| Paynes Prairie |
I mentioned about looking for wildlife and I feel that the more we explore, we are rewarded with wildlife sightings. I've seen many kinds of animals on my adventures thus far and on a recent hike we saw a couple animals I thought I'd never get to see in wild Florida. We encountered a bison and wild horses out on Paynes Prairie State Preserve. It was ironic as well, because the park ranger mentioned that day that it's rare to see them on this vast open prairie. That they could be really spread out and so with that noted we still decided to go see this expansive prairie.
| Wild Horses |
| Wild Horses |
| Plains Bison |
As we started walking again and as we approached the boardwalk we saw just to our left about 30 feet away some wild horses grazing! They stood their ground and everyone kept there distance. After some more photos and videos we headed back up to the trailhead. I'll never forget these moments we experienced at Paynes Prairie State Preserve. I posted some information about the park below, along with a link to web site if you want to read more up on it. I also posted a couple videos and photos of the bison and wild horses. When you go to the park, be sure to check out all it has to offer and enjoy the history!
Paynes Prairie itself is the largest geographical aspect of Paynes Prairie Preserve State Park and consists of sixteen thousand acres of wet prairie, open water, and marsh. An additional area of six thousand acres of uplands including pine forests, fallow fields, ponds, and scrub that surround the Paynes Prairie basin boosts the total acreage to over twenty-two thousand in the preserve.
Paynes Prairie has a rich natural and cultural history that meanders back through time to eras long before humans appeared. The Paynes Prairie Basin was formed in pre-history by the washing away of limestone and the resulting resting of the land. The karst topography of the area has changed appearance little over the epochs, except for intervals of flooding. Paynes Prairie became home to many animals now extinct that included saber toothed cats, mammoths, mastodons, and one animal described as “a five-hundred pound beaver.” Humans followed the animals there at first around twelve thousand years ago, and then a steady stream of us followed including paleo and archaic Indians, the Cades People, the Seminole, and subsequently Europeans and Americans. The area played a bloody role in the settlement of Florida, as it was often the site of battles between the native peoples and others who wanted to make the grand, fruited region their home.
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