Ellie Schiller Homosassa Springs Wildlife State Park is a rehabilitation center for injured and orphaned West Indian manatees until they are returned to the wild. The park’s centerpiece is a first-magnitude freshwater spring, which produces millions of gallons of crystal-clear water each hour with the spring outflow creating the Homosassa River. Visitors a given a rare opportunity to observe Florida’s native wildlife in a natural setting and can stroll along the paved trails and boardwalks to see manatees and alligators, black bear and bobcats, and tiny Key deer and otters at close range. Many birds species, from colorful wood ducks and roseate spoonbills to majestic birds of prey and whooping cranes also inhabit the park.
(Click on photos to enlarge.)
You start out taking a pontoon boat down the river to the park.
The park is surrounded by the river, so you take this
boardwalk to the different areas.
The very rare Whooping Crane
Sandhill Crane
he has on a bad toupee!
Hawks
Red-Tailed Hawk
Barred Owls
Horned Owls
Osprey
FLAMINGOS
Little Night Heron
Roseate Spoonbill
(Life is GOOD if you are a bird living in the park!)
Wood Stork
Flowers
Rare Florida Panther
that though, because these deer were too big. The little one
was little, but it was a baby. The rest of them look like
regular deer. Key deer are very, very small!