Lone Star land Stewards: Burleson’s Prairie, 2
Thursday, August 14th, 2008Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife
Blackland Prairie once covered more than 20-million acres in Texas. Jason Spangler of the Native Prairies Assoc. of Texas says because of cropping and livestock overgrazing, less than one percent of this native habitat exists today.
It’s the most endangered large ecosystem in North America.
You can find a thriving 500-acre example of Blackland Prairie in Bell County thanks to the restoration efforts of Bob and Mickey Burleson.
I don’t think that any of our neighbors think of it as anything but Burleson’s folly. They all think that grass is for grazing to the ground.
Over four decades the Burleson’s visited remnant prairies collecting seeds they later used to restore their land.
Eventually it started working naturally to come back to a climax of what had been here. And, it’s still doing that. We haven’t gotten to the place where the Big Bluestem is the dominant—and that’s what would have been at one time—but we’re getting there.
The Burlesons won the Lone Star Land Steward Award for their dedication to land restoration and stewardship.
It’s what belongs here. This is where I live, This is my home, And this is what I love. (birds chirping)
Learn about land management at passporttotexas.org.
That’s our show… For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.