SP Getaway–Primitive Camping in State Parks

June 21st, 2010

This is a Passport to Texas State Park Getaway

Maybe one day you’ll own an RV with all its creature comforts and use it for overnight outings at state parks. Until then, Bryan Frazier says primitive tent camping remains a simple, yet enormously satisfying alternative.

For most people who are beginners, that’s the way they’re going to go.

And so we have lots of tent camping available, but we have variations in our primitive tent camping as well. We have tent camping that has water outlets there in the tent camp site, with fire ring and picnic table and a lantern pole, which a lot of people appreciate. But we also have hike in sites, where you have a little bit of a hike to your tent camp site, and maybe it’s a little less developed.

And then we have true back country campsites in some of our parks. And that can be really whatever the person’s comfortable with. Some people really want to get away and have a solitude and a peace, and really like nothing else like a tent camping experience in our back country can provide. And we have some parks, particularly out in far west Texas that you can do that—and you may never see another person.

We always encourage people to be safe in all of our campsites, but we want to say, too, in addition to what we have in developed campsites, we do have primitive tent camping that cane be as comfortable and convenient near a parking lot, or as remote, really, as someone is looking for.

Thanks Bryan.

Find more state park information on the Texas Parks and Wildlife website.

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

TPW Magazine–The Water Issue

June 18th, 2010

This is a Passport to Texas

Just as swallows return to San Juan Capistrano, California, and buzzards return to Hinckley, Ohio, water issues return to the July edition of Texas Parks and Wildlife magazine. Editor, Louie Bond.

Well, we dip ourselves into the cool water in July and study water—just water in general in Texas. It’s the most important issue for us, for you, for everyone. Without water we’ve got nothing.

So, each year we try to look at the most important water issues facing Texans. This year. We’re taking it from your own backyard, from the urban creek and the little critters that dwell there. I know that was my first experience with sticking my toes in the water and becoming fascinated. I think that will resonate with a lot of readers.

We’d like to know how are those streams doing….are those critters still living there…are there healthy streams for our kids to play in. And then we take it through urban partnerships and watershed protection, all the way down to the coast where we’ll look at sea level rise and see how that’s going to impact the Texas coast in the future. So, join us in July to find out what the state of water is this year.

Thanks Louie.

The Texas parks and Wildlife magazine’s water issue is on newsstands now.

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

Volunteering at Texas State Parks, 2

June 17th, 2010

Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife

Texas State Parks rely heavily on volunteers.

07—Over the last several years it’s been pretty consistent; we clock about six hundred thousand hours of volunteer time.

And that’s just manual labor, says Lori Reiley, state park volunteer coordinator. Those 600-thousand volunteer hours translate into big savings for state parks.

12—That is equivalent in this fiscal year to about a ten million dollar savings in personnel costs. Our volunteers make up about a third of our workforce. So, we really couldn’t function as well without them.

Volunteers do everything from mowing lawns and scrubbing toilets to taking entrance fees and leading interpretive programs. Reiley says state parks encourage and welcome new volunteers.

16—We could always use their help. And while we get the occasional civic organization or nonprofit that wants to volunteer for service projects, we really could always use more individuals just on a regular basis to come out and volunteer in the parks.

Find out how you can volunteer at state parks on the Texas parks and Wildlife website.

That’s our show for today…we record our series at the Production Block Studios in Austin… For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.

Volunteering at Texas State Parks, 1

June 16th, 2010

This is Passport to Texas

Maximize your time outdoors when you volunteer at a Texas State Park.

03—We basically have three different categories of volunteers.

These categories include locals who sign up for special projects, friends groups that fundraise for specific sites and—says Lori Reiley—the third category is park hosts.

13—And that is a program designed for—traditionally—retirees who travel around the state and in exchange for a campsite, they do twenty-five hours of labor in the park every week.

Reiley coordinates the state park volunteer program, and says people accepted as hosts, are required to make a time commitment.

12—The time frame is a minimum thirty-day commitment. And, the maximum is typically three months, but it can be extended depending on the park needs. The superintendent has the authority to extend that.

Most Texas State Parks offer host programs with plenty of work to help fill the twenty-five hour labor obligation.

17—We have everything from general grounds maintenance, or it could be cleaning the restrooms. What we really like is when we find people with special skills: carpentry, or graphic artists, or educators doing interpretive tours or education programs. So, it’s a variety.

Find more volunteer information on the Texas Parks and Wildlife Website.

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

RV Camping in Texas State Parks

June 15th, 2010

This is a Passport to Texas State Park Getaway

Recreational vehicles—better known as RVs—are like furnished homes on wheels…and the most popular way to camp in Texas State Parks. Bryan Frazier has details.

Summer is vacation time for a lot of people. And so, as we get into our busy visitation time in our parks, I want to talk about our available camping options. And the first one is RV sites that we have.

RVs still remain one of the most popular ways to visit a park. And it gives people the freedom to come and go as they please with their RV, but it gives them some comforts of home while they’re outdoors. So, RVs are just very popular ways to see our parks—and those are the campsites that typically fill up first in our parks.

But we have everything from full hook-up options with water and electricity—either 30 amp or 50 amp service and sewer hook-ups. And we even have a park or two with full hook-ups with cable TV options available. But then we also have our RV sites that are just water and electricity, and some that are just water only.

So, if you have an RV, whether it’s a motor home, a trailer, or fifth wheel, most of our parks can accommodate RVs, and we just want to encourage people to get out and enjoy not only the open road, but their camping experience in an RV in a state park.

Thanks Bryan.

Find more state park information on the Texas Parks and Wildlife website.

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