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Tuskegee National Forest

At 11,252 acres, the Tuskegee National Forest is the smallest in the national forest system and one of only six forests in the system contained in a single county. The Forest incorporates a diverse mix of habitats-mixed pine and hardwood groves, broad ridges and floodplains with stream terraces. The Forest is well watered, with Uhapee, Tsinia, Choctafaula and Hodnett Creeks all flowing through it. The list of birds you can see here is quite impressive, as is the unusual variety of plant species.

A good starting point for your trip through the Forest is Forest Service (FS) Road 900. From Macon County Road 186, turn left (west) onto FS 900 and proceed to the trailhead for the Pleasant Hill trail. This trail meanders through mixed groves of pines and hardwoods. Expect to see a good complement of woodland songbirds. A few miles further on FS 900, you will approach an access point for the Bartram Trail, a National Recreation Trail. Eight and a half miles of the Trail wind through the Tuskegee. A short hike at this access will lead you to a small tributary of Choctafaula Creek. At that point, you have a choice-turn around and return to AL-186 or continue the drive on FS 900, which intersects with FS 913. There is another parking area and access to additional hiking. The other choice is retrace your drive back to the intersection of FS 900 and AL 186. Across the highway is the eastern part of FS 900.

Cross the highway (exercise caution, as Exit 42 of I-85 is a short distance north) and continue onto the packed-clay of Forest Service (FS) 900. The woods here are mixed late-succession hardwoods with a dense understory. From spring through fall, they are filled with Summer Tanagers, Red-eyed Vireos, Wood Thrushes, Great Crested Flycatchers and a host of other woodland songbirds. Drive a bit further to the point where a small creeklet flows under the road. You will see Yellow-throated Vireos in the warm months, as well as Northern Parulas and Blue-gray Gnatcatchers. Bear left at the intersection with FS-906. There is an extensive floodplain to the right. Look for Swainson's Warblers from spring through early fall. You'll find numerous Yellow-billed Cuckoos, Wild Turkeys, Red-shouldered Hawks and Barred Owls.

In a short distance, turn right onto FS-910. The woods begin to thin out, soon becoming rolling grasslands and early-succession scrub with scattered stands of pines. The birds here are completely different from those found two miles up the road. Expect to see Prairie Warblers, Yellow-breasted Chats, Eastern Bluebirds, Field Sparrows, Eastern Towhees and Common Yellowthroats. Common Ground-doves are present on the edges of the woods, but they are easily overlooked among the Indigo Buntings, Eastern Kingbirds and Blue Grosbeaks. Chipping Sparrows and Slate-colored Juncos are abundant in winter. You may spot Northern Bobwhites, but the major attractions at dawn and dusk are American Woodcocks and Chuck-will's-widows. Each are found on the edges of the woods; Chuck-will's-widows are present from spring through fall. American Woodcocks are permanent residents, though most numerous in the cooler months. They perform their courting ritual- 'peent-ing' and performing their 'sky dance'- from January through early June. Great Horned Owls and Red-tailed Hawks hunt the open country. Mississippi Kites nest sparingly in areas with scattered mature trees, and they may be seen soaring over almost any part of the forest from late March through late summer.

At the intersection, turn right onto CR-54 (Vaughan's Mill Road), a narrow red clay road that leads to US-29 (two and a half miles to the south). In approximately a mile, turn right (west) onto FS 911 to visit the two fishing ponds the Forest Service maintains. Okhusee Thloko (Big Pond) and Okhusee Chutkee (Small Pond) are well maintained with a fringe of mixed hardwood/pine forest surrounding the waters and a short trail system paralleling the ponds. A few wading birds and woodland species will be present.


Contact Tuskegee National Forest

REMINDER: This listing is a free service of LandCAN.
Tuskegee National Forest is not employed by or affiliated with the Land Conservation Assistance Network, and the Network does not certify or guarantee their services. The reader must perform their own due diligence and use their own judgment in the selection of any professional.


Contact Tuskegee National Forest


125 National Forest Rd 949
Tuskegee, Alabama  36083


 

Service Area

Services provided in:
  • Macon County, Alabama


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