Recent Articles & News
The 100-Year Experiment
Originally published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. Imagine if you were tasked to develop an experiment on the cultural, economic and ecological effects of frequently burning large landscapes. A daunting task at first, but with a bit of planning you’d likely be...
Kevin McGorty – a Conservation Leader – Retiring in 2022
Kevin McGorty – a Leader in Southeast Land Conservation – Will Leave a Legacy of Accomplishments When He Retires By Kim Sash and Brian Wiebler, originally published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. Kevin McGorty is truly a champion of conservation throughout the...
The Red Quail Mystery
Red Quail, Revisited: How Herbert Stoddard’s Specimens are Helping Solve a Centuries-Old Bobwhite Mystery By Jessie F. Salter, originally published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. If, like me, you have ever found yourself scrolling through the Bobwhite Quail...
Training for National Fire Use
National Fire Use — The Risk Demands the Best Training Possible Originally published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. In much of the Southeastern Coastal Plain the prescribed fire practitioner community does a great job applying prescribed fire. We are fortunate to...
Saving Rare Plants
Saving the Rare Plants of the Longleaf Pine Ecosystem By Jeff Glitzenstein, PhD, originally published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. The recent book, Saving the Wild South: The Fight for Native Plants on the Brink of Extinction by Georgann Eubanks (2021),...
All Hail the Handler
By Durrell Smith, published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. Special thanks to Jon Kohler & Associates for sharing this story. The big man knew the dog wasn’t lost, but there was a growing sense of skepticism in the woods. He was a hollerin’, sqallin’ man. He...
Durrell Smith is on a Mission
Originally published in the 2022 Tall Timbers eJournal. Artist, writer, teacher and birddog fanatic Durrell Smith is on a mission to bring the unlikely to the outdoors. Durrell and wife Ashley Smith co-founded the Minority Outdoors Alliance in 2020, and together from...
Searching for the Black Rail
Searching for North America’s Most Secretive Bird—The Black Rail The Eastern Black Rail, a subspecies of the Black Rail, is a white whale to many bird enthusiasts due to its elusive nature. Rarely seen in flight, it acts more like a mouse than a bird, shuffling...
The Beadel Fellowships at Tall Timbers
The Many Contributions of Tall Timbers' Beadel Fellows In the history book about Tall Timbers, The Legacy of a Red Hills Hunting Plantation, coauthor Robert L. Crawford states, “Beadel Fellows have contributed immeasurably to research at Tall Timbers throughout the...
Two Rare Liatris Species
Two Rare Liatris Species Named for Beadel Fellows Angus Gholson & Bob Godfrey Liatris, commonly called gay feather or blazing star, is an herbaceous perennial wildflower with composite flower heads, and is in the Aster family. Several liatris species can found in...
Treasures in Tall Timbers Archives
Treasures reside in the Tall Timbers Archives Long-time Tall Timbers archivist Juanita Whiddon, who is closing in on retirement, has ceded archival duties to me. I’ve been exploring the shelves in the archives to learn about its holdings. What is in all those boxes on...
34 Landowners Enroll in New Conservation Partnership
Tall Timbers Enrolls 34 Landowners in the Regional Conservation Partnership Program During its First Year of Conservation Work Funded by NRCS Flowing from Thomasville, Georgia south into Florida through the Red Hills, carving swaths through the Cody Scarp before...





















