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Welcoming the Light: A Winter Solstice Recap

1/24/2026

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​The Friends of the Lower Suwannee and Cedar Keys Wildlife Refuges marked the winter solstice with a memorable gathering at the Shell Mound archaeological site, drawing nearly forty participants to one of the most meaningful days of the year.
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The event began at 4:30 p.m. with a guided walk along the Shell Mound Trail led by Friends board member Lukas Desjardins, M.A. Anthropology (in progress), who is currently conducting field work at Shell Mound. His presentation along the trail was engaging and informative, bringing the landscape to life through careful explanation and thoughtful storytelling.

​During the walk, Lukas explained that the shell mounds were purpose-built by the area’s ancient inhabitants and highlighted archaeological features that reveal how, when, and why they were used. 

​Through these observations, participants were offered a glimpse into the daily lives, practices, and ingenuity of the Indigenous peoples who lived and gathered here for generations. His insights helped connect the physical remains of the site with the human stories behind them.
​Following the walk, the group gathered on the landward side of the pier for snacks, beverages, and conversation before moving to the end of the pier as the sun lowered in the sky. The air was cool and comfortable, the sky clear, and the shortest day of the year unfolded toward the longest night. While the no-see-ums made a brief appearance, they did little to detract from the moment. Against this setting, Lukas spoke about the extraordinary archaeological and historical significance of Shell Mound, the Palmetto Mound burial site and similar sites, emphasizing their spiritual, cultural, and practical importance to ancient peoples who traveled from far south in the peninsula and well to the north to gather here.
Lukas' remarks wove together past, present, and future—touching on modern  techniques used to study the site and why this work matters today. By learning about the people of the past, we gain insight into ourselves and our shared human story. 
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As Lukas' talk came to a close, beyond Hog Island, the sun settled on the horizon, 240 degrees east of north, a breathtaking sight and a powerful reminder that this same spectacle would have been witnessed by the site’s ancient ancestors, connecting generations across time on the winter solstice.
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Members Will Elect 2026 Board

1/24/2026

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At the Annual Meeting on Saturday, February 21, the members of Friends will elect the officers and directors of the Board for 2026. Some Board members will be elected to continue their role, others will be new members or will take new roles, and some will end their terms and rotate off the Board.
Slate of Officers and Directors prepared by the Nominations Committee, including their backgrounds, who is new, who is continuing, and who is rotating off. 
These are the people who will be new to the Board or taking a new role on the Board:
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Tara Barney President
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Rick Anthony President-elect
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Ron Kamzelski Past President
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Pete Tirrell Treasurer
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Carol Wilcox Director
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Dan Wilcox Director
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Denise Feiber Director
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Robin Gallup Director
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Fast Track Review of Refuges: Happening Now!

1/24/2026

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On Dec 16, 2025, U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Director Brian Nesvik issued a Director’s Order to conduct a review of the National Wildlife Refuge System and National Fish Hatchery System. The stated purpose is to assure that each refuge still “aligns with the mission.” That mission is “to administer a national network of lands and waters to conserve, manage, and restore fish, wildlife, plants, and their habitats for present and future generations, while also providing compatible, wildlife-dependent recreational opportunities like hunting, fishing, and wildlife observation.”
Refuge managers were directed to provide a preliminary response by January 5, 2026 specifying:
  • Their refuge’s alignment with the mission
  • Recommendations for restructuring to achieve efficiencies in governance, oversight, and span of control
  • Data on resource and staffing levels
  • Comments on structural barriers to success
  • Evaluation of the refuge’s capacity to build and maintain partnerships
On January 15 2026, Friends groups received a survey to gather input from us and other stakeholders with whom we would like to share it. Responses are due by Feb 6.
By Feb 15 2026, the director’s order calls for a “detailed narrative of the results of the review,” including a "list of actionable recommendations with associated necessary actions required for implementation.”  
When these recommendations come out on February 15 . . .  after only two months to gather data, analyze it, and develop actionable plans . . . we advocates for the Lower Suwannee and Cedar Keys NWRs will want to be alert to how they impact our Refuges and our region.
Several media have indicated concern:
  • Interior to Spend Holidays Studying Refuges for Possible Closure, Bloomberg Law December 22 2025
  • They’re coming for Your Wildlife Refuge Wes Siler’s Newsletter, Dec 29, 2025. He is an environmental journalist and avid hunter. The article talks about how hunters helped found the National Wildlife Refuge System and how they provide significant funding for it.
  • USFWS December Review of Refuges, Monuments, and Hatcheries, Wenning Environmental Jan 7, 2026
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Shaping Our Path Forward in 2026

1/23/2026

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On January 10, 2026, the Board of Friends of the Lower Suwannee and Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuges gathered at Refuge Headquarters for a full-day planning retreat focused on setting priorities for the year ahead. With guidance from Refuge Manager John Stark and a briefing from Senior Federal Wildlife Officer Matt McDonald, board members and core volunteers worked to identify projects that are meaningful, achievable, and connected to our members, donors, and community. The meeting emphasized keeping initiatives light on staff time, focused on clear deliverables, and grounded in visible conservation impact.
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The group gets to work
Participants explored a wide range of potential initiatives, including the Junior Rangers program, Vista improvements, longleaf pine restoration, interpretive signage, community events, joint programming with Audubon, and support for biological research on Seahorse Key. Special attention was given to projects that combine environmental protection with public engagement, such as butterfly walks, bat house events, and expanded educational opportunities with the Cedar Key Library and local schools.
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Equally important was planning for the future of the organization itself. The board focused on leadership continuity, volunteer development, and membership growth, recognizing that a strong Friends group is essential to long-term conservation success.

By the end of the day, the group had established a clear, mission-driven framework for 2026. While specific initiatives and priorities will be shared at our upcoming Annual Meeting in February, members can be confident that the year ahead will be guided by purpose, partnership, and a deep commitment to protecting our refuges.
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After meeting respite
​We look forward to sharing more soon!
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Ytori Article on Shell Mound

1/16/2026

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An article titled "Lessons from Shell Mound" was published by in the Fall/Winter 2025 issue of Ytori, the official magazine of the UF's College of Liberal Arts and Sciences. The article features interviews from Dr. Ken Sassaman and board member Lukas Desjardins. Check out the article at the link below:

https://news.clas.ufl.edu/lessons-from-shell-mound/
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2025 Winter Solstice Talk Transcript

1/16/2026

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Below is a transcript of the talk given at the 2025 Winter Solstice event at Shell Mound by Lukas Desjardins.
    Good afternoon everyone. For those of you who may not know me, I’m Lukas Desjardins. I’m a master’s student at UF doing research on Shell Mound and other sites in this area. I hope everyone has enjoyed this winter solstice here at Shell Mound. As many of you know, this is our first solstice event back at Shell Mound in quite some time, and thanks to the refuge we can once again enjoy this newly repaired dock where we get a beautiful view of the gulf. In fact, this is my first time that I’ve actually been at Shell Mound for a solstice event. I’m sure some of you might be missing the drinks from the tiki bar, but I’m at least glad that we are now able to bring this event back to Shell Mound. I hope that everyone also enjoyed the tour. For some of you, this may have been your first time at Shell Mound, and others have been here more than me, but either way I hope that you learned something new.

    The first thing I want to talk about is, at a really fundamental level, why I think that archaeology is important, and why local archaeology is particularly important for the world right now. At a basic level, archaeology is the study of the lives and history of past people through the physical traces that they leave behind. In many cases, these are intentional marks that people have left on the earth - like Shell Mound, which stands as a monument to the lives of people who once lived on this coast. And this is really what drew me to archaeology. While we of course can’t talk to those who are long gone, they can still leave us clues about how they once lived - we can learn about what it means to be human and what it was like to live in particular places at particular times. This includes how things have changed. Of course, there is what we have built - this dock that we now stand on, the roads, and the signage - but there is also the natural processes that have occurred over the long term. Looking out on the water, we can see these mangroves that now cover the coastline that probably wouldn’t have been here in the past. At the same time, though, one value of archaeology is the perspective it gives you about how little certain things have changed. How close the past really is to us, in ways that are physical and observable. That’s why we are here, at Shell Mound, gathering on the solstice today. 1500 years ago, people came to this same place to gather, and in doing so they created a monument to their lives that has persisted into ours. Places like Shell Mound make the past feel less distant and less alien to us. 

    Working in archaeology is something that gives a feeling of intimacy with the past like nothing else. I’m sure Dr. Sassaman could have described, in elegant detail, the exact angles of the sun that we are watching set tonight. But, at least for me, knowing that the sun we are now watching set over the horizon is the same sun once watched by people here 1500 years ago creates a connection across vast stretches of time. Those people also stood in this place, watching the sun set, probably enjoying some delicious winter oysters. For them, the solstice was likely a time of new beginnings - the end of a period of renewal for the sun as the days now reached their shortest duration, and the sun now reverses the journey it has made since the summer solstice. And while today, those of us assembled here tonight excluded, our societies don’t generally make much out of the solstice, the winter remains a time of new beginnings - the end of a cycle and beginning of a new one. 

    So, this is really why I think that local archaeology in the current world is so important. It is not just how we learn about the past, but it puts people into the past - it humanizes the past. It helps us to understand that there were people here who came before us. I think this is particularly true for a place like Shell Mound. I’m glad that my mom was able to come here tonight, all the way from Orlando. She would be able to tell you about the anxiety I experienced as a kid after learning about climate change and sea level rise in school. This has always been something, in the back of my mind, that worries me. But archaeology is one of the few things that gives me hope, and through the past I think we can see other possibilities about the future.

    Places like Shell Mound, and the archaeological story of the refuge in general, can help to show that what we’re experiencing in the present - sea level rise, extreme weather, devastating hurricanes - are things that people on the coast have always lived with, and are things that people have always adapted to. When people first came to Florida, as many of you may know, the shoreline would have been many many miles west of here, and we’d be standing near the middle of the state now. It was rapid sea level rise during the early to mid Holocene that enabled estuarine systems on our coasts to form, along with habitats for oysters and all manner of fish. In many cases, during tumultuous times, people would have lived through rapid sea level rise occurring over only a handful of generations. Memories of their own ancestors' experiences with sea level rise would have provided valuable knowledge for how to live in their own present. The laboratory of southeastern archaeology at UF has documented many of these experiences with sea level rise through archaeology. This tells a story of the resiliency of both human and natural systems, operating together, which are able to persist through time. Knowing that what we are going through now is, at least in some respect, the same as what people have gone through in the past, gives me some comfort and it also gives me hope. 

    Shell Mound is a monument to resilient, sustainable coastal life. Something that Dr. Sassaman has been focusing on, in his research further inland at Lake Pithlachocco, is the idea of the generational knowledge that comes with living long term in particular places. For those of us who are not indigenous, we haven’t lived here very long in the grand scheme of things - even those of us who might be in a long line spanning many generations of Floridians. For indigenous people on Florida’s coasts, deeper roots and longer histories would have also brought knowledge of the kinds of low frequency and high magnitude that we are now unfortunately experiencing with much greater frequency - kinds of events that normally only occur every few lifetimes. These are things like sea level rise, extreme hurricanes, and extreme flooding. This generational knowledge is a kind of practical knowledge through which people can plan for the long-term. This answers really fundamental and human questions, about where it is safe to live, where it is safe to build, where it is safe to bury the dead. 

    The people who once lived here, at Shell Mound, lived through a tumultuous time, seeing several transitions in global climate over only a few generations, and the durability of Shell Mound is a testament to this practical knowledge. This durability, though, has unfortunately come into question in recent years. You all have unfortunately seen the damage that recent hurricanes have brought to the site. This is what my master’s research is about, planning once more for the future of Shell Mound and understanding how the site has become vulnerable. I won’t get too much into the technical details, but one important takeaway I’ve found is that it is places where modern people have changed Shell Mound that it is the most vulnerable. This is along the roads, and along where shell mining previously occurred. Changing the original surface of the mound has created areas with unstable surfaces that are liable to collapse during hurricanes. We don’t yet have clear ideas about what can be done about this, and whether Shell Mound can be saved, but at the very least knowing what makes the site vulnerable will give us tools to plan for the future.

    However, I don’t just want to talk about the vulnerability of Shell Mound, but the resiliency as well. This isn’t just resiliency for the site itself, but a kind of resiliency that contributes to the maintenance of coastal ecosystems. Shell Mound is a place that continues to provide upland habitat on the coast that wouldn’t otherwise be here. The shells with which it was constructed changes the soil chemistry here in a way that supports unique biodiversity, providing habitat for the red cedar trees that grow here. Shell Mound can also help protect the coasts from erosion. It acts as its own living shoreline along with the natural systems surrounding it. As sea levels rise, the relief that Shell Mound provides will help to mitigate the problem of wetland migration that would otherwise lead to the loss of important wetlands. What this points to is the immense value of places like Shell Mound that goes beyond their value for research or recreation. Shell Mound is not just important to us as people, but it is important to all the plants and animals who make use of it.

    I think that one of the most important contributions of archaeology to ecology is understanding the relationship between human and natural systems, really understanding how people can shape the natural environment in ways that are not based on domination but on co-creation. All of the shell sites on Florida’s coasts are evidence for this kind of relationship. And as we know from Shell Mound, this relationship is not limited to the land - we now have evidence for the ways that people nurtured the oyster reefs out at sea, once again planning for the long-term resiliency of crucial ecosystems. The amount of loss that has occurred on these coastal sites is a tragedy, and we will never know the full extent to which indigenous people were responsible for shaping Florida’s gulf coast. But at least here in the refuge many of the elevated places that lie on the coast are only there because people in the past built them. And if I might make a brief detour to the everglades for a moment, we see a similar phenomena there where human action was critical for the development of tree islands that remain a crucial part of the everglades to this day. What this really does is it tells us a different story, of the relationship between people and our environments, that contrasts with a lot of modern narratives that see environmental destruction as part of our human nature. This is what I really mean when I say that the past can tell us about different possibilities for the future. Things haven’t always been the way they are now, and things can be different in the future. 
​

    I had the pleasure this past semester of teaching Aldo Leopold’s Land Ethic to an undergraduate class. I wanted to bring up his definition of the land ethic:

“The land ethic simply enlarges the boundaries of the community to include soils, waters, plants, and animals, or collectively: the land.”

    Both Shell Mound, and the staff here at the refuge give us excellent examples of this kind of Land Ethic. Like nothing else in our country, the Refuge system is exemplary of a kind of stewardship that takes unique knowledge and skill. Again, this is practical knowledge, and I’m sure the staff and especially John Stark here could tell you that it isn’t something you just learn in school. It is something you learn by doing. 

     I’m hoping to be able to continue my research at Shell Mound, not only as it relates to the present and planning for the future, but to also expand on our understanding of the past in a way that can contribute to this kind of planning. This involves not just looking at Shell Mound in isolation, but how it relates to the rest of the landscape surrounding it. Out across the water, some of you may know about Palmetto Mound, the cemetery that was likely one reason that people began their celebrations of the solstice here. This was a landscape that was marked in relation to time, to the ancestors, and to the cosmos. As we saw from the tour, the natural landscape itself is oriented towards the solstices. But the power of Shell Mound was distributed across this landscape. Recently a paper came out about Richard’s Island, where a fish trap you all may have heard of was identified a few years ago. There is also Komar, south of here, another complex of mounds that we know very little about that will hopefully be subject to more research in the future. It is possible that this is the place that people went to after Shell Mound was abandoned, as falling sea levels during the Vandal Minimum reconnected Shell Mound and Palmetto Mound.

    What Shell Mound did, though, during its heyday was bring these places together, through the solstices, gathering people and materials from places all along the coast. People materialized their relationships across time and space within these mounds. And I’m happy to see, once again, Shell Mound is gathering people together on the solstice. I would like to thank all of you for coming, and for listening to my talk. Seeing people who care about this place, who are stewards of the land, is something that gives me hope for my own future.

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Friends of the Lower Suwannee & Cedar Keys National Wildlife Refuges
P. O. Box 532
Cedar Key, FL 32625
[email protected]
We are a 501(c)(3) nonprofit organization.

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