Champions of Nature
Beneath bald cypress towering over the Francis Beidler Forest, a great horned owl swoops by on fierce, silent wings, so stealth the only clue is a whoosh from her wake. Further east, deep in the Francis Marion Forest, kayaks glide along Wambaw Creek, paddles dipping in the tannin-stained water as kayakers keep eyes peeled for the bright yellow flash of the Prothonotary warbler. On John’s Island, sun-weary beach-goers return from a day at Kiawah, where they’ve just witnessed dolphins strand-feeding at Captain Sam’s Spit. They stop to buy late summer beans at a local farm stand, then detour again at Angel Oak, marveling at its otherworldly span.
On one point regarding the environment there is no partisan debate: we are spoiled by the riches of our Lowcountry landscape. Majesty envelops us at every turn, from persimmon sunsets over Bulls Bay to the yawing vistas of the ACE Basin to endless longleaf pine forests, home to rare pitcher plants and endangered red-cockaded woodpeckers, a keystone species on which 27 other species depend.
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