Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve is a 140 acres with trout lilies and other native plants.

Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve is a 140 acre conservation area protecting many acres of Trout Lillies and Trilliums that only bloom late Jan thru March.

04/13/2026
04/08/2026

Twelve species that used to live in American backyards. Most people over forty remember them. Children today often haven't seen them. They haven't moved β€” they're disappearing from the same places they've always lived. The causes are almost always the same four things: poison, concrete, light, and excessive tidiness. 🌿

Chimney swift β€” down over 70% since 1970. They nest exclusively in hollow chimneys and vertical cavities. Modern capped and sealed chimneys eliminate nesting sites. Install a swift tower β€” a purpose-built vertical box at least 10 feet tall β€” in an open area to attract colonies.

Barn swallow β€” down roughly 30% across North America. They build mud nests on structures and return to the same nest for years. Renovations destroy active nests, which is illegal under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act. Never remove an active nest. Install nesting ledges under eaves on outbuildings.

Fireflies β€” significant decline documented, no single nationwide figure. Light pollution is the primary driver β€” a single light source within 30 feet can make mating signals invisible. Turn off outdoor lights after 10pm from May through July. Leave areas of unmowed grass for larvae, which live in soil for up to two years hunting slugs.

American toad β€” declining across much of their range. Roads cut spring migration to breeding ponds β€” thousands are killed in March and April. Slug bait poisons them through their prey. Add a small pond and a ramp exit to any pool. Zero slug pellets.

Little brown bat β€” catastrophic decline in eastern populations, over 90% in some areas, from white-nose syndrome compounded by habitat loss. They roost behind siding, shutters, and in attics. Renovations seal every gap. Install a bat house on a south-facing wall at least 12 feet up. Lights off after dark.

Purple martin β€” declining colony nesters that depend entirely on human-provided housing in the eastern US. Put up a colonial martin house on a pole in an open area with a clear flight path. They eat thousands of flying insects per day.

Mason bees and native solitary bees β€” an estimated 50%+ decline in many native bee species. Over 70% nest in bare ground β€” not in insect hotels. Leave patches of bare, unmulched, undisturbed soil in a sunny spot. Add hollow stem bundles and an insect house. Maintain bloom from March through October.

Burrowing owl β€” declining across their western US range. They nest in existing burrows dug by prairie dogs and ground squirrels. Rodenticides kill their prey and poison them secondarily. Zero rodenticide use in their range.

Barn owl β€” declining, with secondary rodenticide poisoning as the leading documented cause. Studies show high percentages of barn owls testing positive for anticoagulant rodenticide residues. Install a barn owl nest box in a barn or outbuilding. Absolute zero on rodenticide products.

Eastern box turtle β€” declining across most of their range from road mortality, pesticide accumulation, and habitat fragmentation. They're slow enough that lawn equipment kills them. Keep leaf litter undisturbed in corners of the yard. Stop pesticide use in areas where they forage.

Eastern glass lizard β€” declining, often killed by mistake when identified as a snake. They eat slugs and ground insects and live in leaf litter and brush piles. A legless lizard with eyelids. Leave it alone.

Monarch butterfly β€” eastern population down roughly 80% since the 1990s. Plant native milkweed β€” the only larval host plant. Add late-season nectar plants like goldenrod and asters. Zero pesticide use.

The thread connecting all twelve: poison, sealed buildings, light at night, and overly tidy yards. The garden that saves wildlife is the one the perfectionist gardener can't stand β€” and that nature visits every night. 🌱

03/29/2026

We've teamed up with Florida Nursery Mart for a native plant giveaway in celebration of 25 years of wildflowers!

At the Preserve, marking the borders of where the trout lilies grow...
03/29/2026

At the Preserve, marking the borders of where the trout lilies grow...

03/28/2026
03/28/2026

Hello, I'm the turtle that's been crossing your driveway since before you bought the house.

I'm an Eastern Box Turtle. I'm 41 years old. I know every tree, stone, stream crossing, and sunny spot within a quarter mile of where you're sitting right now. I've been walking this same route β€” the same 300-foot loop through your yard, your neighbor's garden, and the woods behind the development β€” for longer than you've had a mortgage.

I'm not passing through. This is my home range. And it's smaller than you'd guess β€” two to five acres for my entire life. I don't wander. I don't explore. I patrol. Every day, the same circuit, adjusted by season and weather. In March I use the south-facing slope near your compost bin because it warms first. In July I shift to the shaded ravine behind the houses. In October I'm back at the slope, digging in for winter.

Here's the part you need to know. I navigate by the Earth's magnetic field. Box turtles have magnetite crystals in their heads β€” literally compass needles embedded in tissue β€” that orient them within their home range. If you pick me up and move me half a mile, I know which direction home is. I start walking. If you move me five miles, I may never find my way back. And I'll spend the rest of my life searching.

This is why "relocating" a box turtle kills it. Every year, well-meaning people pick up box turtles from roads and move them to "better" habitat. If that habitat is outside my home range β€” even by a few hundred yards β€” I'm lost. I don't adapt to new territory. I was imprinted on THIS quarter mile when I was a juvenile, and I will try to return to it until I die or I give up.

Eighty-seven percent of relocated box turtles die within a year. Not from predators. From searching.

If you see me on your driveway β€” and you will, I cross it every May and September β€” carry me to the nearest shrub line in the direction I was heading. Not to the woods three blocks away. Not to the park. To the edge of your property, in the direction I was already walking.

I've been here for 41 years. Four owners of your house. Two renovations. One new fence. I was here when the driveway was gravel. I'll be here when it's repaved.

I don't need a better place to live. I just need you to stop moving me.

Checking on plants and marking the perimeter of the trout lily bloom...lunch at SOCO, and enjoying Whigham's celebration...
03/26/2026

Checking on plants and marking the perimeter of the trout lily bloom...lunch at SOCO, and enjoying Whigham's celebration of the Preserve... ,

03/24/2026

The Georgia Tree Council is excited to be a part of the Georgia Tree Network, the group hosting a talk by Doug Tallamy in Athens later this month!

ICYMI, Dr. Doug Tallamy is an entomologist, conservationist, and professor at the University of Delaware, whose work has transformed our understanding of the relationship between native plants and wildlife.

His research and books, including Bringing Nature Home and Nature’s Best Hope, have inspired millions to see their own yards as part of the solution to the biodiversity crisis. Driven by the belief that everyone can play a role, Doug co-founded Homegrown National Park to encourage people to plant natives in the spaces they care for.

This event is FREE (registration required) and open to the public. Stop by and see us at the Georgia Tree Council booth during the reception!

Register here: https://www.eventbrite.com/e/the-nature-of-oaks-a-talk-by-doug-tallamy-tickets-1983560023426?aff=oddtdtcreator

Even though closed, life continues...got to see two of the original supporters of Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve (Beth G...
03/23/2026

Even though closed, life continues...got to see two of the original supporters of Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve (Beth Grant and Dan Miller) at Birdsong Nature Center's Plant Sale. Also recent visitor Leah Doyle shared the Trillium, Jack-in-the-Pulpit and Cancer Root...

Please make a comment, save our old growth forests…
03/14/2026

Please make a comment, save our old growth forests…

Address

Wolf Creek Road
Whigham, GA
39897

Alerts

Be the first to know and let us send you an email when Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve posts news and promotions. Your email address will not be used for any other purpose, and you can unsubscribe at any time.

Contact The Organization

Send a message to Wolf Creek Trout Lily Preserve:

Share