the land and water we share. It’s a great love of place. It’s part of our ethos, our Floridian ethic, our heritage, and our legacy.”
Voters in these counties join Collier, Volusia, and Manatee counties in supporting natural resource protection. Conservation ballot measures at the county level provide a steady, reliable source of funding to protect land that provides essential services to our local communities.
It's hard to put a price on things like woods, water, and wildlife until you
start to lose them. That's when their true value becomes crystal clear. For those of us who have lived here for
a while, it hits you when you drive by the woods you've passed every day for decades and, suddenly, they're gone. For newcomers, it's the feeling you get the first time you visit a Florida spring and are taken aback by its beauty. Everyone has a reason to stand up and protect wild Florida.
Floridians don’t always agree, but we do find common ground in the land and water we share. It’s a great love of place. It’s part of our ethos, our Floridian ethic, our heritage, and our legacy.
A MOMENT LIKE NO OTHER
We're moving in the right direction, but we have a lot of work to do, friends. With your help and our continued shared values, we can have it all here in our beloved state. We can continue to grow our economy and population, while also saving the special places that can never be replaced.
If you agree with me, and I know in my Floridian heart that an overwhelming majority of you do – regardless of your age, gender, race, background, and political beliefs – then join Conservation Florida as we work to save our water, wildlife, wild places, and conserve the Florida Wildlife Corridor.
With public support at an all-time high, bipartisan political support, and a marked increase in funding for conservation and land stewardship, this is our chance! Join us today for the love of Florida and its future.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Conservation Cowboys
Florida is the birthplace of the cattle industry in America. In 1521, on Ponce de León’s second trip to the land he’d named La Florida, the Spanish explorer brought along Andalusian cattle - something never before seen in America. Now, there are about 15,500 operations, encompassing more than 7 million acres of land with some 1,750,000 head of cattle, and more than 5,000 registered brands in Florida. These ranchlands are the keepers of Florida’s last frontier.
In the Saddle with Pat Durden, Cary Lightsey, Matt Pearce, and Jim Strickland
Florida is the birthplace of the cattle industry in America. In 1521, on Ponce de León’s second trip to the land he’d named La Florida, the Spanish explorer brought along Andalusian cattle - something never before seen in America. Now, there are about 15,500 operations, encompassing more than 7 million acres of land with some 1,750,000 head of cattle, and more than 5,000 registered brands in Florida. These ranchlands are the keepers of Florida’s last frontier.
Can you picture it? The wild west of the south – wild Florida. Where sunburn is a badge of honor from backbreaking work, not basking at the beach.
That’s the lifestyle for Pat Durden, Cary Lightsey, Matt Pearce, and Jim Strickland, Florida’s shining examples of modern cowboy-style conservation. Nearly one-fifth of the state is devoted to the cattle industry, and these ranchers play a vital role in Florida's economic health. These men make it cool to be a cowboy, or "cattleman," as Matt Pearce prefers. They are the history and the future of Florida, truly embodying what it means to be a Steward of the land – protecting some of our state’s most critical habitats.
Matt Pearce’s roots run deep in the sunshine state. “I am a seventh-generation Florida rancher whose family settled along the western shore of Lake Okeechobee, and grazed cattle along the Kissimmee River before there were fence laws,” Pearce said. “My great-grandfather, John Olan Pearce Sr., along with eight other Florida cattlemen, traveled to Tallahassee in 1934 to lobby for private property rights, disease prevention, and flood control. They were the original founders of the Florida Cattlemen’s Association, an organization that represents over 5,000 cattlemen today. I served as the Florida Cattlemen’s Association president from 2019 to 2020, and my family has a rich ranching heritage that I’m continuing to pass down to my three children. The brand I use to identify my cattle – P1 – has been handed down several generations to the firstborn son or grandson of Pearce descendants. The brand is over 150 years old and still being used today at the Pearce Cattle Company.”
Ranches in Florida provide some of the last, vast green space in our state. They provide critical habitat to our native species, and from the swamps to the sandhills, ranches in Florida are key to supporting our unique biodiversity and an array of habitats on a landscape scale. In addition to their critical role in grassland preservation, ranches conserve landscapes in their natural conditions, keeping lands wild and harboring pockets of old Florida.
“There is no time clock to punch in and out – Mother Nature doesn’t care what you had planned. You sometimes work all year in the hope of breaking even. So, why do it?” questioned Northwest Florida Rancher Pat Durden. His family’s heritage in farming and ranching around the Gadsden County area significantly predates the Civil War. “It’s for that sunrise when the birds come to life, and you look out at your cattle grazing a dew-covered pasture on a cool morning. Or, the sunsets when you can sit and hear quail whistling while you look out and see whitetail deer grazing alongside a flock of wild turkeys. I’m not sure how to convey the feeling that comes over you at that moment. It’s a time when I reflect on my granddaddy and my dad’s sacrifices that gave us the privilege to manage and care for the land that they did before me. It’s pretty powerful, money can’t buy that feeling. It’s something that has to be fought for and protected, and the sooner we as a people learn this, the better off environmentally we will be.”
Ranches are critical in helping keep the Florida Wildlife Corridor intact, and without them, our greenways and wildlife corridors would be fragmented and lost forever. Florida’s ranchlands protect a vast amount of native habitat that is critical to the viability of many of our imperiled wildlife species like the Florida panther and Florida black bear. After the conservation lands, cattle ranches create the next greatest opportunity for environmental value in Florida. The mosaic of upland and wetland habitats on ranches can sustain virtually all the native wildlife biodiversity, while providing widespread water resource protection for Floridians.
The ranching legacy passed down through Cary Lightsey’s family is centered upon stewardship with more than 90% of their ranchland registered under conservation easements. In addition, their family has won a variety of awards for their environmental stewardship practices. “We are one of the first ranches to provide eco-tours to the public and civic organizations, showcasing our green spaces, an abundance of wildlife, clean water and air programs, and endangered species,” he added. Lightsey says that the most important thing his father taught him about ranching was that if you take care of the land and the livestock that feed on it, it will take care of you and generations to come.
“Stewardship has to do with how we manage our time, talent, resources... our entire lives. It is a beautiful concept when understood. We are blessed by having the task of caring for all that we possess in our lives such as our land, livestock, wildlife, water, air, and our earth,” said Lightsey. “We want to share our goals and to ensure that the future members of our family will have a livelihood much like the one we had...to work our land, the cattle, and wildlife, and all that goes along with it.”
The importance of the lands our Floridian conservation cowboys manage cannot be overstated. In the Northern Everglades, these ranches mimic the historical dry and wet prairies that once swept across Central and South Florida. Where the natural range of prairie hasn’t been lost to development or more intensive agricultural practices, the disruption of natural fire regimes converted these treeless prairies to forested systems over time.
Florida prairies are naturally maintained by frequent fires. Today, traditional Florida prairies occur almost exclusively on public lands that require human intervention with intensive prescribed fire. The loss of these native grasslands has resulted in the rapid decline of several species dependent on unique qualities offered by prairies. Replicating natural fire regimes on privately owned grasslands to restore the historical conditions of dry prairies is not feasible in the fragmented landscape of Florida today.
That's where the next best management tool comes into play: cattle. To those outside of the agricultural community, cattle may be an unsuspecting hero for wildlife conservation in the state of Florida. However, grazing livestock may just be the most economical and sustainable solution for conserving the declining populations of grassland- dependent species.
The critically endangered Florida grasshopper sparrow was near extinction until recent captive breeding efforts were enacted. The federally threatened crested caracara nest almost exclusively on isolated cabbage palms in wide-open grasslands. The state-threatened Florida burrowing owls were entirely dependent on treeless habitats that only dry prairies could provide. Recovery plans for these species and other imperiled flora and fauna, emphasize the critical role that rural landowners play in statewide conservation.
Jim Strickland can trace his ranching heritage back to just before the Civil War. “There are not many options for owners of big tracts of land except to sell them to developers,” explains Strickland. As the owner of Strickland Ranch and managing partner of Blackbeard’s Ranch in Manatee County, Florida, he’s dedicated his life’s work to conserving the land, waterways, and surrounding habitat of the Myakka River Valley. “It’s about saving land and ensuring smart development,” he says. “I’m not anti- growth or anti-housing, but we also have to recognize that people move here because there are so many things that make Florida special. The quality of life and opportunities for recreation means green space, good water, and a healthy environment – we need to consider those things in making development decisions, and we need to share the story of how the ranching industry promotes stewardship and conservation.”
As Florida’s population booms, poorly planned expansion of cities is cutting off natural wildlife corridors. Conservation Florida is combating these threats to our future by protecting natural and agricultural landscapes for future generations. Conservation easements in particular are a smart tool here, keeping Florida’s family farms and ranches in business, while simultaneously protecting the conservation value of the land
is significant. Maintaining green landscapes, wildlife corridors, habitats, and open spaces, while safeguarding food security and the rural communities that are dependent on the economic viability of agricultural operations, is a double or triple win.
In the last 50 years, more than 8 million acres of forest and wetland habitats (about 24% of the state) have been developed. Protecting ranches is a vital part of the conservation puzzle. It’s hard work and heart work, but glorious all the same – and helps keep Florida green. So, we urge you to think beyond the beaches, look inland, and thank a cowboy (or gal) for keeping Florida, Florida...and join Conservation Florida as we work to protect our state’s ranchlands.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Conservation Florida and Our State’s Sentinel Landscapes
Conservation Florida is a proud partner of The Sentinel Landscapes Partnership, a joint program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Department of Defense (DoD), and Department of the Interior. The partnership unites local, state, and federal partners to strengthen the nation’s military readiness while safeguarding Florida’s natural resources, including land and water.
Leveraging the Power of Partnerships
Conservation Florida is a proud partner of The Sentinel Landscapes Partnership, composed of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Department of Defense (DoD), and Department of Interior. The partnership unites local, state, and federal partners to strengthen the nation’s military readiness while safeguarding Florida’s natural resources, including land and water. Sentinel landscapes surround military installations and ranges; permanently protecting these landscapes strengthens the nation’s military readiness while addressing natural resources concerns.
We are working in both the Avon Park Air Force Range (APAFR) Sentinel Landscape and the Northwest Florida Sentinel Landscape. An exciting opportunity with both Sentinel Landscapes is connecting land within the Florida Wildlife Corridor geography. Conservation Florida will work with partners to protect the network of critical wildlife habitats spanning these landscapes, touting rural and agricultural lands, iconic longleaf pine forests, threatened and endangered species habitats, and multiple key DoD facilities. Its protection will improve regional resilience and sustainability, retain working agriculture and forestry lands, protect natural resources and endangered species, and support military operations.
Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape
Located in south-central Florida, the APAFR Sentinel Landscape covers almost 1,700,000 acres of land and is known for its rich biodiversity and abundance of private ranches. APAFR Sentinel Landscape is anchored by the Air Force’s largest primary air-to-ground training range east of the Mississippi River, which is used by every branch of the Armed Forces.
The APAFR Sentinel Landscape is also home to portions of the Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area, a 900-acre parcel that buffers the installation from incompatible development and offers excellent opportunities for hunting, fishing, camping, and other outdoor activities. In 2016, local partners forged the Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape to preserve the region’s ecological assets and strengthen military readiness by helping private landowners manage their properties sustainably.
Conservation Florida and its partners at APAFR and USDA’s Natural Resource Conservation Service’s (NRCS) Agricultural Land Easement Program are working to conserve land throughout the landscape. This includes the 1,250-acre Arbuckle Creek Ranch. With the help of the APAFR Sentinel Landscape partnership, this is just one of many conservation lands to be permanently protected by Conservation Florida. The Northern Everglades continues to be a key priority for Conservation Florida- a vibrant landscape containing historic cattle ranches, sweeping vistas, and vast ecosystems. Because it forms the headwaters of the Greater Everglades, its protection is critical for the future of Florida’s freshwater supply.
Northwest Florida Sentinel Landscape
The new designation of the Northwest Florida Sentinel Landscape (NWFSL) will provide greater access to funding assistance from federal, state, and local governments and private sector programs to achieve both military and conservation goals. Conservation Florida is a proud partner. The landscape partners will focus on supporting longleaf pine, native grassland, and hydrological restoration, listed species recovery, at-risk species conservation, invasive species control, prescribed burning, and stormwater capture and water reuse infrastructure projects to enhance the resilience of the landscape.
As one of the largest landscapes of its kind, the NWFSL contains the Apalachicola National Forest, Blackwater River State Forest, St. Marks, and St. Vincent National Wildlife Refuges, and the congressionally designated Florida National Scenic Trail. The nine DoD installations and ranges within the landscape are integral to military training, weapons testing, special operations, joint cyber warfare, and aviation pilot training for Air Force, Navy, Marine Corps, and Coast Guard.
The vast majority of the 11,306 square-mile NWFSL is dedicated to agricultural and forested working lands and includes 4,062 square miles of conserved lands providing habitat for 29 Federally Endangered, 20 Threatened, and two Candidate species. This region is also one of the five richest biodiversity hotspots in the continental United States. Aggregating military installations into one Sentinel Landscape reflects the importance of the region to the DoD, while also creating an extraordinarily robust suite of partners that have the resources, expertise, and authorities to deliver the priorities of the Sentinel Landscape program.
Your Support In Action
Because of you, Conservation Florida is able to work to save land in our state’s two incredible Sentinel Landscapes. As a dynamic driver of land conservation in Florida, we will continue to prioritize lands that achieve significant conservation goals. Teamwork really does make the dream work, and thanks to strong partnerships in both Sentinel Landscapes, together we can achieve strong conservation outcomes that benefit people and wildlife alike.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Meet Us Outside
Meet us outside, soaking up the sunshine and beauty of wild Florida! Your support
of Conservation Florida means that you’re connecting people with nature, providing nature-based education opportunities, and creating new advocates for wild Florida.
Frog on a pine lily by Adam Strang Bass.
Reconnecting With the Wild Places We Love
Meet us outside, soaking up the sunshine and beauty of wild Florida! Your support of Conservation Florida means that you’re connecting people with nature, providing nature-based education opportunities, and creating new advocates for wild Florida. From the tropical hammocks to the rolling sandhills to the palmetto prairie scrub, Florida is wildly beautiful - and we intend to keep her that way. We also intend to connect as many people as possible to that beauty, knowing that when we do, we are creating more voices for nature.
Conservation Florida believes one of Florida's most valuable assets is its wild spaces, where pines tower above swaths of palmettos. Where cypress knees emerge out of rich, tannin-stained waters and windswept coasts forged over centuries give way to rivers and lakes teeming with life. This is the Florida known to people who arrived here more than 10,000 years ago.
While only small pockets of old Florida have remained truly untouched over the years, the demand and urgency has grown to protect our state's irreplaceable wild and agricultural lands. Conservation Florida is ramping up its pace, now leading conservation projects on over 101,000 acres statewide. But where can you find wild Florida? Odds are it’s closer than you think. You may find pieces of Florida’s natural heritage—flocks of songbirds to tangles of ancient Spanish moss—right in your backyard. We invite you to meet us outside at one of our many, statewide events.
Whether you're a seasoned naturalist or a first-time explorer, Conservation Florida Bioblitz events are designed for those who are eager to learn and explore outside. The events are engaging, offering participants guided expert-led hikes, hands-on activities, and a chance to explore Florida’s one-of-a-kind natural areas.
Conservation Florida started expanding on the idea of offering Bioblitz events to promote a greater understanding and appreciation of Florida’s wild places. Four years and eight Bioblitzes later, that program has exponentially grown, reaching 121,090 observations, and recording 8,378 species, with the participation of nearly 10,500 Floridians.
Part educational experience, part scientific endeavor, and fully rewarding, a Bioblitz is a celebration of wild Florida. Bring your phone, snap some shots, upload them to iNaturalist, and TA-DA! You're contributing localized data to science that could help protect threatened landscapes and species statewide.
Aside from our Bioblitz events, we've had tree plantings, Wild Walks, and more! We host Wild Walks throughout Florida, but there’s one property we love to host educational events at: our D Ranch Preserve. The 476-acre preserve is a hotspot for Florida wildlife, and supports a healthy population of threatened gopher tortoises, six-lined race runners, red-tailed hawks, and other famous Florida fauna. Located in an area of Volusia County under serious development pressure, this preserve protects rare ecosystems, provides habitat for Florida’s wildlife, builds on current conservation areas, and helps protect Florida’s freshwater.
Since the conservation of the property, Conservation Florida has opened the preserve for several events and volunteer opportunities. We held a tree planting event planting over 100 longleaf pine. The community support was incredible, with volunteers from near and far gathering to get their hands dirty and make a difference. During the many events at our D Ranch Preserve, participants learned about native plants and wildlife, prescribed burns, habitat restoration, and what it takes to permanently protect wild Florida.
The heart of what we do is protecting land, but land conservation is so much more than the number of acres saved. We want to show Floridians what makes the land we protect so important. Conservation Florida events are centered around offering a better understanding of the natural world around us and highlighting why it’s so important to protect. When we protect land, we protect the many things connected to it: clean drinking water, clean air, local agriculture, wildlife habitat, and scenic vistas for the benefit of the general public.
Conservation Florida's nature-based education programming provides supporters a gateway to wild Florida. With educational programs to help our fellow Floridians connect to our state's special places, we are grounded in our genuine affinity for what makes Florida, Florida. Every acre we conserve, every habitat we restore, and every drop of water we safeguard is because we have people like YOU on our side. Come and meet us outside soon!
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Conservation Florida and Florida Department of Environmental Protection Conserve 615-Acre Crippen Ranch
Conservation Florida and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Division of State Lands have completed the conservation of Crippen Ranch, a 615-acre property in the Northern Everglades.
Crippen Ranch is a 615-acre property in the Northern Everglades. Projects Conservation Florida targets in this region will help filter surface water flowing from the north before it reaches Lake Okeechobee. Photo by Carlton Ward Jr. of Wildpath.
615 Acres Now Saved in Florida Wildlife Corridor
Okeechobee, FL (November 22, 2022) - Conservation Florida and the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Division of State Lands have completed the conservation of Crippen Ranch, a 615-acre property in the Northern Everglades.
Located in north-central Okeechobee County and connected to the Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park, the property is within a key region of the Northern Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and Conservation Area - a mosaic of seasonally wet grasslands, longleaf pine savannas, and cattle ranches that sustain one of the most important assemblages of imperiled species in the southeast United States. The conservation easement placed on the ranch permanently prohibits development on the property while allowing cattle ranching operations to continue uninterrupted.
Partnerships are critical in making this type of boots-on-the-ground conservation happen.
"Securing a conservation easement on Crippen Ranch is a win for Florida’s environment, rural economy, wildlife, and more,” said Traci Deen, President and CEO of Conservation Florida. “We are grateful to landowner Scott Crippen for his commitment to conservation and thank our partners at the Florida Department of Environmental Protection's Division of State Lands, as well as our donors, for their tremendous support in our shared mission to conserve a wild slice of old Florida."
The total purchase price of the easement was $2,070,000. August's Cabinet meeting earlier this year marked a pivotal moment as Governor DeSantis and the Cabinet approved its funding. Thanks to Governor DeSantis and the Florida Cabinet in its role as the Board of Trustees of the Internal Improvement Trust Fund, funding was allocated from the State's Florida Forever program to complete the purchase of this 615-acre conservation easement.
“This acquisition was made possible by collaboration between the State of Florida, nonprofit and private stakeholders who are dedicated to conserving wild Florida,” said Shawn Hamilton, Secretary of the Florida Department of Environmental Protection. “The department remains committed to continuing our efforts to acquire and preserve conservation lands for generations to come.”
Crippen Ranch is located within the Kissimmee-St Johns River Connector Florida Forever project, which ranked number 7 in the Florida Forever Less-Than-Fee category, located within the Northern Everglades, Avon Park Air Force Range Sentinel Landscape, and the Florida Wildlife Corridor. Adjacent to the vast Kissimmee Prairie Preserve State Park, the ranch is an extraordinary example of a property’s protection supporting many conservation goals. The Kissimmee-St. Johns River Connector Project is intended to provide a habitat and hydrological connection between the Fort Drum Marsh Conservation Area, the Kissimmee Prairie State Preserve, and the Ordway-Whittell Kissimmee Prairie Sanctuary. This protection area will conserve high-quality, natural habitats for a wide variety of wildlife and plants.
Properties in the region provide critical habitat for species such as the Florida grasshopper sparrow, Florida black bear, crested caracara, gopher tortoise, and other imperiled wildlife species. It is also estimated that more than 50% of all habitats used by panthers in the Northern Everglades are on private lands.
Conservation Florida worked with the landowner Scott Crippen and the Department of Environmental Protection to negotiate the deal.
“Conservation Florida has been a pleasure to work with,” said Crippen. “I am a huge advocate for preserving wild Florida. I will rest easy knowing our family’s ranch will be appreciated, as it is now, forever. I sincerely hope other ranchers and landowners take this path in conserving what is left of our wild and beautiful state.”
Projects Conservation Florida targets in this region will help filter surface water flowing from the north before it reaches Lake Okeechobee. In addition to contributing to the clean drinking water supply for millions of people, the land provides shelter for many species of neotropical birds during their spring and fall migrations. Conservation Florida is proud to continue to have worked with the Department of Environmental Protection to see this property conserved forever.
About Conservation Florida:
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Florida’s Green Wave
The recent election spurred a lot of talk about red waves and blue waves, but a perhaps unnoticed wave that swept the polls in Florida this November was bright green. Once again, Floridians — red, blue, and independent — voted for conservation.
Aerial shot of Cabbage Palm woods by Adam Bass.
“We do find common ground in the land and water we share.”
Written By: Traci Deen, President and CEO of Conservation Florida
Orlando, Florida (November 17, 2022) -The recent election spurred a lot of talk about red waves and blue waves, but a perhaps unnoticed wave that swept the polls in Florida this November was bright green. Once again, Floridians — red, blue, and independent — voted for conservation.
Voters in Polk, Brevard, Indian River, Alachua, Pasco, and Nassau counties turned out during a surprise November hurricane to cast a vote for wild Florida. These counties join Collier, Volusia, and Manatee in passing recent measures that support natural resource protection.
Why do Florida voters elect to pay for conservation? The reasons are as varied as the personalities of Florida’s voters, but the fact is the majority of Floridians support conservation. And we vote for it every time.
Floridians don’t always agree, but we do find common ground in the land and water we share. It’s a great love of place. It’s part of our ethos, our Floridian ethic, our heritage, and our legacy.
Conservation ballot measures at the county level provide a steady, reliable source of funding to protect land that provides essential services to our local communities. Freshly grown food, breathable air, fishable lakes, and swimmable beaches are no longer guaranteed. We must be good stewards of our land and water today, and Floridians get that.
When we vote to save natural and agricultural lands that make our counties unique, we are saying, together, that this is what matters to us. We’re also taking some control over where, when, and how future growth will occur in our hometowns.
I firmly believe that Florida is the best place to live, work, visit, explore, and more. I want to live here, raise a family here, and will continue to be a champion for our state’s prosperity. It’s no surprise to me that others want to be here, too. But, as we grow, we have to keep a keen eye on what we save, and what we pave. Voters in six counties sang that sentiment in unison.
It’s hard to put a price on things like woods, water, and wildlife until you start to lose them. That’s when their true value becomes crystal clear. For those of us who have lived here for a while, it hits you when you drive by the woods you’ve passed every day for decades and suddenly they’re gone. For newcomers, it’s the feeling you get the first time you visit a Florida spring and are taken aback by its beauty. Everyone has a reason to stand up and protect wild Florida.
While voting for conservation is part of a growing national trend, Floridians have a long history of supporting conservation measures. Thanks to the voters who passed measures this year, hundreds of millions of dollars will be allocated to conservation in those counties.
We’re moving in the right direction, but we have a lot of work to do, Florida. With your support and our continued shared values, we can have it all here in our beloved state. We can continue to grow our economy and population while also saving the special places that can never be replaced.
Those Floridians who put wild Florida at the top of their minds, hearts, and voting decisions deserve our gratitude. By passing ballot measures in support of natural resource conservation, they are helping create a better future for all Floridians and sending a clear message to leaders. Save land, and now.
Are you on the fence about the value of protecting wild Florida? Join Conservation Florida at one of our upcoming outings and we’ll introduce you to 1,000 reasons to love and protect Florida’s natural and agricultural landscapes for future generations.
Are you all in and looking for ways to do more? Join Conservation Florida as we work to save our water, wildlife, wild places, and conserve the Florida Wildlife Corridor.
Traci Deen is a 6th generation Floridian; she serves as president and CEO of Conservation Florida, a statewide land conservancy.
About Conservation Florida
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Where the Turtle Tracks Lead
Early one morning in June, I rode my trusty beach bike along the Eastern shoreline and spotted turtle tracks leading to a new nest and back to the ocean. I calculated that I missed seeing this ancient and amazing creature by an hour. I vowed to get out earlier the next day.
“…I came across an editorial written by Sarah Collins of Conservation Florida. In her article, Sarah expressed precisely what I was feeling that morning. “Wild Florida is a treasured gift for all of us that needs to be protected and nurtured." I emailed her immediately - thanking her for expressing the sentiments I was feeling. I also asked how I could learn more about Conservation Florida.”
Wildlife Inspires Floridian to Connect with Conservation Florida
Written by: Christy Wilson Delk
Orlando, Florida (October 17, 2022) - Early one morning in June, I rode my trusty beach bike along the Eastern shoreline and spotted turtle tracks leading to a new nest and back to the ocean. I calculated that I missed seeing this ancient and amazing creature by an hour. I vowed to get out earlier the next day.
That same morning, while reading the Orlando Sentinel, I came across an editorial written by Sarah Collins of Conservation Florida. In her article, Sarah expressed precisely what I was feeling that morning. “Wild Florida is a treasured gift for all of us that needs to be protected and nurtured." I emailed her immediately - thanking her for expressing the sentiments I was feeling. I also asked how I could learn more about Conservation Florida.
Responding to an editorial is not something I do often, but I was primed and ready to act. Ready to do something more than to simply enjoy Florida’s unique environmental gifts and display my Protect the Panther license tag. Post-pandemic left me with more time and a commitment to become involved with a Florida-based conservation organization. Specifically, one that has a need for more boots on the ground to help with environmental projects, and has room for those with a willingness to advocate publicly and financially for conservation in Florida.
The following month, Sarah scheduled an introduction meeting to have my questions answered directly by Conservation Florida’s President and CEO, Traci Deen. After meeting with Traci, I was certain that Conservation Florida was a very important part of the broader effort to protect and even restore our precious Florida ecosystems.
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, and wild places.
The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.
Traci explained how the Conservation Florida mission of protecting Florida’s natural and agricultural landscapes had a primary focus on saving land within the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The Corridor is my sweet spot. That’s where the estimated remaining 200-300 panthers need to roam. At that point I told Traci, “I’m all in. How can I help?" It was that simple. The act of reaching out, and making a connection the moment I read Sarah’s article made all the difference for me.
Perhaps, reading this will inspire you to join me in answering the conservation call. Give your time, talent, and treasure to wild Florida. Make time to grab a coffee with me, Traci, or Sarah to learn more. Let this be the OpEd that inspires you the way Sarah's did me. You won't regret it. Together, we can protect wild Florida.
Christy Wilson Delk is a 50-year Central Florida resident, former Rollins College business professor, and business owner. She is currently a full-time outdoor enthusiast and nature lover.
About Conservation Florida
Conservation Florida is a statewide accredited land conservancy working to conserve Florida’s water, wildlife, wild places, and protect the Florida Wildlife Corridor. The organization’s conservation projects support Florida’s native plants and wildlife, fresh water, wildlife corridors, family farms and ranches, the economy, and nature-based recreation. Since its founding in 1999, Conservation Florida has prioritized strategic and evidence-based land protection and has saved over 30,000 acres of critical habitat.