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  Boy Scout Woods (Louis B. Smith Bird Sanctuary)

Boy Scout WoodsMap

Checklist

A combination of hackberry/oak motte, coastal prairie and wetlands one mile from the Gulf of Mexico on High Island. Open to the public year round, Boy Scout Woods has extensive boardwalks that make birding possible for wheelchair-bound birders. Volunteers host the Boy Scout Woods Sanctuary daily from mid-March to early May each spring.

Purkey's Pond

Each spring thousands of birdwatchers from all over the world come to sit in the grandstands overlooking Purkey's Pond, eager to see the many species of migrating birds that come to drink and/or bathe.

Prothonotary Pond

When HAS received donated land from Amoco Production Company in 1993, Prothonotary Pond's primary vegetation was Chinese Tallow trees, an invasive exotic that provides little useful food for wildlife. One of HAS's habitat improvement projects has been the conversion of Prothonotary Pond from a tallow pond to one surrounded by native Bald Cypress.

Picnic Shelter

The new covered picnic shelter at Boy Scout Woods was finished just in time for spring migration in 2007. This has already become a favorite spot to watch the bird activity around Bessie's Pond. Funds for the picnic shelter were donated by Larry Wright in memory of his wife Shirley, who enjoyed birding in Boy Scout Woods.

History

Boy Scout Woods consists of 60 acres of woods, coastal prairie and wetlands. 15.7 acres were purchased by HAS with the help of members and friends, 44 acres were donated by Amoco Production Company, and 0.3 acres were donated by Ted Eubanks. In 1981 HAS purchased the first 4 acres of oak/hackberry woods from Louis B. Smith, who had purchased the woods from Amoco Production Company and had added many kinds of fruit and nut trees. The sanctuary property was officially named the Louis B. Smith Bird Sanctuary in 1982. An additional 11 acres surrounding the 4-acre tract was donated to HAS by Amoco Production Company in 1994. Smaller tracts were acquired by purchase (Buceme Tract, 1.21 acres, 1993; Charpiot Tract, 0.46 acres, 1994) and donation (Eubanks Tract, 0.35 acres, 1993; Amoco Tract, 44.77 acres, 1994).

The property was known as Boy Scout Woods before HAS purchased it because of the scout camp that existed on the property, and the sanctuary is still known by that name.

 

 
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