Platt Branch lies east of the Fisheating Creek
floodplain and at the southern end of the Lake Wales Ridge. The
1,972-acre area is named for Platt Branch, a creek that flows through
the site. The area was established through the Florida Fish and Wildlife
Conservation Commission’s
Mitigation Park Program. Management of
the longleaf pine, cutthroat grass, slash pine, and scrub habitats is
specifically tailored to benefit protected species such as the gopher
tortoise, Florida scrub-jay and red-cockaded woodpecker.
Now the domain of hikers and wildlife watchers, the area still bears
witness to previous land uses over the last century. The timber and
turpentine industries left their marks here in the 1920s and 1930s.
Several old sand roads and small clearings mark the site of a temporary
settlement documented from the early 1940s. Cattle once roamed freely
across the landscape and later grazed in fenced clearings created for
pasture. Today, some of these clearings are being restored with native
plants to create scrub-jay habitat or pine flatwoods. A loop trail takes
visitors through a mosaic of habitats with ample opportunities to spot
wildlife.
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