Florida golf development, eagles co-exist
Developer gave up prime lots, but added value to overall project
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PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. - Bobby Ginn gave up the nicest lots in his luxury golf course community to a couple that just flew in and made themselves at home.
Three years later, Ginn is happy with the deal. So, apparently, are the bald eagles nesting with a multimillion-dollar view: They recently had babies.
Some developers would have seen an obstacle in the eagles, sitting in a dead pine tree overlooking a lake and surrounded by acres of nothing but nature. Ginn saw an opportunity not just to protect the environment in one of his latest multimillion-dollar ventures, but to make the eagles a selling point.
"For me, it's as big an amenity as golf or tennis or a pool," he said. "People want to see and enjoy wildlife and they should be able to do it from home."
Ginn set aside about 120 acres — up to $40 million worth of home sites — in his Tesoro community in Port St. Lucie, about 115 miles north of Miami.
The property, next to a lake surrounded by trees and full of fish and wading birds, was to have been the most expensive property and the only waterfront in a neighborhood where houses are selling for up to $5 million.
Audubon now controls land
The land is now preserved as nature in perpetuity as a conservation easement donated by Ginn and controlled by Audubon of Florida. Ginn has partnered with the group to protect the eagles, and is paying for outreach and monitoring programs out of his own pocket.
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Rick Silva / AP Brian Mealey removes one of two baby eagles from its nest on March 3 to attach a satellite tracking device. |
What's good for the eagles has been good for business, Ginn said. The area's natural beauty and wildlife figure into the marketing of the development.
"Wildlife doesn't have to suffer. It can coexist with development," he said. "There's got to be a mix, particularly as we're more and more crowding the planet."
The bald eagle was on the federal endangered species list when Ginn started construction, but it was removed last year. Today, there are nearly 10,000 mating pairs in the contiguous 48 states, compared to a documented 417 in 1963 when the bird was on the verge of extinction south of Canada.
Chicks hatched two months ago
The Tesoro nesting pair's two eaglets hatched about eight weeks ago. A Web camera aimed at their nest allows the public to watch the family in real time.
Last week, scientists working with Audubon attached a satellite tracking device to one of the eaglets in hopes of learning more about migration patterns once the bird takes flight in a few weeks. The public will also have a rare opportunity to view what the scientists see by monitoring the eaglet's movements online as it leaves the nest for the first time and flies as far north as Canada.
"The more data we have as to where these birds go the better off we are protecting them," said Lynda White, EagleWatch coordinator for Audubon of Florida. "And we've got to find a way to strike a balance between development and preserving the species, since now that they're de-listed, we don't know what is going to happen."
Audubon's eagle camera is online at www.audubonofflorida.org/friendsoftheeagle/cam.html
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