Stewardship: Understanding Your Land
This is Passport to Texas
The best time to get to know your land is when you first buy it.
16—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 Parks and Wildlife. The program helps landowners with management goals. Campbell recommends getting started by visiting the workshop calendar in the private lands section on the Texas Parks and Wildlife website.
07—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.
10—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, joining with adjacent landowners to form a wildlife management association.
That’s our show. We receive support from the Wildlife Restoration program.
For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti.