Next Meeting

Thursday, March 1st at 7 PM
Springville Presbyterian Church
6645 Highway 11, Springville

The Friends of Big Canoe Creek is a grass-roots organization formed in 2008 to coordinate efforts to preserve and protect the Big Canoe Creek watershed through community education and participation. The primary aim of The Friends of Big Canoe Creek is to foster awareness of the value of the watershed's resources. In addition to its monthly meetings which frequently include public speakers, the group sponsors periodic educational, recreational and community-service activities such as rain barrel workshops, float trips, and creek cleanups.


A Comprehensive Water Policy for Alabama

Posted on January 15, 2012

While Alabama’s water resources are abundant, they are not unlimited; they must be carefully managed to meet long term needs. Alabama is one of the few states in the U.S. that does not have a state-wide comprehensive water policy. The absence of a clear plan for accounting for and allocating the state’s water jeopardizes our water security and environment.

Alabama Rivers Alliance

At a special meeting on Thursday, January 26th, the Friends of Big Canoe Creek will host guest speaker Mitch Reid of the Alabama Rivers Alliance. Mitch will discuss how the Alabama Rivers Alliance is diligently working to make a comprehensive water plan a reality for Alabama.

 

NOTE: This meeting will be held in the Fellowship Hall (lower level) of the Springville United Methodist Church. The presentation starts at 7 P.M. and the public is welcome. Refreshments will be served.

 

Conservation Photographer Beth Maynor Young

Posted on March 1, 2011

Headwaters Cover

Acclaimed conservation photographer, Beth Maynor Young, spoke to The Friends of Big Canoe Creek on Monday, February 28th. Beth is an accomplished conservation photographer who has devoted her life to nature and landscape photography. Her photography is part of many private and corporate art collections and is published in many books, including her most recent, Headwaters — A Journey on Alabama Rivers, from which she shared slides and stories. Beth's photographs reveal the mystery, the beauty and the diversity of Alabama and have been used to help preserve special places throughout the state.

 

FOBCC Participates in Adopt-a-Stream Program

Posted on May 12th, 2010

FOBCC Adopt-a-Stream Sign

Friends of Big Canoe Creek has "adopted" two stream crossings in the Springville area as part of the Adopt-a-Stream program coordinated by Alabama People Against a Littered State (Alabama PALS). The stream crossings are at Highway 11 northeast of town and at the County Road 9 bridge north of Homestead Hollow.

Official "Adopt-a-Stream" signs were posted at both locations earlier this month. As part of the program, FOBCC is responsible for picking up litter and discarded debris around the roadway and in the stream at the two crossings for the next two years. Alabama PALS will provide trash bags, pick-up tools, and safety vests for volunteers.


FOBCC and Freshwater Land Trust Sponsor Bioblitz

Posted on May 5th, 2010

On Saturday, May 1st, Friends of Big Canoe Creek teamed up with the Freshwater Land Trust to sponsor a "bioblitz" on the site of a proposed nature preserve in Springville. Almost fifty participants spent a day documenting flora and fauna on the 600-acre tract of land that has been nominated by Friends of Big Canoe Creek for conservation through Alabama's Forever Wild program. Scientists and naturalists from the University of Alabama, Birmingham-Southern College and Samford University were among those combing the forest and streams. Also partcipating in the event were members of Conservation Photographers of Alabama (see some of their amazing photography at the "Read More" link below).

Bioblitz Participants

Wikipedia defines a bioblitz as "a special type of field study, where a group of scientists and volunteers conduct an intensive 24-hour biological inventory, attempting to identify and record all species of living organisms in a given area." Information resulting from the field study will be used to bolster the nomination of the property for conservation. Among the preliminary results from the bioblitz are the documentation of more than 80 tree and shrub species and more than 50 bird species on the property. The proposed preserve includes a rich array of topographic/ecological zones -- from riparian to ridgeline -- fostering an impressive species diversity. In addition, no fewer than seven distinct geological formations are exposed on the site.

 

Read More