We turn off the Okefenokee
Parkway & drive to the
Okefenokee National
Wildlife Refuge.
Okefenokee means "land of the trembling earth." Many Indian tribes hunted and fished in this area before they were driven out by Europeans in the 1700s and by Americans in the the 1800s. In 1937 the US Fish and Wildlife Service acquired most of the 400,000 acres of swamp to create a wildlife sanctuary.
The Richard S. Bolt
This visitor center engages
children with educational
displays.
The Kids Activity Table
Set a spell & learn about life
in the Okefenokee Swamp.
Life below the surface
of the water in the
Okefenokee Swamp.
Visitors see the belly of an
roots & Lily Pads.
A preserved Alligator
head
Eric & I watched an introductory
film on the complex environments
that make up the Okefenokee
Swamp.
Shop for souvenirs.
After picking up a few brochures, Eric and I set out for a look for wildlife along Swamp Island Drive. We are going to visit the Chesser Island Homestead and walk the Chesser Island Boardwalk and climb to the top of the observation tower to look for wildlife.
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