
Tucked away in southwestern Randolph County, the Birkhead Wilderness Area lies just beyond the horizon of the Piedmont’s major cities and highways. This obscurity has allowed the region to maintain its rural roots, which helps provide the perfect backdrop for the Birkheads. As the only designated Wilderness Area within the Uwharrie National Forest, the Birkheads are free of motorized vehicles and other modern niceties. Its nearly 6,000 acres are intended to be a reprieve from traffic, cell phones and all the other headaches brought about by everyday life. Primitive hiking trails allow visitors to trek many miles, interrupted only by a squirrel scampering in the leaves or birds chattering in the forest canopy.
The rolling Uwharrie Mountain landscape houses a wealth of farms and forests. These rural conditions combine to create some of North Carolina’s cleanest and most aquatically significant streams. Near the top of the list is the West Fork of the Little River, a recipient of the Nationally Significant Aquatic Habitat designation due to the presence of six species of rare freshwater mussel. The Birkhead Property houses over 9,000 feet of Little River tributaries that originate either on the site or within the Birkhead Wilderness Area. Had these small streams been carved up by roads, culverts and houses, the negative impact on downstream water quality would have been drastic.

The LandTrust would like to thank the Conservation Trust for North Carolina for providing the necessary financing for this project. Without their involvement, we would not be able to celebrate this tremendous conservation achievement. Thanks to CTNC’s assistance, we can now take pride in the fact that 290 acres that were to be paved over by year’s end are now helping to maintain the peaceful serenity of the Birkhead Wilderness Area.




