I've spent quite a bit of time out in this flat piney wilderness trying to find my "secret spot" that no one else would visit, but nearly every trip I came home empty-handed. On my last trip through the slough, I stopped under some trees to have lunch and have a little afternoon siesta when this beautiful and large Florida sandhill crane wandered into view, hunting for frogs and crayfish among the thick grasses of a flooded prairie.
Sandhill cranes are very common in rural central Florida. They can often be spotted over great distances in cow pastures or on the edges of lakes, marshes, and other wetland features. While this species (Grus canadensis) is not listed as a threatened or endangered species, the non-migratory Florida subspecies (Grus canadensis pratensis) of sandhill crane is. Numbering at around 5000 remaining individuals, they are thriving in the places where they are least likely to come into contact with humans.
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