Northeast Alabama
Where the
land remembers.
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The Cahaba River
America's most biologically diverse river runs through the heart of Alabama — home to more fish species per mile than the Amazon basin.
It survived coal mines, paper mills, and decades of neglect. It's still here.
Longleaf Pine
Once blanketing 90 million acres across the South, the longleaf pine forest is one of the world's most threatened ecosystems.
Less than 3% remains. What's left is cathedral-quiet.
The Red Hills
Rolling clay hills, quail country, hunting lodges passed between generations. The land runs russet and amber come October.
People here measure time in seasons, not years.
Talladega National Forest
The oldest trees in Alabama stand here. Cheaha Mountain — the highest point in the state — looks out over a sea of hardwoods 2,400 feet below.
In November, it turns every shade of fire.
What Remains
These places don't need a campaign. They need someone paying attention — and a way to tell the story people don't forget.
This is what that looks like.
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