Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies

Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies

Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies

Come experience this special 40-acre preserve located in eastern Dane County, WI.  Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies was acquired in 2011 by The Prairie Enthusiasts and is managed by the Empire-Sauk Chapter as a Wisconsin State Natural Area. It encompasses two dry upland remnants of original prairie on drumlin hills with massive displays in August of cylindrical and rough blazing stars.

The site harbors over 100 native prairie species including stunning displays of early spring wildflowers and a healthy population of the federally-threatened prairie bush-clover. Since the preserve is all in grassland cover, many grassland birds use it for nesting, including eastern meadowlark, field sparrow, dickcissel, grasshopper sparrow and (outside of breeding season) short-eared owl.

SITE STEWARDS

GARY BIRCH

608-873-8837

EMAIL


JANE GRAHAM

EMAIL

ACCESS & DIRECTIONS

 

From the intersection of Highway 12/18 and Highway 73 (two miles west of Cambridge, WI) go south on Highway 73 for 1.5 miles, then east on County Highway PQ for 1 mile, then south on Clearview Road for 0.5 mile. Park in the small parking lot off of Clearview Road and walk west .25 miles on an old farm lane into the natural area.

Google Map

Description & Significance

The Prairie Enthusiasts and Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources have ranked Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies as a top-tier prairie remnant. The term drumlin is from an Irish word meaning “little hill.”  Drumlins are long, narrow whale-shaped hills that were formed by glaciers.  The last glacier to move across southeast Wisconsin did so in a northeast to southwest direction, thus the setting orientation of the hills.

Drumlins are composed of the till (rock, gavel, and sand) pushed along and ground up under the ice.  Today, the preserve’s hills are still covered with their original sod of prairie plants (13 acres) which have been in place for at least 4-5 thousand years. The remnants are imbedded within productive cropland (28 acres) which have been enrolled in the USDA Conservation Reserve Program (CRP) since 1988.  Originally, planted to smooth brome grass, TPE is now converting these fields to prairie vegetation with the first seeding done in the fall of 2013.

Prairie dropseed is a type of now uncommon prairie grass that is important to many prairie species of leafhoppers, including Memnonia panzeri, a State Special Concern species that feeds exclusively on this plant. Both the grass and the rare leafhopper are present on this preserve.

A few pockets of deeper soil on the drumlins support species such as this prairie lily (Lilium philadelphicum) compass plant and rattlesnake master that are more typical of mesic (deep soil) prairies. Prairie lily plants will grow on both acid and high pH soils and grow best in dry-mesic to mesic habitat. It takes seven to eight years before a prairie lily plant growing in the wild will get big enough to bloom.

In 2003, Shirley Ellis, local conservationist, discovered five plants of the federally-threatened prairie bush clover,Lespedeza leptostachya. By 2010, after brush clearing and prescribed burns by TPE volunteers, the prairie bush clover population had increased to 113 plants. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service provided funding to help acquire the site because of the presences of this threatened species. It is restricted to original prairie sod, and is known only from four states:  Iowa, Illinois, Minnesota and Wisconsin. Loss of habitat is the main reason for its rarity.

In 2005, another rare plant, pale purple coneflower (Echinacea pallida, threatened in WI) was introduced to the site using seed from a native population near Cross Plains, WI in western Dane County.

Phyllis Reiner Smith, whose family were previous owners of the land, remembered looking for spring wildflowers on the drumlin hills as a child (ca. 1929-1935), especially the pasque flowers which are present at Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairie.  

Natural History

The site contains two linear, parallel, drumlin hills formed by the passing of the last glacier more than 11,000 years ago.  Such glacially sculpted ridges or drumlins are a common feature between Madison and Milwaukee, and they once were covered with prairie and savanna.  Southern Wisconsin is world famous for its rare drumlins.  In the 1840s, Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairie was part of a 7,000-acre treeless prairie that had been in place for 4-5 thousand years.

When European settlers first came to this area, they found a vast sea of grasses and wildflowers that were part of a continuous tallgrass prairie ecosystem stretching west to the Great Plains. These prairies had many species of grasses such as big and little bluestem and Indian grass that grew to heights of five to six feet, limited tree cover, and hundreds of species of wildflowers. Frequent fires that occurred either naturally, through lightning strikes, or through the actions of Native Americans, limited the encroachment of most trees and shrubs. Some trees such as bur oaks could survive frequent fires due to their fire-resistant bark, but only in low numbers. Fires also stimulated growth of prairie grasses and wildflowers. The deep roots of prairie plants develop rich, fertile soils that were eventually prized by European settlers for agricultural use. When the invention of the mould board plow allowed the native prairie sod to be busted and converted to crop fields, over 99% of original tallgrass prairie was lost.  As a result, many species that relied upon prairies are now rare. Of the prairie and grassland species found in Wisconsin, 41 are listed as endangered or threatened.

Geography, Topography & Soil Types

The drumlins are composed of glacial till (subglacial rock soil debris) including deposits of sand and gravel, making for a blend of dry, dry-mesic, and even a few pockets of mesic prairie of varying soil pH.  The east drumlin has a sandier soil with a lower pH level (acidic) and the west drumlin soil contains dolomitic limestone bedrock slopes with a higher pH level (alkaline). Agriculture was unsuited to grow croplands on drumlins due to their gravelly consistency.  The preserve’s prairie remnants were grazed until sometime in the early 1950’s, thus they are not pristine. The berms evident along the base of the hills were constructed in the 1960s, as part of a federal soil conservation practice that has since fallen out of use.  Today, the driest portions of the preserve are now once again high quality prairie, and more mesic areas are recovering nicely with a good population of native species.

Plant Communities

Early season blooming forbs:  

  • bird’s foot violet (Viola pedata)
  • prairie violet (Viola pedatifida)
  • blue-eyed grass
  • hoary puccoon (Lithospermum canescens)
  • prairie smoke (Geum triflorum)
  • spiderwort

Mid-summer blooming forbs:  

  • black-eyed Susan (Rudbeckia hirta)
  • common milkweed (Asclepias syriaca)
  • whorled milkweed (Asclepias verticillata)
  • compass plant (Silphium laciniatum)
  • flowering spurge (Euphorbia corollata)
  • lead plant (Amorpha canescens)
  • pale purple coneflower (Echinacea pallida)
  • prairie coreopsis (Coreopsis palmata)
  • prairie dock (Silphium terebinthinaceum)
  • prairie lily (Lilium philadelphicum)
  • purple prairie clover (Dalea purpurea)
  • rattlesnake master (Eryngium yuccifolium)
  • wild rose
  • yellow coneflower (Ratibida pinnata)

Last season blooming forbs: 

  • cylindrical blazing star (Liatris cylindracea)
  • rough blazing star (Liatris aspera)
  • downy gentian (Gentiana puberulenta)
  • flax-leaved aster (Ionactis linariifolia)
  • heath aster (Symphyotrichum ericoides)
  • silky aster (Symphyotrichum sericeum)
  • sky-blue aster (Symphyotrichum oolentangiense)
  • smooth blue aster (Symphyotrichum laeve)
  • prairie sunflower (Helianthus petiolaris)
  • western sunflower (Helianthus occidentalis)
  • common goldenrod (Solidago canadensis)
  • Missouri goldenrod (Solidago missouriensis)
  • old-field goldenrod (Solidago nemoralis)
  • showy goldenrod (Solidago speciosa)
  • stiff goldenrod (Solidago rigida)

Cool season grasses:  porcupine grass, early panic-grass, prairie panic-grass and Scribner’s panic-grass

Warm season grasses:  little and big bluestem, Indian grass, prairie dropseed, switchgrass TPE has recently planted into the CRP (former cropland) areas some species that were not present as remnant populations on the site (hence missing from the plant list), but which have a high probability of having been present in pre-settlement times, based on what is known about the region’s flora and ecology.  The introduced species are mostly ones characteristic of deep soil mesic to wet-mesic prairie communities that were lost from the site following introduction of agriculture to the land, plowing of the deep soil and grazing of the un-plowed prairie remnants. The site’s remnants represent only the dry soil end of the prairie community continuum, and thus lack many deep soil species.  Past grazing may also have eliminated some species.

Insects, Birds & Animals

The majority of prairie forbs rely on pollinating insects to transfer pollen from one plant to another to insure abundance of flower seed and plant generation.  Pollinators are a key to the health and vigor of the prairie. Prairie provides bees and other pollinators with a continuity of food resources throughout the season. Large patches and massive swirls of flowers allow bees more efficient access to the blooming plants. Monarda, common and whorled milkweed, mountain mint, Culver’s root, prairie clover and pasture thistle are good foundation plants for pollinators.

Insects:  red-headed thatching ant, prairie leafhopper, clay-colored leaf beetle, goldenrod soldier beetle, black swallowtail, tiger swallowtail, silver-bordered fritillary, monarch, skipper, spring azure, pearl crescent butterfly, ten-spotted skimmer dragonfly, katydid, milkweed leaf beetle, small milkweed bug, red milkweed beetle, milkweed tussock larva, shield bug, bumble bee, weevil

Birds: dickcissel, bobolink, yellowthroat, eastern meadowlark, field sparrow, grasshopper sparrow, chipping sparrow, song sparrow, tree sparrow, house sparrow, yellow cuckoo bird, bluebird, cedar waxwing, cat bird, gold finch, brown thrasher, indigo bunting, kingbird, ruby throated hummingbird, killdeer, morning dove, robin, downy woodpecker, redwing blackbird, sandhill crane, ring-necked pheasant, wild turkey and (outside of breeding season) short-eared owl

On November 24, 2013, Gary Birch and Rich Henderson observed a short-eared owl at Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies, and again on December 21 of that year. This owl is a rarely seen specialist of open grasslands. It was flushed at midday out of knee-high grass where it had been roosting. This interesting species, with a wingspan of 33-to- 43 inches, requires large, treeless areas of grassland, sedge meadow, or marsh habitat to establish breeding territories (it nests on the ground) and for hunting areas. Short-eared owls hunt mostly at night but sometimes also during the day. They are most often seen at dawn and dusk sitting on fence posts or flying low over open ground using a low, slow, graceful flight reminiscent of a butterfly and locating prey by ear. They hunt small mammals such as voles, shrews, mice, rabbits and, occasionally, birds.  The preserve is not currently large enough to ever hope to entice the owls to nest there, but the grassland habitat is clearly sufficient to provide critical feeding and resting habitat during spring and fall migrations.

Mammals:  American badger, coyote, meadow jumping mouse, red fox, thirteen-lined ground squirrel, white tail deer, woodchuck

Amphibians:  eastern gray treefrog

Volunteers

Volunteers are the backbone of the restoration and management work being done at Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies. If you are interested, we welcome help with activities such as seed collecting, processing and planting, invasive plant and brush control, prescribed burning, citizen science like Monarch Larva Monitoring Project, conducting plant/bird/wildlife surveys, photographing events and more.

Usage Policies

Allowed:

  • Hiking
  • Bird Watching
  • Research by permit only
  • Hunting White Tailed Deer (all seasons; no permit or reservation required)
  • Hunting Ring-necked Pheasant (all seasons; no permit or reservation required)

Not Allowed:

  • No vehicles, including bicycles
  • No camping, campfires, or picnics
  • No pets (except for dogs for pheasant hunting)
  • No horseback riding
  • No collecting seeds, flowers, plants or rocks, or any natural items

Please clean boots and clothes before entering to help limit introduction of invasive species.

Ownership History

In 2011, on the day before Thanksgiving, Glenn Smith, long-time Prairie Enthusiasts member and supporter, permanently protected his drumlin prairies with the sale of his 40 acres to The Prairie Enthusiasts. Funding was provided by grants from the USFW Service and the Dane County Conservation Fund. The Smith-Reiner family owned this land since the 1920s.  The preserve was named in honor of Glenn’s mother, Phyllis Reiner Smith. Prior to The Prairie Enthusiasts’ involvement, the Dane County Environment Council recognized the family with a certificate of appreciation in 1984. Glenn recalls:

“As a boy, my grandmother would take us to the hills on the family farm to see the early spring Wind (Pasque) flowers and late summer Blazing Star (Liatris). We didn’t know about drumlins and thought prairies were elsewhere. We just knew that the drumlins on the farm were too rocky to plow.

Decades later I returned to the farm to give my mother Phyllis Reiner Smith a hand. A chance meeting with Rich Henderson who was representing The Prairie Enthusiasts at the Madison Garden Expo permitted me to inquire about ways to preserve and protect the prairie drumlins. I was surprised to find that he had been on our prairie and was very interested in getting involved.

Rich met many times with my mother and me, and alleviated her fears about removing trees. Over the next 10 years TPE volunteers cataloged plants, animals, birds and insects, removed trees and invasive species, and burned parts of the drumlins each year. A long term management plan was developed. Shirley Ellis, a volunteer who spent hundreds of hours working on the drumlins discovered the very rare Prairie Bush Clover, which enhanced the prairie’s value for preservation.

It finally became apparent that the drumlins needed permanent stewardship. The opportunity arose about five years ago for The Prairie Enthusiasts to purchase the property. It is now protected, designated as a State Natural Area and open to the public for all to enjoy.”

Management

In 2000, The Prairie Enthusiasts began habitat management at Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairies under an informal management agreement with the landowner, Phyllis Reiner Smith, to restore and care for their prairie remnants. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Private Land Office provided grants during that time to clear trees and brush. 

In the late 1980s and in 1992 the Wisconsin Department of Natural Resources wildlife managers burned the western most prairie remnant.  Management activities have continued with selective prescribed burnings.  In 2013, the agricultural lands of 28 acres were planted into native grasses and forbs by The Prairie Enthusiasts.  The long-term management goals for Smith-Reiner Drumlin Prairie are to restore the site, as much as feasible, back to the original prairie ecosystem that was present 170 years ago, to provide critical habitat for rare and declining species, and to provide opportunity for people to experience and enjoy the area’s prairie heritage.

Schluckebier Sand Prairie

Schluckebier Sand Prairie

Prairie violet by Joshua Mayer

Schluckebier Sand Prairie

Schluckebier Sand Prairie, one of the last surviving remnants of the 14,000 acre Sauk Prairie Sauk , a vast grassland that covered the area prior to European settlement. The small dry to dry-mesic prairie is situated on part of an old Wisconsin River terrace. The prairie supports a good diversity of native plants and insects. Including plants such as little bluestem, June grass, Virginia dwarf dandelion, short green milkweed, bird’s-foot violet, pasque flower, prairie smoke, flowering spurge, spiderwort, and rough blazing-star.

Except for a few small patches on slopes and along the edges, it is believed that the entire site had been plowed as early as the 1850’s. An area to the south was also grazed until 1969. Because of its sandy soil and rapid depletion of nutrients, the site was abandoned for cultivation purposes and native species that had disappeared were able to recolonize the prairie. Also present, perhaps due in part to human disturbance, are sand blows that provide microhabitats for specialists like false heather, a pioneer plant that helps stabilize the sand blows. Today, with a management regime of prescribed fire, brushing, and invasives control the condition of the prairie is improving. Schluckebier (SCHLUCK-e-beer) is a German name meaning “drink a beer”. The site is owned by The Prairie Enthusiasts and was designated a State Natural Area in 2006.

SITE STEWARDS

BRANDON MANN

413-427-4099

EMAIL

ACCESS & DIRECTIONS


Take US Highway 12 west of Sauk City until you get to the light at County PF.  Turn left (west) onto Co. PF and travel 1.5 miles, at which point there is a dirt lane immediately beyond a row of trees on the left.  Turn left (south) into the lane and look for the small mowed parking area about 100 down the lane.

 

Google Map

Description & Significance

The prairie supports a good diversity of native plants and insects.

Notable Species:

  • prairie bush-clover (Lespedeza leptostachya)
  • little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)
  • June grass (Koeleria macrantha)
  • Virginia dwarf dandelion (Krigia virginica)
  • short green milkweed (Asclepias viridiflora)
  • bird’s-foot violet (Viola pedata)
  • pasqueflower (Anemone patens)
  • prairie smoke (Geum triflorum)
  • flowering spurge (Euphorbia corollata)
  • spiderwort
  • rough blazing star (Liatris aspera)

Sand prairie is a dry native grassland community dominated by grasses such as little bluestem, J junegrass, panic grasses, and poverty-oat grass. Common herbaceous associates are sand cress, field sage-wort, western ragweed, several sedges (e.g., Carex muhlenbergii, Cyperus filiculmis, and Cyperus schweinitzii), flowering spurge, frostweed, round-headed bush-clover, western sunflower, false-heather, long-bearded hawkweed, stiff goldenrod, horsebalm, and spiderwort. Drought-adapted fungi, lichens, and mosses are significant components of sand prairie communities.

Management

Except for a few small patches on slopes and along the edges, it is believed that the entire site had been plowed as early as the 1850s. An area to the south was also grazed until 1969. Because of its sandy soil and rapid depletion of nutrients, the site was abandoned for cultivation purposes and native species that had disappeared were able to recolonize the prairie. Also present, perhaps due in part to human disturbance, are sand blows that provide microhabitats for specialists like false heather, a pioneer plant that helps stabilize the sand blows. Today, with a management regime of prescribed fire, brushing, and invasives control the condition of the prairie is improving.

Pleasant Valley Conservancy

Pleasant Valley Conservancy

Pleasant Valley Conservancy

Pleasant Valley Conservancy State Natural Area is a 140-acre natural area in western Dane County. It consists of extensive restored oak savannas, dry, mesic, and wet prairies, wetlands, and oak woods. It is in the Driftless Area of Wisconsin and is in the Hill and Valley Province.

Scenic views and wildlife viewing are excellent, and a hiking trail brings one into the heart of the savanna. Thirty-seven acres were donated to The Prairie Enthusiasts in 2006, along with a conservation easement on the remaining land. 

There is an extensive website that was developed by Tom Brock with information about the site and its management. 

SITE STEWARDS

KATHIE BROCK

608-238-5050

EMAIL

ACCESS & DIRECTIONS

*** THIS SITE IS CURRENTLY CLOSED TO THE PUBLIC ***

Description & Significance

The steep south-facing ridge supports several prairie remnants, which are now thriving after intensive management began in 1995. The oak savannas, primarily on the ridge top, contain numerous large, open-grown bur and white oaks with many being over 150 years old. This area supports numerous grass, sedge, and forb species including the state-endangered purple milkweed (Asclepias purpurascens), which re-appeared after restoration and prescribed burning began.

The cooler north-facing slope is predominantly oak woodland with red oak, basswood, hackberry, butternut, yellowbud hickory, and red maple. The woodland contains a good variety of spring ephemerals.

The savanna and oak woodland support a diversity of bird species which include the red-headed woodpecker, a declining bird species of conservation concern. Other birds include blue-gray gnatcatcher, eastern wood pewee, tufted titmouse, eastern bluebird, yellow-throated vireo, scarlet tanager, black-billed cuckoo, and yellow-billed cuckoo.

Also present is the spring-fed Pleasant Valley Creek, which flows through the wetland and into East Blue Mounds Creek.

Notable Species:

South-Facing Prairie Remnant:

  • big bluestem (Andropogon gerardii)
  • little bluestem (Schizachyrium scoparium)
  • Indian grass (Sorghastrum nutans)
  • side-oats grama (Bouteloua curtipendula)
  • wood betony (Pedicularis canadensis)
  • bird’s foot violet (Viola pedata)
  • purple prairie clover (Dalea purpurea)
  • violet wood sorrel (Oxalis violacea)
  • prairie turnip (Pediomelum esculentum)

Oak Savanna:

  • purple milkweed (Asclepias purpurascens)
  • silky rye (Elymus villosus)
  • bottlebrush grass (Elymus hystrix)
  • ear-leaved brome (Bromus latiglumis)
  • leadplant (Amorpha canescens)
  • large-flowered yellow false foxglove (Aureolaria grandiflora)
  • Canada milk-vetch (Astragalus canadensis
  • Illinois tick-trefoil (Desmodium illinoense)
  • prairie alumroot (Heuchera richardsonii)
  • shooting star
  • spiderwort
  • giant yellow hyssop (Agastache nepetoides) – state threatened
  • upland boneset (Eupatorium sessilifolium) – special concern

North-Facing Slope:

  • bloodroot (Sanguinaria canadensis)
  • Jacob’s ladder
  • large-flowered bellwort- (Uvularia grandiflora)
  • yellow lady’s slipper orchid (Cypripedium parviflorum)
  • large flowered trillium (Trillium grandiflorum)
  • Dutchman’s breeches (Dicentra cucullaria)

Natural History

Pleasant Valley Conservancy consists of a long narrow ridge that runs almost due east/west, with steep hillsides facing both north and south. The north-facing slope is cool and moist and the vegetation is primarily oak woods. The south-facing slope receives the full brunt of the sun and is hot and dry. Its vegetation consists of oak savanna and prairie. Pleasant Valley Conservancy is part of the unique “Driftless Area” of southwestern Wisconsin, an area that the glaciers never reached. Surveyors notes and plant surveys tell us that the dominant vegetation before settlement was oak savanna, with areas of prairie along the edges of the streams and on the steepest south-facing slopes. The spring-fed Pleasant Valley Creek flows through the property, feeding into Blue Mounds Creek. Along the creek valley is an area of marsh and wet prairie.

The property was owned by the Lockwood Family for many years and was in general agricultural use from the 1880s through the 1950s. However, only about 15 acres of the property was ever in cropland (now planted to prairie). The rest was pasture, woodland, or wetland. After the early 1960s the property was in absentee ownership until Kathie and Tom Brock purchased it in 1980.

An air photo by the Soil Conservation Service, done in 1937, shows that the south-facing slope was predominantly prairie and oak savanna. The Wisconsin Land Cover map for the Town of Vermont, done around the same time, provides a similar picture. Most of the south-facing slope was probably pastured, but very slightly. Subsequent air photos show that after the 1950s, the south slope gradually deteriorated, losing its open character.

At the time restoration began in 1995, there was a small native “goat” prairie at the west end of the hill. The remaining parts of the south slope had small amounts of remnant prairie vegetation which were virtually overgrown with planted red pines, native red cedars, and invasive trees and shrubs such as black walnut, buckthorn, and honeysuckle. These woody plants were cut and removed from the south slope during the winter of 1997-98. Controlled burns were begun In the spring of 1998 and were extremely successful, leading to a resurgence of original prairie. Continued burns since then have returned the whole south slope to prairie.

At the time restoration began, the upper slope and the ridge top had many large open-grown oaks (mostly bur but some whites), but they were overun with invasive trees and shrubs. During the 1999-2003 period, most of this invasive woody vegetation was removed, and controlled burns were introduced, which were quite effective. Remnant herbaceous vegetation growing in a highly suppressed form was released. Continued burning at yearly intervals have encouraged further savanna vegetation. Careful monitoring and control of invasive shrubs has kept the savannas open.

Although the wetland had been tiled, it was abandoned to agriculture in the 1950s and the tiles gradually broke. Today, the wetland is of high quality and is fairly large for the Driftless Area. Many springs arise in the wetland and contribute water to a small creek that flows through the east end. Also, Pleasant Valley Creek is on the Conservancy and flows through the west end of the wetland. This cold-water spring-fed creek supports many wetland forbs and sedges. Reed canary grass, a common bane of wetlands, is present in only low amounts.

Volunteers

Various volunteer activities are carried out throughout the year. To be placed on a special email list for Pleasant Valley Conservancy, send an email or call site steward Kathie Brock.

Usage Policies

Currently not open to the public.

Ownership History

The Prairie Enthusiasts owns outright 37 acres of Pleasant Valley Conservancy and owns a permanent conservation easement on the remaining land. The 37 acre parcel had been owned by the Savanna Oak Foundation, Inc., a nonprofit foundation established by Tom and Kathie Brock. Savanna Oak donated this parcel gratis to The Prairie Enthusiasts in 2006.

The conservation easement on the remaining land was donated gratis to the Prairie Enthusiasts by Tom and Kathie Brock in 2006.

Pleasant Valley Conservancy was designated a State Natural Area in 2007.

Management

Some of the management activities of Pleasant Valley Conservancy have been supported by grants from the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Services (controlled burns of the wetland), Wildlife Habitat Incentive Program of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (oak savanna restoration), and Landowner Incentive Program of the Wisconsin Department of Natural Areas. The Conservation Reserve Program of the U.S.D.A. has also permitted us to plant prairie on our four CRP fields.

However, most of the restoration work at Pleasant Valley Conservancy has been supported by Tom and Kathie Brock through their Savanna Oak Foundation, Inc.

Management activities include the following (visit the Brocks’s website to see the details): controlled burns, seed collection and planting, on-going brush control, weed control, and plant species monitoring.