Keep South Carolina Wild

Palmetto Outdoor Women’s Retreat (POWR)

Hey ladies, would you like to…

Learn new skills?

Build confidence?

Spend the weekend with like-minded people?

If you love the outdoors and answered “yes” to these questions, we have just the event for you!  The Palmetto Outdoor Women’s Retreat (POWR) is held annually and allows women to spend a weekend together learning skills including archery, fishing, boating, nature crafts, birding, hiking, shooting sports, outdoor photography, and much more! Participants select 8 classes to take out of more than 20 choices.  Classes are taught by knowledgeable and patient instructors who are there to make sure you learn in a judgement free and laid-back environment.  Not only will you be able to select 8 great classes but all meals and lodging are included in the cost of the event.

Past participant Elizabeth Hager says, “I had never done anything like this, and I had to go alone, because the whole group I was to attend with backed out.  I was so apprehensive about it, but it was one of the best experiences.  It gave me confidence.  I learned new things and met new friends.  WONDERFUL!”

Many instructors were once participants in the retreat and learned so much they were able to come back and teach.  One participant turned instructor, Beth Rivers, says “As long as I’m able to attend, I will.  I’ll never learn it all.  I’m proud to be part of this family of outdoors women as a participant and as an instructor.”  Rivers’ class, Nature Spa, is a very popular class and fills quickly.

Another instructor, Stefany Beals says, “POWR keeps me connected to like-minded women in an atmosphere that brings me back to my beloved Girl Scout days.  A way to taste the outdoors without having to possess the skills or tools (gear) needed for all the activities I experience.”

As noted by Beals, POWR is such a great way to get hands-on instruction and experience without having to buy all of the equipment for 8 different activities.  For less than the cost of a half day fishing charter, participants will get expert instruction and access to gear plus meals, a POWR shirt, and a 2 night stay.  There are also evening events planned for even more ways to network with others who attend.

We invite you to join us for POWR May 3-5 at Clemson Outdoor Lab and find out for yourself why everyone enjoys this event.  To register, visit https://www.scwf.org/events/2024/5/3/palmetto-outdoor-womens-retreat-powr today.

The Retreat has been presented by the South Carolina Wildlife Federation for more than 20 years at different locations around the state.  Each event is made possible with the support of several outfitters and organizations including the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources, Cabela’s/Bass Pro Shops (Greenville Store), Clemson University, Angling Women, SASS (Surviving Assault Standing Strong), Chattooga River Fly Shop, and Three Sisters Essentials. These partnerships enable us to provide a wide variety of activities conducted by a diverse group of expert instructors.

SCWF’s Spring Soiree Fundraiser

Thank you to everyone who joined us for our Spring Soiree Fundraiser on March 2nd to celebrate our state’s many contributions to World Wildlife Day. We were delighted to see old friends from programs and events such as the Midlands Master Naturalists, Palmetto Pro Birder, POWR, and WAIT programs, and also make new ones! All funds raised will support SCWF’s conservation, advocacy, restoration and education programs. Thank you for helping us increase our impact in 2024!

Image Credits L to R: SCWF Board Member, Jim Taylor received the F. Bartow Culp award for his service to SCWF in 2023; Sara Green and Ben Gooding, the incoming board chair, thanked the 2023 board chair, Alan Stuart for his service.

We highlighted several signature species including the Spotted salamander, Venus flytrap, loggerhead sea turtle, prothonotary warbler, monarch butterfly, shortnose sturgeon, and bottlenose dolphin.

We enjoyed delicious food by Scott Hall & Paella South with bartending by Twist.

From wildlife art to handcrafted nesting boxes to outdoor adventure experiences, our raffle had something for everyone!

We are especially grateful to all of our event sponsors & WAIT Partners for helping us increase our impact for South Carolina’s wildlife.

A Squirrel and Dumplings Feast

This past hunting season was particularly enjoyable for Industry Habitat Manager, Jay Keck, and his sons. In addition to hunting doves and deer, they decided to try their luck squirrel hunting in order to spend more time in the outdoors together. It had been over thirty years since Jay had actively pursued squirrels with his father, so connecting his past with his present by taking both of his sons hunting, was truly a special time for him.

Having outfitted a new .22 Ruger with a Vortex scope, they were able to harvest a “mess” of squirrels, and were easily able feed all of the family, which included Jay’s mother and father, to a delicious homemade squirrel and dumplings feast!  Decades old stories were told by his father around the table about hunting with Jay and his older sister, and even their cat, “Kitty”.

This past hunting season was particularly enjoyable for Industry Habitat Manager, Jay Keck, and his sons. In addition to hunting doves and deer, they decided to try their luck squirrel hunting in order to spend more time in the outdoors together. It had been over thirty years since Jay had actively pursued squirrels with his father, so connecting his past with his present by taking both of his sons hunting, was truly a special time for him.

Having outfitted a new .22 Ruger with a Vortex scope, they were able to harvest a “mess” of squirrels, and were easily able feed all of the family, which included Jay’s mother and father, to a delicious homemade squirrel and dumplings feast!  Decades old stories were told by his father around the table about hunting with Jay and his older sister, and even their cat, “Kitty”.

Jay’s family carried on the tradition of taking their pet when they had their silver lab, Tulip, join them on one of the hunts near Batesburg-Leesville. It’s amazing how hunting and spending time in the field (and around a dinner table) can strengthen our relationships with friends and family. Jay and his boys are eagerly awaiting next winter’s squirrel season, but will find plenty of time in the outdoors looking at all of the non-game species waking up from their winter break to breed!

Forks, Knives, & Spoonbills Art Contest Winners Announced

We are grateful to every single artist who entered this year’s Forks, Knives, & Spoonbills Art contest. The creative way the artists showcased this year’s featured species is inspiring. South Carolina is blessed with stunning wildlife and habitats, and each of these pieces reflects that beauty. Thank you again for sharing your talent with SCWF and inspiring our staff and supporters to continue our conservation efforts to help our state’s wildlife thrive.

Winning Image: Feathered Flock by Candace Thibeault

Feathered Flock by Candace Thibeault.

The winner of this year’s contest is Candace Thibeault for Feathered Flock. She entered the contest with her daughter Adeline (aged 9).

About the piece:

“I decided to take a timeless approach to create this piece; inspired by a touch of art nouveau. It seemed fitting since the style often reflects natural elements. Heavier lines were used to emphasize our important bird friends. Working on this piece was a way for my family to spend time together and to focus on a conviction that’s important to all of us. Me, a professional artist, and my daughter, a ‘junior conservationist’ often feel inspired to paint together when working from nature as inspiration” -Candace Thibeault


first runner-up: Alyssa Castelluccio

First Runner-Up Image by Alyssa Castelluccio.


second runner-up: Palmetto Plumage by David Hugo

Palmetto Plumage by David Hugo.

You can follow David Hugo on Instagram at @hugofishin.

About the piece:

“From the swaying pine to the sunlit marsh bank, I worked hard to not only highlight these six iconic species but do so in a way that showcased their unique habitats. Whether it be the state silhouette, the subtle hints of Spanish moss, or even the background patch of Spartina, I made it a priority to weave state imagery into the canvas. I had a blast bringing this piece to life.” -David Hugo


All of the art entered in this contest is included below. Our staff enjoyed seeing the way each artist envisioned including all the featured species and also the variety of mediums used. Thank you to everyone who participated!

Image Credits L to R: The Gathering by Evelyn Sophia Legoreta (age 10); God’s Aviary by Olivia Schreiber (age 17).

Images Credits Left to Right: Birds Cafe by Lyela Gadsden; Bird’s Lunch by Adeline Thibealt (age 9).

Nature’s Patchwork by Allison Couick Love; Vanishing Voices: Portraits of Imperiled Wildlife by Shay Brown.

Image Credits L to R: Gathering at the Marsh by Chris Crotty; Hopes to Feather the Weather by Sarah Cottle.

Huge swaths’ of SC wetlands now vulnerable due to weakened federal protections

Published by Post & Courier: https://www.postandcourier.com/environment/south-carolina-wetlands-at-risk-sackett/article_e6dd35ee-c453-11ee-a97b-4f61260eafe4.html

By Toby Cox tcox@postandcourier.com

A recent U.S. Supreme Court decision rolled back federal wetlands protection, making it easier for developers to backfill marshes and streams. Officials are worried this will contribute to South Carolina’s already worsening flood risks.

Conservationists and officials are still trying to make sense of the 2023 ruling’s implications, but one thing is clear: Millions of acres of critical ecosystems are now at risk, putting flood-prone communities at risk as well, they say.

Sackett v. the Environmental Protection Agency was the Supreme Court’s most recent attempt to clarify what defines a wetland protected under the Clean Water Act.

In 2007, Michael and Chantall Sackett wanted to build a home on their residential lot in Idaho and began to fill the wetlands on the property with sand and gravel. The EPA ordered them to stop and restore the wetlands, which were near a ditch connected to a creek that fed the large, navigable Priest Lake, located approximately 300 feet from the Sacketts’ lot. If the Sacketts didn’t comply, they faced penalties exceeding $40,000 a day. A 16-year legal battled followed.

In a 5-4 decision that favored the Sacketts, the court ruled that the Clean Water Act only applies to wetlands that have a “continuous surface connection” with “waters of the United States” — or navigable and relatively permanent bodies of water, such as lakes and rivers.

The decision did not define “continuous,” which leaves room for interpretation, said Kelly Moser, a North Carolina-based senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center.

“How continuous is continuous?” she said. “Is it to be (connected) all the time? … Does it have to be connected during all the months except the arid summer months?”

The exact number of acres of wetlands in South Carolina that may lose protection is unknown, but experts are taking educated guesses.

The S.C. Office of Resilience estimated that approximately 2.8 million acres out of the state’s roughly 7.5 million total acres stand to lose protections — or about 37 percent. This estimate, however, is based on a quick mapping analysis and probably isn’t altogether accurate, said Alex Butler, SCOR’s resilience planning director.

“That’s the best data we had for a very quick analysis for how we think (wetlands are) distributed across the state to the different watersheds,” he said.

Moser estimated it’s probably closer to half or more of the state’s wetlands that are at risk of losing protections.

“All of our mapping of wetlands is incomplete, and so any estimate is really conservative,” she said.

SCOR is working with the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration to secure funding to map the state’s wetlands at a higher resolution, which could reveal more or fewer at-risk wetlands, Butler said.

But any estimate, however conservative, means far too many wetlands could be compromised in a region plagued by flooding, Moser said.

In an area with increasing tidal and riverine flood risks, the loss of wetlands can be devastating for communities prone to flooding: NOAA estimates that 1 acre of wetlands can store up to 1.5 million gallons of floodwater.

Isolated wetlands that connect to larger bodies of water only during rainy seasons or flood stages — which stand to lose protections under the Sackett decision — also hold and channel excess water, Butler said.

High stakes

When wetlands are protected under the Clean Water Act, developers must get authorization before filling them in.

“It doesn’t mean you can’t dig in those (protected) wetlands,” Moser said. “It just means that you have to get a permit for doing those things.”

The Clean Water Act is enforced by the EPA and Army Corps of Engineers, the permitting agency that determines whether a wetland is protected under the act. The permitting process also notifies the public and provides opportunity for community input.

“It’s one of the best ways that the public can participate in making sure their waters stay clean,” Moser said, noting that the Sackett decision removes this level of oversight.

Since a lot of construction takes place on private land, developers could take advantage of the decision’s vagueness and skip applying for a permit altogether, she added.

“It’s really hard to keep track of what’s happening on the ground unless you happen to drive by something and see a big development and see it’s in wetlands, but that doesn’t happen very often,” she said.

It’s unclear how much of South Carolina’s wetlands already have been impacted as a result of the decision or how the decision has changed the number of permits requested from the Army Corps.

“(The Army Corps) continues to evaluate the effects that the Sackett decision may have on permit requests,” said Matt Wilson, manager of the Army Corps’ Regulatory Program, in a written statement.

The Sackett decision’s vagueness means that future lawsuits are likely.

“There’s a lot of room in the Supreme Court decision for interpretation, which likely means there will be litigation — other cases trying to interpret what the Supreme Court test means,” said Chris DeScherer, office director for the South Carolina office of Southern Environmental Law Center.

For an example of how Sackett may play out on the ground, Moser suggested looking to the Okefenokee Swamp.

The swamp is roughly half the size of Rhode Island, spanning the Florida-Georgia border, said Bill Sapp, a Georgia-based senior attorney at the Southern Environmental Law Center.

Home to “extraordinary” wildlife, including the endangered red-headed woodpecker, white storks and a large population of alligators, it became a national refuge in 1937, he said. But this refuge status doesn’t extend to Trail Ridge, a high sandy ridge that runs along the eastern edge of the swamp that formed approximately 250,000 years ago, according the Georgia Conservancy.

In 2018, a mining company from Alabama sought permits to extract heavy minerals on the ridge. These minerals are refined to make titanium and titanium dioxide, which is used to make white pigments in everything from paint to Oreo cookies’ cream center, Sapp said.

When wetlands protections were rolled back by the Trump administration in 2020, the Army Corps determined the mining company no longer needed permits. Even after the Biden administration restored wetlands protections, the Army Corps’ decision held, Sapp said.

This wasn’t the direct result of the Sackett decision, but the Sackett test reinforces this outcome and uses similar reasoning, he said, noting that the mine would destroy hundreds of acres of wetlands without oversight, accountability or public input.

No new lawsuits have been filed since Sackett, but future litigation is possible; the Southern Environmental Law Center and 50 other organizations nationwide are pushing for stronger legal protections of the swamp, Sapp said.

“All the advocates that are fighting the mine are very clear on that point that they’re not against mining, per se,” Sapp said. “They’re against mining for a common mineral next to a very uncommon natural resource.”

At the time of publication, no lawsuits were pending over the Sackett decision in South Carolina, but that doesn’t mean there won’t be. No state is immune from what’s happening in the Okefenokee Swamp, Moser said.

“It could happen anywhere,” she said. “It can happen in South Carolina.”

An uncertain future

Weaker federal protections mean states may have to come up with their own solutions. Various South Carolina groups — environmentalists, hunters, fishermen and wetland consulting firms — are invested in wetland protections, said Josh Eagle, law professor at the University of South Carolina.

“All these people have something big to lose,” he said.

But these protections wouldn’t fully offset the impacts of the Sackett decision, Moser said.

The main issue with state-level protections is that they require full participation from every state within the watershed. Virginia, for example, has some of the strongest state-level protections for wetlands in the region, but the water quality of the Chesapeake Bay depends on the health of the water flowing to the bay from multiple states, she said.

“No matter how comprehensively one state regulates its waters, if a neighboring state doesn’t, everyone suffers,” Moser added.

Conservationists say the Sackett decision misses the mark, doing little to clarify when a wetland deserves protection and presenting new unknowns, including how many acres of South Carolina’s wetlands are at risk, how the test will be applied on the ground and how the state can protect its natural resources.

After attempts by multiple generations to finagle these complex and critical ecosystems into a concise legal definition, only two things remain certain: Where a body of water begins and ends remains difficult to determine, and water remains famously unbound.

A short history of defining wetlands rights

1948: The Federal Water Pollution Control Act of 1948 passed, becoming the first major law to address water pollution in the U.S.

1972: As concern over the country’s deteriorating water quality increased, the law was amended and expanded, becoming known as the Clean Water Act.

1985: In United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that “waters of the United States” include wetlands adjacent to other open waters.

2001: In Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. United States Army Corps of Engineers, the Supreme Court ruled that providing migratory bird habitat alone is not enough to protect isolated wetlands under the Clean Water Act.

2006: In John A. Rapanos et ux. et al. v. The United States, the Supreme Court sought to determine how “adjacent” to navigable waters a wetland must be to qualify for protection under the Clean Water Act.

Rapanos wanted to fill-in three wetland areas on his property in Michigan to build a shopping center. The EPA argued that the wetlands were protected because they drained into man-made ditches, which emptied into navigable rivers and lakes.

The court was divided in a 4-1-4 decision, resulting in two tests that could be applied to wetlands to determine whether they were “adjacent” enough to a body of water to be protected under the Clean Water Act.

  1. The “continuous surface connection” test, which emphasized visible connections.

  2. The “significant nexus” test, which deemphasized visible surface connection. This test held that wetlands and streams that could impact the water quality of larger bodies were protected under the Clean Water Act, acknowledging the unseen ways waterways are connected.

2023: In a 5-4 decision, Sackett v. EPA upheld the “continuous surface connection” test and rejected the “significant nexus test,” overturning the Rapanos case.