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Shrader-Weaver Woods 

 

Shrader-Weaver
Shrader-Weaver Woods
© TNC Photo

Why You Should Visit 
Hosting one of the best wildflower displays in Indiana, Shrader-Weaver Woods also offers old-growth forest, floodplain, successional forest and a seep spring.    

Location
Fayette County

Ecoregion
North Central Tillplain

Size
108 Acres

Dedicated
State Nature Preserve, 1974

Designated
National Natural Landmark, 1974

Owned & Managed By
Division of Nature Preserves 

How to Prepare for Your Visit
Easy to moderate terrain, two looped trails through the preserve and the beauty of nature will make for a great day of hiking. Watch out for stinging nettle, the most prominent plant in the woods during the summer months.

Directions
From Bentonville, travel east on C.R. 700 N for one mile and turn right (south) on C.R. 450 W. Travel 1.75 miles to a marked parking lot on the right hand side.  

What to See: Plants and Animals
Spring wildflowers include Dutchman's breeches, red trillium, nodding trillium, spring beauty, blue phlox, Solomon's seal violets, doll's eyes, Mayapples, geraniums, waterleaf and many, many more...too many to count! Of course there are other plants to admire what at the preserve. Queen of the prairie is the most striking of flowers and restoration has brought back the Michigan lily, swamp goldenrod, cup plant and several species of sedge. Skunk cabbage, golden ragwort, marsh marigold, jewelweed and blue-eyed Mary cover the forest floor. Above, the canopy is created by beech, maple, tulip, black cherry, black walnut, red elm, bur oak on twenty-eight acres of old-growth forest.

Flying across the sky or nesting in a standing dead tree could be a number of different species of birds. Barred Owls, Great Crested Flycatchers and migrant species like Cerulean Warblers, Blue-gray Gnatcatchers, Ovenbirds, Scarlet Tanagers, Baltimore Orioles, Red-eyed Vireos, Wood Thrush and Acadian Flycatchers.

For More Information
Division of Nature Preserves