image linking to 100 Top Bass Fishing Sites image linking to 100 Top Saltwater Fishing Sites image linking to 100 Top Fly Fishing Sites image linking to 100 Top Walleye Sites image linking to 100 Top Small Game Sites image linking to 100 Top Birds and Waterfowl Sites hunting and fishing clubs monster list by state
0 Vote down Vote up

Tennessee’s Morrison Meadow and May Prairie State Natural Areas Walking Tour Scheduled For August 23

August 19, 2008 · Email This Post · Print This Article

Morrison Meadow and May Prairie State Natural Areas Walking Tour Scheduled For August 23Nashville, Tenn. - The Department of Environment and Conservation’s Division of Natural Areas will host a guided walking tour at Morrison Meadow and May Prairie State Natural Areas on Aug. 23.  Participants should meet at 8 a.m. in the Target parking lot off Bell Road near Hickory Hollow in Nashville, or participants with reservations may arrange with trip leaders to meet near one of the sites.

Natural Areas Program Botanist Todd Crabtree will lead the easy to moderate hike.  Morrison Meadow is renowned for its summer and fall flora, and makes for outstanding wildflower viewing.  Natural areas staff will also be stopping at May Prairie State Natural Area in Coffee County, which features impressive open grassland and is one of Tennessee’s most floristically diverse natural areas.

Participants should bring water and lunch, and they should wear hats and appropriate footwear and bring rain gear. They also should bring sunscreen and insect repellant. Reservations for the guided hike are required and can be made by emailing Todd Crabtree at Todd [dot] Crabtree [at] state [dot] tn [dot] us or by calling (615) 532-0431.

The hike at Morrison Meadow and May Prairie is part of a series of monthly, guided field trips to Tennessee State Natural Areas offered by the department’s Division of Natural Areas.  Tennessee has 79 designated State Natural Areas throughout the state, covering approximately 110,000 acres of ecologically significant lands.  More information about Tennessee’s natural areas program, including a complete list of all natural areas and scheduled field trips, can be found at http://www.tn.gov/environment/na/.



Related posts

Got Something To Say? Want to add your 2 cents?

Leave a comment and let everyone know!!





Spam protection by WP Captcha-Free

This blog contributes to the web with Nofollow Reciprocity.