Recent Articles & News
Birdsong Nature Center land is permanently protected
Originally published in The Cairo Messenger on July 5, 2023 Thanks to the collective efforts of conservation-minded voters and elected officials, along with public and private funding support, the long-term vision for Birdsong Nature Center has finally come to...
Albany smoke management training draws a crowd
Air quality standards are currently a big topic in the prescribed fire world, and Albany, Georgia, has unfortunately become a test case for protecting prescribed fire use. In January 2023, the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency caught the attention of burn managers...
Tools to avoid housing, wildfire repeat
“We made too many wrong mistakes.” Yogi Berra. This quote from catcher/philosopher Yogi Berra is actually somewhat profound. We all make mistakes that have little bearing on our lives — thinking, for instance, that we look great in those cargo shorts! But it’s the...
Komareks’ international work lives on as Europe explores prescribed fire
Ed and Betty Komarek's boot prints remain in Portugal's soot more than 50 years after they went there to spread the gospel of prescribed fire. Fast forward to 2023, and the same areas around Mafra where one of the original Tall Timbers founders visited are still being...
Does gopher tortoise health impact burrow use by wildlife?
by Anna Maria, visiting student researcher 7:00 a.m. A squirrel! I can't believe I just saw a squirrel from the house window. What luck, I even managed to take a video of it! Well, my first awakening at Tall Timbers is off to the best possible start, with a gorgeous...
Congressional members urge EPA to ensure efficient and timely use of prescribed fire under new air standards
Twenty-five Democratic congressional leaders from California sent U.S. Environmental Protection Agency Administrator Michael Regan a June 13, 2023, letter expressing concern that a proposed rule to strengthen the national ambient air quality standard “could...
Summer’s dry down is the perfect time to burn wetlands
An uptick in afternoon convection thunderstorms accompanies the summer months. At the same time, we typically start to dry down in April and May, months that are among the driest in the Red Hills. This annual dry down primes our fuels for fires as we enter the...
With a huge home range, where do feral hogs like to hang out?
By University of Georgia Master's student Chris Terrazas Feral hogs like to roam, but determining where they like to spend their time can help manage their eradication from the Red Hills landscape. That was one focus of a three-year Feral Swine Control and...
Feral hog study: Game species alter habits when pigs are present
By University of Georgia Master’s student, Kelsey Hoskins If you happen to have noticed orange flagging tape on the trees around North Florida and South Georgia last year, then I hope you were smiling. Because below that flagging was one of the 151 trail cameras that...
Tall Timbers advocates Farm Bill priorities in Washington
Conserving and protecting working rural lands in the greater Red Hills and Albany regions occasionally takes Tall Timbers staff outside of our beloved focal areas. Planning and Advocacy Coordinator Neil Fleckenstein recently attended the Land Trust Alliance Advocacy...
Summer’s here. Add these books about fire to your reading list
Spring prescribed fires have stopped smoldering and growing season burns are on the horizon. Turkeys and quail have laid eggs and are busy raising their next generations as crisp spring mornings have transitioned into long, lazy summer days. It’s a perfect time for a...
Firebird Project studying fire’s sweet spot for coastal rail habitat
The Black Rail is not the only secretive marsh species being studied by Tall Timbers as part of the NOAA Firebird Project. The cryptically colored Yellow Rail is the second smallest rail species in North America and has mastered the art of elusion. Similar to the...





















