A typical Pine Flatwood with grasses. |
"When Samuel Lockett traveled by mule-drawn carriage around the Florida Parishes in 1871 documenting the natural conditions of the region and commenting upon its development potential, he fell in love with the beauty of the region.
In the central and eastern Florida Parishes (essentially equivalent to the range of the EGCP Ecoregion in LA) longleaf pine woodlands in the hilly uplands and longleaf pine savannas in the flatwoods were by far the most common habitats in the region. Describing much of Washington, St. Tammany, Tangipahoa, St. Helena and Livingston parishes as unbroken expenses of longleaf pine, Lockett wrote of "the most beautiful, limpid streams imaginable... The transparency can scarcely be realized from a mere description," he noted."
Marc Pastorek has updated his plan for the site. Here is the new concept:
The green areas are islands of loblolly pines and natural
diversity of fruiting trees and shrubs with wood edge wildflowers like monarda
and mountain mint, etc. The yellow is meadow and
scattered long leaf with an occasional grouping of pond cypress(maybe one or
two small groupings of maybe eight or so, total).
No comments:
Post a Comment