Archive for the 'SFWR' Category

Recreational Landowners: Wildlife Associations

Thursday, February 12th, 2009

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Wildlife Restoration Program

As more people move from the country to the city, large tracts of farm and ranch land are being divided into smaller parcels to accommodate urban dwellers’ desire for rural retreats.

More and more of our land is being fragmented and broken up. And so, small acreage land holdings are more common, especially in the eastern half of the state. You know, we’re talking fifty acres to two hundred acres.

Linda Campbell directs the private lands program at Texas Parks and Wildlife. Because habitat fragmentation negatively impacts wildlife, neighboring landowners are encouraged to work together to lessen the problem.


We encourage landowners to join with their neighbors in what are called landowner cooperatives, or wildlife management associations. They’re becoming much more common, and landowners working together can get a lot more done for wildlife; they impact more habitat when they work together. And they can accomplish common goals. And, so, we very much encourage and work with groups of landowners to develop these landowner driven cooperatives.

Visit the Texas Parks and Wildlife web site for complete details on how landowner cooperatives can receive free, confidential technical assistance.

Our show’s supported by the Wildlife Restoration Program… providing funding for the Private Lands and Public Hunting Programs.

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

Recreational Landowners: Know the Land

Wednesday, February 11th, 2009

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Wildlife Restoration Program

The best time to get to know your land is when you first buy it.

Walk it; look at it carefully. Study it over the seasons. Really find out what makes it tick. And, that’s the first step – to really understand the land – and then understand the management that it takes to achieve the kind of goals you want for your recreation.

Linda Campbell directs the private lands program at Texas Parks and Wildlife that assists landowners to achieve their land management goals. She recommends getting started by visiting the workshop calendar – in the private lands section – on the Texas Parks and Wildlife website.


These are workshops and field days and things of that nature that occur all over the state. And so I would suggest landowners take a look at that.

Attending these events allows landowners to get to know other like-minded people in their region. The agency also offers free on site technical assistance in wildlife management planning.


And so, we look at the entire picture – all the habitats that are there, what can be done, what are the landowners goals, and then we help them develop a plan that will help them achieve that.

Tomorrow, forming wildlife management associations. [To view this link you must have Adobe Reader.]

That’s out show…with support from the Wildlife Restoration Program… providing funding for the Private Lands and Public Hunting Programs.

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

Recreational Landowners: Rural Life

Tuesday, February 10th, 2009

Passport to Texas and the Wildlife Restoration Program

As our population becomes urban, we see people buying rural property as weekend retreats.

Recreational buying is the greatest motivation for exchanges in land in Texas.

Linda Campbell, program director for the private lands program at Texas Parks and Wildlife, says the reasons for buying rural property are as different as the people buying it.

Game species are still a big driver – very important economically for landowners in Texas. But, we have a greater diversity of landowners, and so with a diversity of people , you have a diversity of interests. So, there are a lot of landowners, particularly those with smaller tracts, that are primarily interested in managing for birds and other non-game wildlife. Or, they just want to get away from the city to have a retreat. And that’s an absolutely valid goal as well. And, so, we work with all landowners in whatever their goal is.

Parks and Wildlife’s private lands program offers landowners free technical assistance managing their property.

Texas is over ninety percent privately owned, and so we recognized that if we’re going to have any impact at all on conservation of wildlife and habitats, we have to do it through the cooperation of private landowners.

Understanding your land…that’s tomorrow.

That’s our show with support from the Wildlife Restoration Program… providing funding for the Private Lands and Public Hunting Programs.

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

Texas–The State of Flowing Water

Monday, February 9th, 2009

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife

While it’s true that water is life, Carter Smith—Parks and Wildlife Executive Director—says for many Texans, water also means enjoyment.

It is the source of recreation in our rivers and lakes and streams and reservoirs—where Texans go to fish and kayak and swim and enjoy all of nature’s bounty.

Yet, containing flowing water for recreational use upstream can have a negative affect on the people, habitat and wildlife living downstream.

The overriding conflict is between rural and urban.

Lee Smith produces water documentaries for Texas Parks and Wildlife. The latest in the series, Texas: The State of Flowing Water, addresses environmental flow, which is the water needed to maintain healthy ecosystems along a waterway. He admits this important subject matter is complex.

This one was pretty difficult because the focus was so broad, and encompassed these various entities that are at work to try and figure out what [water] levels need to be in the rivers and the bays and how to get that written into law. That, in itself, was a huge challenge.

Witness how Smith evenhandedly weaves together the diverse aspects and points of view of this complex topic when you tune into Texas: The State of Flowing Water Thursday February 12 at 8 PM, on most PBS stations… made possible by the Sport Fish Restoration Program.

Find additional information at texasthestteorwater.org.

That’s our show… For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Lee’s Life Lessons from Nature

Thursday, February 5th, 2009

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife

Texas Parks and Wildlife TV producer Lee Smith says he learned an important lesson from nature when shooting the documentary Texas–The State of Flowing Water.

It has given me a new sense of patience. I went down to the bay—it was basically a travel day the real shoot was the next day—so I was going around getting shots on this back bay of a sunset. And it was a horrible day; it was overcast; no birds were down yet, so there was nothing like that I could shoot. And the sun was going down, and I wanted to eat…and so I blew it off.

And I was driving up to the restaurant and as I was getting out of the car, the sun popped in my eye. And I looked over and the sun had come out of the clouds for just about five minutes. And if I would have stayed there, and been patient, and waited for the day to unfold, I would have gotten probably the title shot of the show. But I didn’t. So, now whenever I’m out there and things aren’t looking great, I say, you’ve got to wait it out. You’ve got to wait for nature to reveal herself.

Catch the documentary Texas the State of Flowing Water Thursday, February 12 at 8 pm on PBS stations. Visit texasthestateofwater.org for complete listings.

That’s our show… For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.