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2007/12/31

Why Am I Publishing a Prairie Blog?

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 7:58 am

EchinaceaWhy am I publishing a prairie blog?  There are several reasons:

  • Education: Ansel Adams said: "If no one knows the importance of preserving a beautiful place, that place is not likely to be preserved." Only by talking about the beauty of prairies and the need to conserve them will conservation efforts increase. I’m in Texas and outreach and education seem especially needed here.
  • Motivation: So little native prairie conservation and restoration happens in Texas that I needed to hear about others’ successes to help keep me motivated.  I hope it will help motivate others also, because we need more people to get involved in prairie conservation and restoration.
  • Networking: I hope others involved in prairie conservation and appreciation will post comments so we can get to know each other.
  • Information:  Some examples: NPAT is constantly looking for native prairie remnants in Texas to add to our data, and to make friends with the landowners and tell them about the potential tax benefits of conservation easements.   We also want to connect conservation buyers (including my wife Lisa and myself) with owners of native prairies.
  • Funding: I hope generous donors or foundations may read this blog and decide to help fund prairie conservation and restoration, in Texas and throughout North America.

I’m sure I will think of more reasons, which I will add later.  🙂

At Home on the Prairie

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 7:14 am

Photo By Tom BeanFrom an NPCA article by Krista Schlyer: In the rolling hills of Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve, the dance of the greater prairie-chicken mimics the rhythms of the landscape.

The story highlights Texas A&M graduate Rebekah Foote’s work studying Greater Prairie Chickens at Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve.

Read the full story, "At Home on the Prairie", on NPCA’s web site.

2007/12/30

Recent Federal Bills That Could Benefit Prairies

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 4:28 pm

Recently, the Trust for Public Land outlined conservation related appropriations in recent bills in their 12/27/2007 edition of Washington Watch.  Some of these conservation programs that could benefit native prairie/grassland conservation and restoration include:

From the Omnibus Appropriations Package for FY 2008 signed by the President:

  • Land and Water Conservation Fund: $154.339M
  • State and Tribal Wildlife Grants: $73.83M

From the Senate version of the Farm Bill (awaiting a House/Senate conference and final version):

  • Farm and Ranch Land Protection Program (FRPP): $97M per year
  • Grassland Reserve Program (GRP): $48M per year
  • Conservation Easement Tax Provision (making permanent the expanded tax incentive for conservation easement donations)

Read more at the Trust for Public Land.  Also, the National Wildlife Federation has similar update related to the new Farm Bill.

Vote for Tallgrass Prairie in the 8 Wonders of Kansas

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 3:36 pm

Tallgrass Prairie Naitonal PreserveVoting for the 8 Wonders of Kansas ends tomorrow (midnight on Dec 31st, 2007) so go vote for Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve & the Flint Hills as one of the 8 Wonders of Kansas!

Vote here!

Banker Who Helped Create Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 12:44 pm

Photo from Tallgrass Prairie National PreserveKansas.com is running an article about Bill Watson, a Wichita banker who helped create Tallgrass Prairie National Preserve by making the initial loan to purchase the Z-Bar Ranch. 

Mr. Watson went on to become the CEO of the National Parks Conservation Association (NPCA) for many years before returning to the banking industry.

Read the full article, "A Conversation With: Bill Watson is a rarity in the Wichita banking community", on Kansas.com.

Alabama TNC Working to Protect Blackland Prairie

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 12:27 pm

Terre Noire Blackland Prairie © Scott Simon/TNCFrom the Birmingham News: The Alabama Chapter of the Nature Conservancy has signed an option to buy a 3,000-acre tract that adjoins the state-owned archeological park at Old Cahawba and is a remnant of the rich-soiled tall-grass prairies that once covered 1,000 square miles of central Alabama.

"There are expanses of native, natural grassland with very few non-native weeds and grasses. So, it is close to being a little slice of what Alabama used to be like that first attracted the settlers there," Oberholster said.

Too shallow to support large forest trees, the prairies supported smaller trees such as Eastern red cedar, redbud and hackberry, and large expanses of tall grasses such as yellow Indian grass and little bluestem, grasses more commonly associated with the Great Plains.

See the article, "Alabama chapter of Nature Conservancy working on deal to buy 3,000-acre tract near Old Cahawba that includes tall-grass prairies", at Everything Alabama for the full story.

Iowa Artist Depicts Tallgrass Prairies

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 11:34 am

Island View, Waterman South by Bruce MorrisonA hillside of native prairie grasses and False Gromwell.  A prairie pothole in the summer.  Rolling hills with prairie flowers in the foreground.

These are some of the tallgrass prairie landscapes that Bruce Morrison has depicted in his work.  Paintings, drawings, serigraphs, and photographs are among the mediums he uses to convey the beauty of native landscapes.

Bruce has also donated many works to help conservation groups and educational organizations.

Learn more about Bruce and his artwork, including how to purchase some of his work, on the Morrison’s Studio web site.  Bruce also has a blog called Prairie Hill Farm Studio.

2007/12/27

Green Prairie Cemeteries Could Protect and Restore Prairies

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 8:13 pm

Butterfly in the prairieEnvision a green cemetery in the middle of a restored tallgrass prairie, with native flowers blooming in the spring alongside lush native grasses.  Could you imagine a more beautiful way to spend eternity while helping to protect and restore an endangered ecosystem and provide habitat for grassland birds, butterflies, and other prairie wildlife?

Sales of plots in the conservation burial ground would fund the prairie conservation and restoration at the prairie cemetery and an adjacent tallgrass prairie remnant.  A conservation easement or outright ownership by a land trust would protect both the prairie cemetery and the adjacent prairie remnant in perpetuity.

Flat headstones would allow haying or cutting the prairie cemetery along with the native prairie remnant along side of it that provides the seed for the prairie restoration.

Biodegradable coffins and an absence of preservatives would make the project further green.  A certification from the Green Burial Council would help assure families that ecological practices were being followed.

Could you fund or be a partner in a green prairie cemetery project?  Contact the Native Prairies Association of Texas if so!

2007/12/25

Prairie Revival in Science News Online

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 9:58 pm

Science News coverFrom Science News Online: "It took less than a century after John Deere unveiled his steel-bladed plow in 1837 for the North America prairie to all but disappear. For 20 million years, a nearly 1,000-mile-wide swath of unbroken grassland belted the continent’s midsection from northern Canada to Mexico. Now, only about 5 percent is left, mainly as mixed and shortgrass prairie in the Plains states. To the east, less than 1 percent of the original lush tallgrass remains, most of it as remnants in pioneer cemeteries and old railroad rights-of-way."

The article highlights tallgrass prairie restoration efforts, diversity of remnant vs. restored prairies, bison grazing and increased prairie diversity, and the possible effects of climate change on tallgrass prairies.

The full article by Leslie Allen in Science News Online (from the week of Dec. 15, 2007; Vol. 172, No. 24) requires a subscription to the print magazine

Happy Holidays from NPAT

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 12:22 pm
Holiday Sideoats
May your native grasses grow tall and your prairie flowers bloom plentifully this upcoming year.

– From the Native Prairies Association of Texas (NPAT)

Sideoats Grama (Bouteloua curtipendula) is the State Grass of Texas

Artwork by Lisa Spangler

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