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​Wings Over Big Creek 

Construction 2021-present

1From Forest to Farmland

         The rich bottomlands of Big Creek were once a thriving old growth riparian forest made up of oaks, bald cypress, hickory, and associated riparian vegetation. These ancient habitats did not escape the land clearing madness of the 1960's to satisfy the soybean farming craze of the era.  After conversion from riparian forest to farm land, the natural process of flooding did not change (and in fact increased). Year round flooding continued to wipe out the agricultural crops almost every year.

2Planning and Permits

       In the spring of 2021, the process began to convert Wings Over Big Creek (WOBC) back to its best use: a natural landscape that would better fit the year round cycle of flooding along Big Creek. In late 2021 environmental analysis, planning/management, and construction plans were completed with the aid of biologists from the Arkansas Game & Fish Commission and Ducks Unlimited. Permits were secured from the US Army Corps of Engineers in the summer of 2022, setting the stage for construction.

3.  Construction/Habitat Restoration

         In the fall of 2022, the farmland sections were tilled, a well was dug, and a pump was installed. Soon afterward, precision grading commenced on the North and South side of Big Creek to develop a series of managed moist soil units. Grading was completed in the fall of 2022.

         The moist soil units were immediately filled with pumped water, and wildlife use of the new habitat was immediate and dramatic. Geese, egrets, spoonbills, herons, ibis, and shorebirds settled into the ponds, eager to feed on the invertebrates that hatched a few days after filling the units. Waterfowl arrived in early winter along with many species of raptors. The rest of the winter of 2022 and into today, thousands of cottonwoods, willows, persimmons, oaks, bald cypress, tupelo, buttonwillows, and emergents were planted to jumpstart the revegetation process. 

WINGS OVER BIG CREEK AND DUCKS

4Post Construction Success

        Mother Nature and Father Time have enriched WOBC. Floodwaters continuously bring in native plant seeds that germinate as the weather warms up in the spring. Sprangeltop, toothcup, panic grass, sedges, smartweed, and millet create a luxurious growth of plants that cover all of WOBC.

        Planted and naturally germinating woody vegetation continuously add to the habitat.  The combination of moist soil plants, invertebrates, amphibians, and fishes provide the resident and migratory wildlife of WOBC with habitat the year round.

WINGS OVER BIG CREEK'S DUCKS FEEDING ON MOIST SOIL SEEDS AND INVERTEBREATES
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