View allAll Photos Tagged servicew

On the 8th June 2019 the 'Blumlisap' (1906) laves Spiez Schiffstation with sailing no.16 1510 Interlaken West (See) to Thun (See). The passenger servicew on Lake Thun, Switzerland is operated by Swiss railway company BLS.

The Harrogate Bus Company: 2775 (BF63 HCV) a Wright Gemini 2 bodied Volvo B9TL, painted in two-tone red fleet livery with We Love Harrogate branding and captured at Leeds Bus & Coach Station operating on servicew 36 to Harrogate.

 

© Christopher Lowe.

Date: 22nd February 20251.

Ref No: IMG_0050/NR.

Two servicews that are no more: on 27 No9vember 2002, 220027 stops at Leamington on the 1432 Birmingham New Street - Portsmouth Harbour as 165108 stops on the 1348 Paddington - Stratford-upon-Avon.

Camellia - Cotton Picking Time

 

Servicew New Co.

Lusterchrome by Tichnor Bros.

CAPA-000279

 

Mailed from Macon, Georgia to Mr. & Mrs. Ralph Marteen in Cardington, Ohio on July 6, 1963:

 

Hi Grandma, Ralph & Alma,

Just a line to let you know we got here. Fall is fine. Having a good time! Been hot & rainy. Been swimming once. Going to Callaway Gardens tomorrow. Be home in a week, probably. Bob, Gloria, Mike, Dennis & Teresa

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Giving Love and Service – it is rarely easy and virtually never convenient. Yet, it can make all the difference to those we love and to the strangers around us.

I believe we all have a story to tell of someone who has done something small for us – an act of service that did not...

 

www.glimpseofheavenbook.com/small-things-great-love-givin...

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

One of two existing EN71AKŚ units arriving at platform 2 of Katowice main station to start her workshift as Koleje Śląskie KŚ-40523 commuter servicew to Tychy.

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

4608 Secretary Ken Salazar shakes Refuge Manager Charlie Pelizza's hand after installing the first boundary marker on Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge. Director Dash Ash (center), Southeast Regional Director Cindy Dohner, and Deputy Refuge Manager Keenan Adams (right) applaud. the 556th refuge in the system. Jan 18, 2018 near Hines City, FL, about 50 miles south of Orlando.Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

Each year, the Service works with the Watershed Association for the Tuckasegee River, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, and other partners in a reenactment of a traditional Cherokee fish harvest.

 

Local youth come to a historic fish weir on the Tuckasegee River where they spend the morning rotating through stations, learning about river biology and the historical use of the river by the Cherokee. The morning culminates in the children reenacting a traditional fish harvest by driving fish toward the fish weir which has been fitted with a fish trap. After the kids get a look at any fish that swim into the trap, the fish are released.

 

This year’s event was also significant because it included the release of young sicklefin redhorses into the river. Sicklefin redhorse is a fish that’s a candidate for inclusion on the federal endangered species list, and the subject of conservation efforts by the Service, the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians, N.C. Wildlife Resources Commission, and Conservation Fisheries, Inc. The fish released into the Tuckasegee River were reared at the Service’s Warm Springs National Fish Hatchery in Georgia.

 

Photo credit- G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

North Carolina’s Beech Creek Bog State Natural Area is a 120-acre natural area in North Carolina’s Watauga County. Managed by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation, it was the first example of a southern Appalachian bog in the state parks system. Service biologists recently visited the site as part of their effort to advance bog conservation in western North Carolina.

  

Photo credit: G. Peeples/ USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

The North Carolina Wildlife Resource Commission’s Conservation Aquaculture Center in Marion plays an increasingly important role in efforts to recover rare and imperiled fish and mussels. The center meets several needs. It holds what biologists call ark populations – groups of individuals safeguarded in captivity as a way to ensure they don’t go extinct should they disappear from the wild. It’s also a place where the young of imperiled animals can be raised in a safe environment, eventually to be stocked into the wild, helping boost numbers and recover some of our rarest aquatic animals. Among the animals they work with are the federally-protected Appalachian elktoe and Carolina heelsplitter mussels and spotfin chub, a fish.

 

Photo credit: G. Peeples/USFWS

 

North Carolina’s Beech Creek Bog State Natural Area is a 120-acre natural area in North Carolina’s Watauga County. Managed by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation, it was the first example of a southern Appalachian bog in the state parks system. Service biologists recently visited the site as part of their effort to advance bog conservation in western North Carolina.

  

Photo credit: G. Peeples/ USFWS

 

North Carolina’s Beech Creek Bog State Natural Area is a 120-acre natural area in North Carolina’s Watauga County. Managed by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation, it was the first example of a southern Appalachian bog in the state parks system. Service biologists recently visited the site as part of their effort to advance bog conservation in western North Carolina.

  

Photo credit: G. Peeples/ USFWS

 

North Carolina’s Beech Creek Bog State Natural Area is a 120-acre natural area in North Carolina’s Watauga County. Managed by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation, it was the first example of a southern Appalachian bog in the state parks system. Service biologists recently visited the site as part of their effort to advance bog conservation in western North Carolina.

  

Photo credit: G. Peeples/ USFWS

  

North Carolina’s Beech Creek Bog State Natural Area is a 120-acre natural area in North Carolina’s Watauga County. Managed by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation, it was the first example of a southern Appalachian bog in the state parks system. Service biologists recently visited the site as part of their effort to advance bog conservation in western North Carolina.

  

Photo credit: G. Peeples/ USFWS

 

North Carolina’s Beech Creek Bog State Natural Area is a 120-acre natural area in North Carolina’s Watauga County. Managed by the North Carolina Division of Parks and Recreation, it was the first example of a southern Appalachian bog in the state parks system. Service biologists recently visited the site as part of their effort to advance bog conservation in western North Carolina.

  

Photo credit: G. Peeples/ USFWS

 

4541 U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Dan Ashe speaks at the news conference announcing the creation of the 556th National Wildlife Refuge, Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge at the FFA training facility near Hines City, FL, about 50 miles south of Orlando. Behind: Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar , Rancher Bud Adams , Brian McPeek, Chief Operating Officer, The Nature Conservancy, and Nick Wiley, Executive Director, Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS.

4445 - Rancher Bud Adams talks about the importance of balancing the needs of wildlife with ranching. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar (l), grand daughter Leann Adams, and son, Mike Adams (center) with U.S. Fish and Wildlife Director Dan Ashe and Senator Bill Nelson, (FL) at a stakeholder meeting prior to the news conference announcing the creation of the 556th National Wildlife Refuge, Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS, Jan 18, 2012 at the FFA training facility in Haines City, FL

Audubon's Director of Advocacy, Charles Lee discusses the importance of the the Everglades Headwatres NWR with Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar at the stakeholder meeting prior to the news conference announcing the 556th refuge. Photo by Tom MacKenzie Jan 18, 2012

4373 – Florida Senator Bill Nelson talks about the importance of the National Wildlife Refuges at a stakeholder meeting prior to the news conference announcing the creation of the 556th National Wildlife Refuge, Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar (l) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director (r) are seated. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS, Jan 18, 2012 at the FFA training facility in Haines City, FL

4373 – Florida Senator Bill Nelson talks about the importance of the National Wildlife Refuges at a stakeholder meeting prior to the news conference announcing the creation of the 556th National Wildlife Refuge, Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge. Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar (l) and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director (r) are seated. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS, Jan 18, 2012 at the FFA training facility in Haines City, FL

4628 – (L) Steve Myers, Hiatchania Ranch, Secretary of the Interior Ken Salazar, Richard Hilsenbeck, The Nature Conservancy, and U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director, Dan Ashe post the first National Wildlife Refuge boundary at Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge (the 556th in the system). Jan 18, 2012 near Hines City, FL, about 50 miles south of Orlando. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS.

4687 – Stakeholders in swamp buggies tour the newly established Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and surrounding area just after it was announced. Jan 18, 2018 near Hines City, FL, about 50 miles south of Orlando. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS.

4681 – Stakeholders in swamp buggies tour the newly established Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge and surrounding area just after it was announced. Jan 18, 2018 near Hines City, FL, about 50 miles south of Orlando. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS.

Nick Wiley, Executive Director, Florida Fish and Wildlife Commission at the press conference to establish the Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge at the FFA training facility near Hines City, FL, about 50 miles south of Orlando. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS.

15/01/11. Newcastle. A Dennis Trident chassis and Alexander Enviro400 body.

 

[Route 1]

Pine scrub at Everglades Headwaters National Wildlife Refuge. Photo by Tom MacKenzie, USFWS, Jan 18, 2012 at the FFA training facility in Haines City, FL.

1