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South Florida Water Management District
“Florida is a complex living creature and subtlety is its most endearing quality.” -Clay Henderson, President, Florida Audubon Society
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Seventeen miles south of Lake Okeechobee and forty miles north of
Everglades National Park, the 35,350-acre Holey Land Wildlife Management
Area is part of the most northern extent of remaining Everglades
sawgrass marsh.
Former marsh to the
north has been drained for agriculture while Stormwater Treatment Area
3/4 and the newly constructed Everglades Agricultural Area Reservoir lie
to the east. Here you can hunt white-tailed deer, common snipe,
and marsh rabbit. Blue-winged teal, mottled ducks, and other waterfowl
are found in the sloughs in the northeastern portion of the area.
Although the marsh
is most easily traversed by airboats and tracked vehicles,
the extensive network of levees and canals constructed for flood control
and water supply afford ample opportunities for bird watching, fishing,
hiking, and biking.
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to South Region
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