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2007/06/05

Prairie News Update 2007-06-03

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 12:13 am

NPAT LogoA Prairie News Update has been emailed to the Native Prairies Association of Texas (NPAT) email list!

You can also read it on the NPAT web site.  Contents include:

Subscribe to the NPAT-announce email list to receive Prairie News Updates and other prairie field trip and event announcements.
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2007/06/04

Field Trip to Bear Creek Ranch

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 11:47 pm

Echinacea Wildflower Tour of Bear Creek Ranch – June 9, 2007 – Saturday 10am-1pm

Owned by the Dixon Water Foundation, the 1700 acre Bear Creek Ranch supports deep soiled tallgrass prairie, limestone glades, and streamside forest. Come see this spectacular part of the Fort Worth Prairie.

The Nature Conservancy’s Jim Eidson will talk about natural history, and Robby Tuggle, ranch manager, will talk about sustainable grazing.
Located at 2701 Bear Creak Rd., Aledo, TX 76008 (west of Fort Worth). Click here for directions.

For more information, contact the Nature Conservancy’s Jim Eidson, 903-568-4139, jeidson@tnc.org. Also see the field trip flyer.

Konza Prairie Segment on 49 ABC News – Topeka

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 10:42 pm

News segment on Konza PrairieFor us Texans to easily visit a large tallgrass prairie, we unfortunately have to visit a different state since Texas has protected so few tallgrass prairies of significant size. One of the best to visit is Konza Prairie, a 8600 acre tallgrass prairie in the Flint Hills of Kansas. The thin soil and rocky limestone hills spared the Flint Hills from plowing and saved this prairie, and Konza Prairie is one of the best examples of tallgrass prairie to visit.

Konza Prairie is used as a long term research program station by Kansas State University to study tallgrass prairie, but luckily for us it has several miles of great trails open to the public.

49 ABC News, a Topeka, Kansas TV station, recently ran a great segment on Konza Prairie. Click the image or go to the story on their web page to watch the segment.

If you are visiting the Flint Hills, the Konza Prairie Annual Wildflower Walk is Sunday, June 10th. Call 785-587-0441 to make reservations, or learn more at http://www.k-state.edu/konza .

2007/05/24

Save Texas Tallgrass Prairies

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 10:36 pm

“I can sit on the porch before my door and see miles of the most beautiful prairie interwoven with groves of timber, surpassing, in my mind, the beauties of the sea. Think of seeing a tract of land on a slight include covered with flowers and rich meadow grass for 12 to 20 miles…” – John Brooke, an early settler in the tallgrass prairies of Texas, 1849

Out of the original 20 million acres of beautiful Texas tallgrass prairie, less than 1% remains due to suburban sprawl, plowing for row-crop agriculture, and improper overgrazing during the last 150 years.

Our current generation is the last chance to save this important piece of Texas’ cultural and natural heritage, and with Texas’ high projected population growth we must act now to save these special places.

2006/04/11

NPAT and NPSOT Logo Merchandise Now Available

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 11:42 pm

Prairie CelestialAs a fundraiser for the organizatons, I created CafePress stores with logo clothing, mugs, and bags for the Native Prairies Association of Texas (NPAT) and the Austin chapter of the Native Plant Society of Texas (NPSOT).

NPSOT-NPAT 2007 Symposium store
Native Prairies Association of Texas (NPAT) store
Native Plant Society of Texas (NPSOT) – Austin chapter store

Show your love of Texas prairies and native plants by wearing these shirts while raising money for these worthy organizations.  Proceeds benefit NPAT and NPSOT-Austin in their respective missions.

Book Review: Prairie Time – A Blackland Portrait

Filed under: — Stormwind @ 11:23 pm

Prairie TimeThe Blackland Prairie, part of Texas’ tallgrass prairies, once occupied 12 million acres of Texas, from the Red River near the Oklahoma border, south through Dallas, Waco, Temple, and Austin down to San Antonio.  The tall prairie grasses and flowers created extremely rich soils, which led to most of the Blackland Prairie being plowed for agriculture.

Perhaps only one-tenth of one percent of Texas’ beautiful Blackland Prairie remains in native hay meadows or places too rocky to plow, and many of these endangered places are slowly disappearing over time to the plow and development.

There are people who care about the prairie and search for remnants of the Blackland, hoping to find a special piece of what was and experience it as those who first came to Texas did and maybe even protecting some of the ever decreasing gems that remain.  Matt White is one of these people, and he tells an incredible tale of both destruction and hope in Prairie Time – A Blackland Portrait.
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