- Welcome
- Campus Maps
- History
- Mission Statement
- Accreditation
- Administration
- Employment
- Human Resources Employment Process FAQ
- Position Vacancies
- Salary Schedule (PDF)
- Employee Benefits
- Paid Holidays
- Employee Handbook (PDF)
- BENCOR Special Pay Plan (PDF)
- Social Security Collection and Usage
- Affordable Care Act Notice (PDF)
- Social Security Disclosure Summary (PDF)
- Tobacco-Free College
- Drug Free Workplace & Campuses
- Technology Usage Acknowledgement (PDF)
- Employee Safety Manual (PDF)
- SFSC’s Annual Security and Fire Safety Report (PDF)
- Calendars
- News
- Social Media
- Honoring Our Retirees
- Celebrating Our Trustees
AVON PARK, Fla. – March 5, 2018 – SFSC’s Museum of Florida Art and Culture (MOFAC) plays host to the Pygmy Fringe Tree Wildflower Festival, a celebration of the region’s native wildflowers, on Thursday, March 8, 10 a.m. – 1 p.m., on SFSC’s Highlands Campus, Avon Park.
The festival takes its name from the pygmy fringe tree (Chionanthus pygmaeus), a now rare flowering shrub that grows between 3 and 6 feet tall. The pygmy fringe tree once thrived throughout central Florida. However, farming and development nearly swept it from the region, prompting the federal government to declare it an endangered species in 1987.
The festival kicks off with guided walks through SFSC’s Wayside Shrine Trail, a footpath winding its way through pristine scrubland on the college’s campus. The tract, blanketed by fine white sand and overspread with shrubs, is home to native wildflowers including the big flag pawpaw, sky-blue lupine, and other endangered species, like the scrub St. John’s Wort.
“The Wayside Shrine Trail on the SFSC Highlands Campus offers the public an easily accessible venue with which to view this rare and extraordinary shrub,” said Megan Stepe, MOFAC curator. “This beautiful plant flowers in early March, so now is the time to take in this wonderful event.”
Leading the walking tours will be Dustin Angell, a conservation photographer and education coordinator from Archbold Biological Station in Venus, Fla. Photography walks will be led by Karla Respress, SFSC art professor.
The festival includes storytelling by Florida Seminole songwriter Rita Youngman and storytelling and song by Florida folklorist Carol Mahler. Members of the Audubon Society and the Ridge Rangers will be on hand to answer questions from the public. Visitors will find members from the Lake Placid Art League along the trail doing plein air, or open air, painting of the shrubs.
Visitors can purchase lunch from local caterer Loafin’ Around, who will have their food truck on hand for the festivities.
The guided walks start at 10:15 a.m. from MOFAC’s entrance adjacent to the Alan Jay Wildstein Center for the Performing Arts. Take Entrance 3 from College Drive to reach MOFAC. SFSC’s Highlands Campus is located at 600 W. College Dr., Avon Park.
A walk through the trail gives visitors a chance to see the land, known as the Lake Wales Ridge, as it existed for centuries. The ridge, an ancient beach and sand dune system formed 1-3 million years ago, has been home to flora that has struggled to survive against development.
The trail was conceived by Mollie Doctrow, former MOFAC curator and an award-winning artist whose work revolves around capturing natural habitats. The trail opened in 2011.
Visitors to the trail can write their impressions in notebooks found in wooden shrine boxes along the path. The boxes, designed by Doctrow, contain information that showcase the shrubs and wildflowers. One side of each box has a plant image in relief, allowing visitors to make a rubbing on paper as a memento of their visit. Rubbing kits will be available for purchase.
The trail is open to the public during regular college hours. To reach the trail, visitors should look for Entrance 5 along College Drive.
For more information on the festival, call Stepe at 863-784-7240 or follow the events link on MOFAC’s website at mofac.org.