Water from Stone
Passport to Texas from Texas Parks and Wildlife and the Wildlife Restoration Program
Forty years ago a soil conservation service technician told David Bamberger he’d purchased the worst piece of land in Blanco County. But Bamberger had a plan.
We were wanting to demonstrate and try to develop a model that perhaps other people could follow.
Bamberger, and his late wife Margaret, created a conservation model by dedicating themselves to restoring ecological balance… including flowing water…to their fifty-five hundred acre ranch.
Let me tell you, there wasn’t a drop of water here. There wasn’t anything in the way of wildlife. I drilled 7 water wells 500 foot deep; I never got a drop of water.
With careful land management, including the removal of 3-thousand acres of “wall-to-wall” cedars and seeding the land with native grasses, the land revived.
So, over this forty years, as the habitat was improved, we got 11 springs that started to run; after 7 years we had two creeks that were running. Today we have 22 ponds or tanks that weren’t here when I came. Two of them we call lakes because of their significant size.
This 81 year old award-winning conservationist’s latest project also involves water.
The idea behind this project is to capture all the water that falls here, and keep that little perched aquifer charged up.
We’ll learn more about that tomorrow.
That’s our show…made possible by a grant from the Wildlife Restoration Program…supporting habitat restoration in Texas…For Texas Parks and Wildlife…I’m Cecilia Nasti