Some fascinating creatures appeared at the Francis Beidler Forest during the last two days!
ASC operates two centers. Francis Beidler Forest in Four Holes Swamp is a 17,000-acre wildlife sanctuary featuring a 1-3/4 mile boardwalk through an old-growth cypress-tupelo swamp. Open Tues-Sun (closed Mon. & some holidays; admission fee). Silver Bluff along the Savannah River has 3,154 acres of upland pine forest, hardwood bottomlands, fields, lakes and streams with a checklist of over 200 species, including Wood Storks! Ed. programming and tours. Images © FBF, 2006-2016.
Friday, March 30, 2007
Charleston County School of the Arts
Some fascinating creatures appeared at the Francis Beidler Forest during the last two days!
Thursday, March 29, 2007
Westview Elementary
Check out the education department calendar to see what days are still open for school visits.
Wednesday, March 28, 2007
SCE&G and Vance Elementary School


Tuesday, March 27, 2007
Silver Bluff Coach & Carriage Drive
This special day was hosted by Jack Wetzel as a fundraising event for the sanctuary. Many spectators paid for the privilege of attending to observe the carriage driving, participate in bird and natural history walks, watch raptor demonstrations, and enjoy a delicious lunch – complete with chocolate riding boots for dessert!
Monday, March 26, 2007
CPR Training
The dragonfly in the other image is also working on its circulation. It has recently emerged from its life as an underwater macroinvertebrate and is preparing to begin its life as an adult. Its wings have not yet filled and stiffened to their flight-ready horizontally-extended position.
Thursday, March 22, 2007
Silver Bluff Trail Ride
Wednesday, March 21, 2007
Charleston AFB Conservation Day

Tuesday, March 20, 2007
Red Hat Society
Monday, March 19, 2007
Summer Camp


The group in the image are getting a close look at the fawn in the other image.
June 25-29, 2007
July 9-13, 2007
Friday, March 16, 2007
Coach & Carriage Ride at Silver Bluff
The 2007 Audubon Coach & Carriage Drive at Silver Bluff Sanctuary near Aiken features a day in Nature offering a variety of activities. Observe the Coach & Carriage drivers prepare their rigs and then view the array as they make their way along the 6+ mile forested trail. Guided birdwalks and live Raptor demonstrations will be ongoing. Attendees will also enjoy a sumptuous lunch at 1:00 pm, catered by the Green Boundary Club.
Thursday, March 15, 2007
A.W.O.L.

Wednesday, March 14, 2007
Maintenance
Monday, March 12, 2007
Great Backyard Bird Count Results

Friday, March 09, 2007
Spotted Turtles
When you visit the Francis Beidler Forest, you can learn more about the Spotted Turtle by interacting with the touch-screen display in the nature center. The display and previous Spotted Turtle research at the Francis Beidler Forest were sponsored by Santee Cooper, which owns the powerline that cuts across Four Holes Swamp and provides critical basking sites for the turtles.
Jackie Litzgus studied Spotted Turtles for four years here at Beidler Forest. She grew up in southern Ontario, Canada and has been studying Spotted Turtles since a chance encounter in 1991 while working as a biology instructor at a canoe trip camp. In the Bug House, the name given to the shed that housed the camp’s equipment, Jackie discovered a moldy binder of forgotten research data for Spotted Turtles dating back to 1977. Jackie was fascinated and immediately set out to see if she could find any of the individual turtles in the nearby pond. She did and she was hooked!
As an undergraduate from University of Guelph, Jackie began studying the Spotted Turtles in the Ontario area (45N 06’, 80W 04’), which led to her Master’s degree on the subject from the same university. In Canada, the Spotted Turtle is listed as an endangered species. Jackie’s 29 years of data constitute the longest running data set for the species on the planet.
Having studied the Spotted Turtles at the northern extent of their range, Jackie began looking for suitable sites to study at the southern extent of their range. Florida was eliminated as a possibility, since there no longer exists a large or healthy population of Spotted Turtles. Jackie’s four-year study at the Francis Beidler Forest site, which led to her Ph.D. from the University of South Carolina, began at the suggestion of herpetologists in our state. Jackie is now back in Ontario as a professor studying turtles.
"It was an amazing experience. Beidler Forest is a herpetologists dream…all the reptiles. It’s spiritual among the trees."
--Jackie Litzgus
We couldn't agree more!
Monday, March 05, 2007
Snapping Turtle
Friday, March 02, 2007
Noisette Creek Monitoring

In the image, Noisette Creeks runs generally from west to east and empties into the Cooper River. A portion of Park Circle can be seen in the upper left corner. The northern portion of the former Naval Base straddles Noisette Creek and portions of the old golf course form the boundaries of the creek at its Cooper River end. The portion of the old golf course south of the creek will be returned to its former state as a marsh.