2023 Sandhill Crane Festival Set for January 14-15

Friday, January 06, 2023 | 10:35am
Sandhill Cranes

NASHVILLE --- The 32nd Tennessee Sandhill Crane Festival is set for Jan. 14-15, 2023 (Saturday-Sunday) at the Hiwassee Refuge, Cherokee Removal Memorial Park, and Birchwood Community Center.

The festival is a celebration of 20,000 or more sandhill cranes that migrate through or spend the winter on or near the Hiwassee Refuge. It is also an opportunity to focus attention on the rich wildlife heritage of the state and the Native American history of the area.  

The nearby Cherokee Removal Memorial will feature Native American folklore specialists. They will present artifacts and objects used in everyday life by Native American inhabitants in the Hiwassee River area. Visitors can also view cranes and other birds from the shelter house above the confluence of the Hiwassee and Tennessee Rivers.

This free event runs 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily and includes shuttle transportation from the Birchwood Community Center, where all guests must park,  to the Cherokee Removal Memorial Park and the Hiwassee Refuge. Volunteers will be present, with spotting scopes that allow for an up-close view of not only sandhill cranes but many waterfowl and bald eagles. Lucky guests might catch a glimpse of the endangered whooping cranes which also migrate through the area. For more information, click here.

Visitors can also enjoy free shows from the American Eagle Foundation and musical guests and Nashville recording artists, Second Nature and The Mount LeConte Jug Band. Vendors and educators will also be available at all three locations. 

The Hiwassee Refuge comprises about 6,000 acres. The Birchwood Community Center is only three miles from the wildlife-viewing site at the Hiwassee Wildlife Refuge.  The Cherokee Removal Memorial is adjacent to the refuge near the Tennessee River. The Hiwassee Refuge and Cherokee Removal Memorial are open to the public year-round and visitors are welcome during normal operating hours.

Beginning in the early 1990s, the recovering population of eastern sandhill cranes began stopping at the Hiwassee Refuge on their way to and from their wintering grounds in Georgia and Florida. TWRA has been managing the refuge for more than 60 years for waterfowl, and it provides sandhill cranes a combination of feeding and shallow water roosting habitat. Thousands of birds now spend the entire winter at the confluence of the Hiwassee and Tennessee rivers.

---TWRA---

Photos Courtesy Donna Bourdon

Cranes-Cluster Donna Bourdon