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Planting Preparation for Saturday's Restoration Planting (FWC Royce 9/7/2018)
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Planting Preparation for Saturday's Restoration Planting (FWC Royce 9/7/2018)

We’ll be loading the native plants for the next day’s planting onto a trailer, moving them out to the restoration area at Royce, and placing them where they’ll be planted.

9/7/2018
When: From 9 AM to around 11 AM
Where: FWC Royce Unit - Main Offices
1630 Royce Ranch Avenue
Lake Placid, Florida  33852
United States
Contact: Bill Parken
bill.parken@myfwc.com
863 699 3742


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We’ll be loading the native plants for the next day’s planting onto a trailer, moving them out to the restoration area at Royce, and placing them where they’ll be planted.  

This will allow everyone to start planting much earlier the next day.


Please wear sturdy footwear, long pants, long sleeves (or a T with sunscreen), and a hat. Please bring your work gloves and hiker’s water bottle or similar.

 We’ll have plenty of cold drinking and all the tools needed.

So we can plan properly, please let us know that you're coming by registering on this webpage (see button at top).


Directions to FWC Royce Unit

From the corner of US 27 and CR 621 in Lake Placid, go east on CR 621 1.7 miles to Hallmark Ave. on the left.  Turn left on Hallmark.  After 3.6 miles the road makes a sharp left and sharp right and changes names to Royce Ranch Ave.  After a total of 5.0 miles on Hallmark / Royce Ranch Ave, Royce Ranch is on the left, marked by an FWC logo.  Turn left onto the driveway and follow it back to the offices.


  

This workday is part of Project Acorn ... a multiyear effort by the Ridge Rangers to gather and pot scrub-oak acorns, maintain the sprouts, and plant the resulting baby oaks in damaged scrub oak habitat on the Lake Wales Ridge.


The FWC Royce Unit is part of the Lake Wales Ridge Wildlife and Environmental Area. The most distinctive natural community on the Lake Wales Ridge is scrub, home to one of the rarest collections of plants and animals in the world. Healthy scrub has the appearance of a miniature forest with trees seldom taller than 10 feet and open patches of sand. The WEA contains 20 of 22 federally listed plant species known to occur on the Lake Wales Ridge.