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Betsy Purdum
“Corbett provides habitat for many types of wildlife besides the deer, small game, and feral hogs that draw human hunters.” -Susan Jewell, Exploring South Florida
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Wedged between Florida’s expanding Gold Coast to the east and
south and orange groves and agricultural fields to the west is 60,228-acre
Corbett Wildlife Management Area. For at least 2000 years before Europeans
arrived, Indians inhabited this land, burying their dead in mounds,
accumulating the remains of their meals in middens, and traveling by
canoe, sometimes on man-made causeways. In the 1800s the Seminoles sought
refuge from the U.S. Army in Hungryland Slough. Today you can hunt deer,
feral hog, turkey, and snipe in designated hunting areas and explore
pine flatwoods, cypress swamps, and a hardwood hammock on Hungryland
Boardwalk and Trail. Nearby is Everglades Youth Conservation Camp, offering
summer camps for kids and year-round programs for families and educators.
Observe sandhill cranes, rare roseate spoonbills, wood storks and other
wading birds and camp along semi-circular ponds and fish for bluegill,
bass, and catfish.
The Friends of Corbett is a non-profit citizen's support
organization established to support the J.W. Corbett Wildlife
Management Area and Everglades Youth Conservation Camp and to promote
the importance of this natural area to an increasingly urban
population. The Friends is a diverse group that meets monthly to plan
activities and projects and hosts an Annual Meeting and Barbeque. They
welcome and encourage new members. For more information or to send
your tax-deductible contribution, contact The Friends of Corbett,
P.O. Box 16309, West Palm Beach, Florida, 33416-6309.
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