Archive for September, 2011

Public Hunting

Friday, September 16th, 2011


 
This is Passport to Texas

The state has more than a million acres of public hunting land including wildlife management areas, state parks and state natural areas, where sportsmen and women may harvest a wide variety of game.

And an annual public hunting permit is only $48-dollars.

While hunting on public land offers outstanding opportunity, Todd Merendino, a former Texas Parks and Wildlife biologist—who currently manages conservation programs for Ducks Unlimited—says doing so requires planning and flexibility. We spoke with him during a public waterfowl hunt on Matagorda Island.

37—Public hunting is just a different style or type of waterfowl hunting, primarily because unlike a guided operation or your own private lease, there is an element of unknown of where you’re going to go because folks that are in front of you may pick the spot you wanted to go to, or you may just be unfamiliar with the place and not know a good site to hunt. So there’s a little bit of kind of an uncertain element to in just the fact because of the check in procedure and a paperwork procedure sometimes you’re out in the field extremely early. Just like this morning, these guys will be set up an hour before shooting time. Whereas on a private lease, or a guided operation, you’d probably be getting set up right at shooting time.

The Sport Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program supports our series… and funds the operations of wildlife management areas in Texas.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Wildlife and Drought

Thursday, September 15th, 2011

This is Passport to Texas

Drought doesn’t just affect how green your lawn is. It also affects wildlife.

Robert Perez, the parks and Wildlife’s upland game bird program leader, says ground nesting birds like the endangered Attwater’s prairie chicken are vulnerable during droughts.

11—Even winter rain is important for those species to get their greens and get their vitamins and get their body ready to get into the breeding season. Once they breed they need soil moisture in the form of rainfall on the mostly native grasses.

Agency water resources branch chief, Cindy Loeffler, says sometimes the drought can become worse when people use too much water. And animals in Texas springs are some of the most affected.

12—There are plans in place to go in and remove endangered species from these springs and put them in locations for safe-keeping in case the springs do go dry.

Drought can also cause coastal waters to have high salt-concentrations. That means species like oysters suffer.

11—The predators that prey on these oysters do better in higher salinity conditions. So that’s one indicator of how we’re doing in our bays and estuaries is how the oysters are doing.

And right now, says Loeffler, the oysters aren’t happy.

We receive support for our series from the Sport Fish and Wildlife Restoration Program, funded by your purchase of fishing and hunting equipment and motor boat fuel…

For Texas Parks and Wildlife I’m Cecilia Nasti.

TPW TV: Mountain Biking Big Bend Ranch

Wednesday, September 14th, 2011

 
This is Passport to Texas

When the weather cools, and you’re ready to engage the outdoors again, strike out on two wheels. Get a taste of a mountain biking adventure on the TPW TV show. Producer, Alan Fisher.

Mountain biking is gaining popularity at Big bend Ranch vast state park.

Big Bend Ranch State Park is the biggest State Park that we have in the state of Texas—310 thousand acres and about 388 miles of road, trail, route.

So, are you following a couple of people on bike?

We followed a group of people who went on hundred mile ride over four days. They had quite an experience.

It is challenging in places. It’s smooth in places. *This is awesome!* What I love about Big Bend Ranch is it has a little bit of everything.


If you’re doing a multi-day ride out there, you really need to have somebody helping you carry some gear. There are also day rides that are options with interesting routes that you can bike.

Who’s your sag support when you’re out there?

Well, there were just hours and hours of jouncing around in a vehicle. It is a difficult place to get around, and that’s another great thing about seeing Big Bend Ranch State Park on a bicycle—there are areas you can access that you really can’t take a car, so it’s really a neat way to explore the park.

Thanks, Alan!

Check your local listings for air times.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Bison Celebration September 17, 2011

Tuesday, September 13th, 2011


 
This is Passport to Texas

Caprock Canyon SP has much to offer visitors. Some folks have even called it the hidden gem of the state park system. Park Superintendent Donald Beard can support that claim.

29— We have beautiful canyon country. We have thousand foot elevation drops. Twenty-eight miles of biking, hiking, and equestrian trails inside the park. Plus, we have our Trailway, which is an abandoned railroad line, which runs from Estelline to South Plains–65 miles long. It has Clarity tunnel, which is home to 250-thousand to half a million Brazilian free-tail bats that emerge nightly. We just have so much to offer here…it’s an amazing place. You can come here and spend all kinds of time and never see it all.

The park also has the official state bison herd. And on Saturday September 17, everyone can celebrate the completion of the first phase of a park’s restoration project, which triples the room these animals have to roam.

24—We’re going to start out the day with an official ribbon cutting to celebrate the fact that we are completing phase one. And then that will kick off our day’s activities. We’re going to have food vendors, we’ll have a lot of living history type exhibitors, with buffalo hunter camps. Native American camps… Pioneer days type stuff. It’s just going to be an all day fun thing. Everybody’s invited to come on out.

Find details about the September 17 Bison Celebration at Caprock Canyon SP at texasstateparks.org.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife I’m Cecilia Nasti.

State Parks: Eisenhower State Park

Monday, September 12th, 2011

 

This is Passport to Texas

Eisenhower State Park, on the shores of Lake Texoma, is a mid-sized park that offers BIG recreational opportunities, as our SP guide Bryan Frazier explains.

It sits right on the shores of 75-thousand acre Lake Texoma. It’s way up by Denison Texas, just south of the Oklahoma border.

The park is scenic: it’s got oak trees, ash, cottonwoods. It’s got great hiking and biking trails. It’s also the only park in Texas that has an off highway vehicle ATV park in it. Lake Texoma is becoming a fantastic fishery. Not just for striped bass, but now also for small mouth bass. And there’s not a lot of places in Texas where you can catch them, but Lake Texoma is becoming, perhaps, the trophy small mouth lake in Texas.

And the state park is a great place to access that lake, and there’s water recreation there. It’s also unique because there’s a marina and a store there inside the state park—and it has even has a yacht club. But for fishing and recreation and scenery and an escape from the Dallas Fort Worth area, Eisenhower SP is as good as you’re going to find.

Thanks, Bryan!

That’s our show for today…with funding provided by Chevrolet…building dependable, reliable trucks for more than 90 years.

We record our series at The Block House in Austin.

For Texas Parks and Wildlife I’m Cecilia Nasti.