Friday JohnKu – AKA – TGIF – Fri-Yay/Good News

Florida panthers in the Picayune Strand – credit, David Shindle Conservancy of Southwest Florida

Today’s good news comes from the Good News Network.

Everglades Restoration Project Ongoing for 20-Plus Years Sees Huge Rewilding Success

A huge area of the Everglades that was drained in an attempt to convert it to suburbia has been restored to a somewhat native ecosystem after 2 decades of reverse-landscape engineering.

Picayune Strand is a large, almost perfect rectangle of South Florida wetland, located northwest of Everglades National Park and northeast of Thousand Islands Nat. Wildlife Refuge, and west of the Florida Panther Nat. Wildlife Refuge.

It was part of an enormous land package bought by the real estate company Gulf American in the 1950s in an attempt to create America’s largest suburban housing development, called Golden Gate Estates.

But their effort to tame the swamp failed, even though substantial landscape alterations were made to try to dry out the area. Picayune Strand is 2 feet lower in elevation than the Golden Gate Estate land to the north, and this little difference made it virtually impossible to prevent flooding. The company went bankrupt.

One of the first projects identified and pursued by conservationists under the Everglades Restoration Plan of 2000, Picayune Strand has changed significantly over the years. Since 1985, conservationists have been buying up all the private, often unbuilt-on land that Gulf American had managed to sell. It was tedious lawyer’s work, but by 2004, it was all consolidated into a conservation package.

Gulf American built 4 large canals to channel water off the land they wanted to develop, while the earth and stone they churned up were used to crisscross the area with causeways, atop which roads ran. These were the first targets for groups like the Everglades Foundation, the Conservancy of Southwest Florida, and the US Army Corps of Engineers.

The hydrology of the Everglades is defined by water flowing across the once-7 million square miles all in the same direction at roughly the same snail’s pace, a phenomenon described as “sheet flow” through a “river of grass.” Huge areas remained flooded all year, and plugging the canals was the first step towards restoring the natural hydrology.

To restore this, the roads were torn up, and the materials were chucked back into the canals from whence they came.

One of the 3 pump stations – credit, Brigida Sanchez US Army Corps of Engineers

From macro to micro

“Picayune is as good a place in South Florida as there is, in terms of getting it back to what it was before,” Michael Duever, an ecologist who has been monitoring the Picayune project, told Yale News. “We’re feeling that we’re in the range of 90 plus-or-minus percent of restoration.”

There had to be some compromises, as people still live in Picayune Strand. Part of that 10% is missing; Duever refers to it as 3 pumping stations that pull rainwater out of the closed canals on the northern boundary of the Picayune project and dump it into large basins that will leak it out in many directions. The water level at times is higher than natural, however, and at other times drier.

Vegetation is coming back in a big way—not always ideally, but upland plants cannot now spread further south because of the continual water bodies. More native species that have missed the continual wetness are also returning—like a native, wild sunflower.

The restored Picayune is expected to help several endangered species, including the red-cockaded woodpecker and the Florida panther, while studies have already shown that increased insect abundance is benefiting the bonneted bat, the largest of its kind in Florida, with a wingspan greater than a foot.

“I kind of view Picayune Strand as a microcosm of the entire [Everglades] plan,” Stephen Davis, chief science officer at the Everglades Foundation, told Richard Mertens at Yale.

The good news in this story is that once a mistake is realized, many hands helped make it right again. Today’s JohnKu talks about rectifying mistakes. I hope you have a terrific weekend.

Mistakes by John W. Howell © 2026

A mistake is made,

That threatens wildlife and Earth. . .

All hands are on deck.

13 comments

  1. Smorgasbord - Variety is the Spice of Life.'s avatar

    Great to hear John and thank you for sharing… such an amazing project hugsx

    Liked by 1 person

    1. John W. Howell's avatar

      🤗 It is. I’m glad they didn’t just say “Oh well” and let it go.

      Liked by 1 person

  2. Esther Chilton's avatar

    That is great news. Often when things don’t work, it’s just left so it’s so good to hear that they’re working to reverse it. Thank you for sharing the story, John.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. John W. Howell's avatar

      Twenty years of working is a good thing. Thanks, Esther. 😀

      Liked by 1 person

  3. T. W. Dittmer's avatar

    It’s good news that the mistake of Gulf American to make a huge suburban area is being reversed, John. It will be good for the wildlife.

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Charles Yallowitz's avatar

    Really wish I got to see a Florida Panther while I lived down there. Not up close. I remember hearing how rare they were.

    Like

  5. Ol' Big Jim's avatar

    It’s awfully good to read news like this. We seem to be hell-bent to destroy the entire earth, so projects like this one help to revive hope in my stony little heart. Thanks for that, John.

    Like

  6. equipsblog's avatar

    Go Big Cats!

    Like

  7. lois's avatar

    Thank goodness for the many hands that made it right, again. Keep suburbia out of the Everglades, for gosh sakes.

    Like

  8. Cindy Georgakas's avatar

    This is so encouraging, John!
    Thanks for sharing!💕

    Like

  9. Gwen M. Plano's avatar
    Gwen M. Plano · · Reply

    Wonderful restoration. Thank you, John, for this hopeful post.

    Like

  10. coldhandboyack's avatar

    This is a really cool project. Thanks for telling us about it.

    Like

  11. circadianreflections's avatar

    You don’t often hear about a reversal of plans on this scale. I think this is going to prove out to be the best decision all around. Thanks for sharing this. Have a great weekend!

    Like

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