This is a good-news story.
American Bald Eagle Lake Apopka 2018-10-08 (298) |
“Fed by a natural
spring, rainfall and stormwater runoff, water from Lake Apopka flows through
the Apopka-Beauclair Canal
and into Lakes Beauclair and Dora. From Lake Dora, water flows into Lake
Eustis, then into Lake Griffin and then northward into the Ocklawaha
River, which flows into the St.
Johns River” (Wikipedia).
This grand flow
that starts north of Orlando is also joined west of Ocala by the crystal-clear
waters of Silver River and ends up exiting the state at Jacksonville. It’s an extraordinary hydrologic system and an exquisite underpinning
segment of north-central Florida’s water make-up.
Decades of abuse and lack of understanding of their impacts
by local communities and farmers, however, who ditched, diked and drained 18,000-20,000
acres of marshlands along the north shore, caused the lake, for lack of a
better way to describe it, to die.
Glossy Ibis Lake Apopka 2018-10-08 (199) |
Florida Marsh Hen Lake Apopka 2018-10-08 (267) |
In 1984, I left as director of the St. Johns River Water
Management District after over five years redesigning the way the U.S. Corps of
Engineers had intended to ditch, dike and drain 2,000 square miles of
the Upper St. Johns River drainage basin and divert its flows south toward the
Everglades. It was a bruising exercise but one that resulted in a showcase
system where today environmentalists, developers, farmers and governmental interests
have been brought together in support of common goals.
Great Blue Heron Lake Apopka 2018-10-08 (158) |
Little Blue Heron Lake Apopka 2018-10-08 (298) |
Today, the District’s efforts are comfortingly apparent for
the lake. The farming operations have been displaced through the mechanisms and
wisdom of funding from Florida Forever funds designed for just such problems. Farms
were purchased and thousands of acres of fertilized and pesticide-laden fields are
being converted back to the freshwater marsh ecosystems systems that originally
flourished as the lake’s kidneys. As we drove along the “Wildlife Drive”, formerly
part of the agricultural diking system, the beginnings of new a marsh ecosystem
was apparent, and wildlife was abundant.
It was gratifying to actually see and experience at least
one significant success by those who spent their careers – decades - identifying
and addressing Florida’s growing water-related problems and finding ways to
revert such damage or prevent it from becoming a continuing inevitability into
the future.
The health of Florida’s natural systems is directly related
to the health of the state’s future economic well-being. It is a false premise that protection of
Florida’s natural systems and the legal mechanisms it entails are antithetical
to free enterprise and the spirit of entrepreneurial viability.
These are a few photos that bear witness.
Red-Winged Blackbird Lake Apopka 2018-10-08 (45) |