BEXAR
AUDUBON
SOCIETY
SAN ANTONIO, TX
Volume XXII, No. 4
September 2004
Thursday, September 9, 2004, San Antonio Environmental Network Issues Forum
America's Greatest Wildlife Migration
HAWKS!
John Economidy, a San Antonio attorney who has
an interest in birds of prey, will discuss one of
America’s greatest wildlife migrations — the raptor
migration through the Coastal Bend of Texas. Each
fall, tens of thousands of birds of prey, including
hawks, kites, ospreys, peregrine falcons, bald eagles,
caracaras, and more, funnel through this area of south
Texas on their southerly migration. John will
specifically talk about the Hawkwatch at Hazel
Bazemore County Park, just outside of Corpus
Christi, which is, amazingly, the largest fall migration
of birds of prey in the United States. This region
serves as a geographical chokepoint for most of the
North American birds of prey migrating to Central
and South America.
What is hawkwatching? Hawkwatching is part
science and part fun. Scientists, students, interested
6:30 p.m. — Social Time; 6:45 p.m. — Program
Free and open to the public—Parking adjacent to the Center
Grossman International Conference Center of the University of the Incarnate Word
Northeast corner of Hwy 281 and Hildebrand
First Place, 2000 & 2002!
National Audubon Society
newsletter contest for
large chapters
laypeople, and those just
curious, all gather to observe
and tally the numbers of raptors
migrating through an area.
Hawkwatching began in the
Eastern U.S. at Cape May, New
Jersey, and Hawk Mountain,
Pennsylvania, and spread to
other locations throughout the U.S., Canada, Vera
Cruz, Mexico, and Panama. Our Texas hawkwatch is
significant in that observers often see more migrating
birds on one day in south Texas than in an entire
season at other U.S. locations!
John will share slides of his many years as head
observer of the Hawkwatch at Hazel Bazemore and
give an overview of Texas raptors, including some
I.D. tips for identifying these birds on the wing.
Note new day for our meetings - second Thursdays
Sunday,September 19, 2004 — Hazel Bazemore County Park
Hawkwatch Field Trip
Join as we head down to Hazel Bazemore County
Park near Corpus Christi to experience the fall raptor
migration. We will meet at the Ruble Center, 419 E.
Magnolia Ave., for carpooling. Call Patty Leslie
Pasztor at 824-1235 for information and directions.
If you would like to go on your own the night before
or another weekend, directions are as follows:
*Cross the Nueces River on IH-37. * Take US 77 to
Robstown/Kingsville/LRGV. * Immediately take the exit
marked FM 624/Up River Road. * After exiting, go to red light
and turn right on FM 624/Up River Road. * Go past CalAllen
High School and its stadium. * At the first red light past the
stadium, turn right onto “County Road 69.” This takes you to the
park. Turn left into ranger station. This traffic light is new from
past years. There is no longer a wooden sign saying Hazel
Bazemore County Park.
The park has water and restroom facilities. There
are folks there to help you with I.D.
Bring: Chair, Sunscreen, Hat, Binoculars,
Patience. Hawkwatching is like fishing. They will
come: you just have to wait.
Swainson’s Hawk USFWS)
September 2004 2 Bexar Tracks
BEXAR AUDUBON SOCIETY
Chapter of the National Audubon Society
P. O. Box 6084, San Antonio, TX 78209
210-822-4503
GOALS
The Chapter’s primary goals are
to promote species and habitat
conservation and environmental education
in the community.
OFFICERS
President Susan Hughes . (susan@wordwright.com) . 532-2332
Vice Pres. Harry Noyes ..... (harrynoyes@satx.rr.com) . 490-3124
Treasurer Betty Minyard ... (mink@texas.net) .............. 344-6128
Secretary ......................... ........................................ available
BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Dean Bibles ......................... (dbibles@aol.com) ............ 698-9264
Tony Wood ......................... (tmcawood@aol.com) ....... 493-4684
Director ...................................................................... available
COMMITTEE CHAIRS
Aud. Adven. Betty Minyard ... (mink@texas.net) .............. 344-6128
Birdathon Marge Lumpe ... (birdwatcher@msn.com) ... 545-1822
Conserv. Harry Noyes ..... (harrynoyes@satx.rr.com) . 490-3124
Education ...................................................................... available
Memb. ...................................................................... available
Publicity Harry Noyes ..... (harrynoyes@satx.rr.com) . 490-3124
SAEN Coord. ...................................................................... available
Bexar Tracks Content editor ............................................... available
Editors Jill Sondeen ..... (jls2003@gvtc.com) .. 830-980-3277
Mailing Blair Richter..(barkisrichter@sbcglobal.net) . 832-0522
Bexar Tracks is your newsletter.
We welcome your contributions.
Printed with soy ink on
recycled paper.
Visit Bexar Audubon’s
Web Site:
http://www.BexarAudubon.org
Visit San Antonio Environmental
Network’s Web Site:
http://www.sa-naturecenter.org
Suggestions and contributions are welcome.
Please contact Bill Hurley at
billhurley@satx.rr.com
BENEATH THE GAVEL
To report a polluting vehicle:
1-800-453-SMOG
(1-800-453-7664)
or www.tnrcc.state.tx.us/air/ms/
smokingvehicles.html
Dear Friends:
Seems there’s life in the old
gal yet! Following our August
pulse-taking session, there’s
been a lot of activity within
Bexar Audubon Society,
especially by people who have
been long-time members and
supporters. Some of them may
have been less active with BAS
over the past few years (most
have had other focuses in their
lives — personal and/or
volunteer), but their dedication
to BAS — its history and its
goals — has brought them
forward again. I can’t thank
them enough.
As evident in this issue of
Bexar Tracks, we have
programs, field trips, and other
activities for you to attend,
participate in, and enjoy. Come
and bring your friends. To keep
this level of activity up and even
growing, we must have your
attendance and interest.
Remember that December
will bring us elections at our
annual holiday party. You’ll see
some new names on the ballot
this year! Plan to attend and get
them off to a great start, while
enjoying some holiday cheer and
camaraderie and our world-famous
white elephant gift
exchange. Start digging through
your closets now.
Among the important issues
San Antonio will deal with in the
coming year is the Aquifer
Protection Initiative, which will
appear on the May election ballot.
Start talking about this issue with
your friends and neighbors and
make sure they come to vote FOR
the API in May. It’s the surest way
we have to protect the Edwards
Aquifer from the impending threats
from growth over the recharge
zone.
Mitchell Lake will be holding
its official opening soon. Watch for
more news and be sure to attend.
What a jewel we have in Mitchell
Lake, and how fortunate we are
that it is well on its way to
becoming a full-fledged Audubon
Center — right here in our home
town.
And, of course, there’s the
general election in November.
There are important decisions to be
made that will surely affect our
nation’s future and our hopes for
sustainability.
Warm regards, and a hearty
welcome to all of you who wish to
participate in our programs and
outings and to get more involved
with Bexar Audubon.
-Susan Hughes, President
Earth laughs in
flowers.
~Ralph Waldo Emerson~
John Economidy Bio
John M. Economidy is a San Antonio attorney who has an interest in
birds of prey. In 1980, he helped get John Karger’s Last Chance
Forever bird conservancy incorporated as a non-profit organization.
From 1987 to 1996, he was head observer of the hawk watch at Hazel
Bazemore County Park and Texas regional editor for Hawk Migration
Studies, the publication of the Hawk Migration of North America. He
recently researched the status and distribution of raptors for Raptors
of Western North America and Raptors of Eastern North America, the
Brian Wheeler Guides published by Princeton University Press.
September 2004 3 Bexar Tracks
JUNE SAEN RECAP - ROAD-BUILDING OVER THE RECHARGE ZONE
Over 30 people attended the
San Antonio Environmental
Network panel discussion on Road-building
over the Edwards Aquifer
Recharge Zone, moderated by
former San Antonio city
councilmember and current
Edwards Aquifer Authority board
member, Bonnie Conner.
Joanne Walsh, director of the
San Antonio-Bexar County
Metropolitan Planning
Organization (sametroplan.org),
gave an overview of the issues
regarding local transportation. Her
committee is responsible for
developing a coordinated
transportation plan that
incorporates all aspects of
transportation, including roads,
bicycle trails, and public
transportation.
The first step is for local
officials, business leaders, technical
experts, and citizens to work
together to identify and prioritize
transportation needs as well as find
innovative solutions. Thus, the
trend is away from modular
solutions that address one problem
at a time, to a comprehensive land
use plan that includes
transportation planning to coincide
with growth areas.
Another aspect of good
transportation planning was the fact
that access and mobility are not just
about congestion relief, they’re
about economic development: on-time
delivery, economic
competition, delivery of emergency
services, and access to jobs,
schools, medical care, shopping,
and recreation.
Geary Schindel, P. G., Chief
Technical Officer of the Edwards
Aquifer Authority, described what
the EAA was doing to address
water quality issues. The EAA has
appointed a citizen’s group to
review water quality issues
concerning the aquifer. The EAA
board has already begun to address
practices that could affect water
quality by prohibiting the
construction of new fuel storage
tanks over the recharge zone, by
implementing stringent standards
for well construction, and with a
program to identify and plug
abandoned wells. The EAA has in
place an extensive water quality
monitoring program throughout the
aquifer, consisting of 80 wells per
year.
Clay Smith, P. E., planning
engineer of the San Antonio office
of the Texas Department of
Transportation (TxDOT), described
the 2030 Transportation Mobility
Plan. This plan is based on
population growth and economic
development. He noted that the 25
percent of the highway miles under
TxDOT in San Antonio carry 65
percent of the traffic. Every project
developed by TxDOT undergoes an
environmental impact study and
develops a water pollution
abatement plan utilizing best
management practices to reduce or
contain pollutants.
George Veni, P. G., of Veni and
Associates, a hydrogeologist who
specializes in karst geology,
emphasized that karst aquifers have
NO filtering of their recharge, thus
as drinking sources they are the
most vulnerable to pollution.
Bill Barker, a transportation
planning consultant, described a
recent study, including cities of
populations from 1 to 12 million,
that show that average commute
times are 30 minutes. This means
that the time that people budget for
commuting is about 30 minutes
each way, and that they move
rather than put up with longer
commute times. Bill thinks that
focusing high dollar construction
projects in areas over the recharge
zone that are more than 30 minutes
away from jobs may not be a good
idea – there is little probability that
significant jobs will move over the
recharge zone.
During the Q & A session,
George Veni noted that best
management practices (BMP)
required by water pollution
abatement plans weren’t
necessarily the best way to
minimize contamination, but
probably were the most affordable
ways to attempt to minimize
contamination. In addition, if the
various BMP features (catchment
and/or sediment basins) are not
maintained (have the filters cleaned
or changed), they become useless
or worse, they may concentrate the
contaminants and then direct them
into the recharge features.
Another question was about the
existence and impact of access
roads. They first appeared in Texas
in the 1950s and have led to more
accidents and very disorganized
growth because of local
development. George Veni noted
that San Marcos bought 600 acres
over the recharge zone and will
extend Wonder Road as a parkway
with no exit ramps, so that there
will be a buffer over the vulnerable
area. Limiting access over the
recharge zone could be a way to
minimize growth while addressing
congestion problems.
-Jill Sondeen
September 2004 4 Bexar Tracks
BIRD TALES
How do birds get their names?
Birds get their common names
in a variety of ways. Often birds are
named for one of the pioneer
ornithologists. Names may be
derived from Latin, Greek or local
terms, a name may be borrowed
from Old World species, a name
may suggest the bird’s call.
John Cassin, a famous bird
biologist from the early 1800s, has
five birds named for him, one being
our common Cassin’s kingbird.
Falcon is derived from the Latin
“falcis” meaning “sickle” for the
curved beak and talons. Plover
supposedly comes from the Latin
word “pluvia” for rain, because the
birds were thought to migrate in the
rainy season or they live in rainy
places.
Europeans who explored North
America named some of our birds
for birds that were familiar in their
homeland. The American robin was
named for the beloved “robin
redbreast” of England. Both have a
reddish breast, but they are very
different and not closely related.
Dove was a British term for wild
pigeon, and the word likely came
from an Anglo Saxon word
meaning “to dive.” Warbler
originally meant to sing with trills
and was used to describe Old World
warblers, many of which are not
good singers and are not related to
our colorful wood warblers. Our
orioles were named for the
European golden oriole even
though they are in a different
family.
Many birds are named for the
calls they make. The northern
bobwhite is named for its familiar
“bobwhite” whistle; and the
killdeer is named for its “killdee”
call. Nightjars’ nocturnal calls
became their names. For example,
the chuckwill’s-widow says its
name, although at a distance one
only hears “will’s widow,” while
the poorwill and whip-poor-will
clearly pronounce their names.
It is said that “owl” is onoma-topoeic,
that is it is derived from
the bird’s call, although there is
also an Anglo Saxon word “ule”
meaning an owl and a Latin word
“ulula,” meaning a screech owl.
Our willet’s name is imitative of
the bird’s call; likewise the
whimbrel calls “whim” and the
“rel” is a diminutive suffix.
Some birds’ names are derived
from an Indian name for the bird.
Anhinga, for example, means
“water turkey” in a South
American language and perfectly
describes this bird found in
swamps and lakes. The sora, a rail,
living in similar habitat, is also
from an Indian word.
At times a simple description is
best. The gray catbird is gray and
mews like a cat. The mockingbird
mocks other bird calls, the
ovenbird makes a domed oven-shaped
nest, woodpeckers peck on
wood, flycatchers catch flies and
other insects, and the
hummingbirds’ wings hum with
their rapid flight.
-Carol E. Edwards
ceebird@overland
Water
Quality and
Smart
Growth
The U.S. Environmental
Protection Agency has released a
new report that aims to help
communities protect water
resources and achieve smart
growth. The report documents 75
innovative approaches — including
redeveloping abandoned properties,
encouraging rooftop gardens,
creating shared parking, and
promoting tree planting — that
state and local governments and
water quality professionals can use
to achieve their smart growth and
water quality goals.
To receive a free copy of
Protecting Water Resources with
Smart Growth, send an email to:
ncepimal@one.net or call 1-800-
490-9198 and request EPA
publication 231-R-04-002. The
report and more information about
smart growth are also available at:
www.epa.gov/smartgrowth
September 2004 5 Bexar Tracks
REGIONAL NEWS
Each year, millions of people
visit the San Antonio River Walk,
enjoying its restaurants, bars, hotels
and shops. With so much going on,
visitors can miss the trees in a
forest of entertaining distractions.
The horticulture faculty at
Texas A&M University has taken
steps to help change that. Working
with the San Antonio Parks and
Recreation Department, the
horticulture faculty submitted a
nomination to the American
Society for Horticultural Science in
Washington, D.C., to designate the
River Walk a horticultural
landmark. The horticulture society
agreed.
A plaque commemorating the
site as “a magnificent urban
ecosystem where man and nature
embrace a great engineering work
that supports the rich diversity of
South Texas plants” was unveiled
on July 21 at a ceremony on the
River Walk.
Dr. Dan Lineberger, a Texas
A&M horticulture professor who
had the idea of nominating the
River Walk for the award, attended
Seed for major award planted
by Horticulture Department
the ceremony.
“As a horticulturist,
I felt the site deserved
to be recognized for the
unique beauty of the
plants and trees
growing there,”
Lineberger said. “I’m
glad the horticulture
society felt the same
way.” The ASHS is an
international association
of horticulturists, founded in 1903.
It commemorates horticultural sites
of “historical, scientific,
environmental and aesthetic value”
by designating them as
horticultural landmarks. The River
Walk is the eighth site to earn this
distinction.
The plaque designating the site
a horticultural landmark is on
permanent display at Peak’s Park,
located off River Walk’s
Commerce Street entrance near the
Greater San Antonio Chamber of
Commerce.
“The San Antonio River Walk
is a unique horticultural
environment,” said Lynn Rawe,
Texas Cooperative Extension agent
for horticulture.
“There you can see a collection
of plants and trees you won’t find
in any other urban setting,” she
said. “And lot of the flora has been
there for centuries, so it has a
strong historical significance too.”
The San Antonio River Walk
was initially designed by landscape
architect Robert Hugman. From its
beginning as the “San Antonio
River Beautification Project” in the
late 1930s, the area was intended to
blend the commercial and
entertainment portions of
downtown San Antonio with the
area’s natural beauty. Over the
years, the River Walk has grown
into a 2.5-mile-long stretch within
the heart of downtown San
Antonio, but its original purpose
has remained unchanged.
The flora around the San
Antonio River Walk is unusually
diverse, he added. “Trees like palm,
lemon, banana, papaya and
avocado grow well in this zone.
They are planted among the more
typical trees of the region, such as
oak, pecan and bald cypress.”
According to Lineberger, the
River Walk provides a growing
environment which supports hardy
native trees and plants, as well as a
number of different and less-hardy
plants. “And because it’s below
street level, it creates a
microclimate that can be five to
seven degrees cooler than normal
in the summer and warmer in the
winter. That makes it more
pleasant.”
Now the site has been
designated a horticultural
landmark, the horticulture faculty
at Texas A&M hopes more visitors
will take time to smell the roses —
or honeysuckle and night-blooming
jasmine—along the River Walk.
-Paul Schattenberg
September 2004 6 Bexar Tracks
Local and Regional News
July 10th Recap:
How the Possum Lost
His Furry Tail
In this second Saturday program, Emma Ortega, a Lipan Apache
storyteller, shared wonderful stories of animals and Native American
tradition around the evening campfire. Forty-five people were present to
hear her presentation — even a pair of whistling ducks circled the
clearing several times during the program, their whistles adding
credibility to the ambience of the evening.
This sought-after speaker is always very popular with the audience;
we had several people attending who returned specifically to enjoy
Emma’s stories after hearing her in our second Saturday series last year!
SECOND SATURDAY REPORT
by Peggy Spring
Mitchell Lake Audubon
Center Landscape -
Volunteers Needed
The landscape next to the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center is
beginning to take shape. The plantings include those native to South
Texas and Mexico attractive to songbirds, hummingbirds and butterflies.
If any of you are interested in joining us to plant, pull weeds and/or
spread mulch, we will be meeting out there Saturday mornings in
September (Sept. 4, 11 and 18) to prepare the area for the opening on the
24th. We also need some people to water the landscape until it is
established (weekdays or weekends). If you would like to help in any
way, call Patty Leslie Pasztor at 824-1235.
Black bear
Guzzles Rainier
But not Busch
BAKER LAKE, Wash. (AP) -
When state Fish and Wildlife
agents recently found a black bear
passed out on the lawn of Baker
Lake Resort, there were some clues
scattered nearby — dozens of
empty cans of Rainier Beer.
The bear apparently got into
campers’ coolers and used his
claws and teeth to puncture the
cans. And not just any cans. “He
drank the Rainier and wouldn’t
drink the Busch beer,” said Lisa
Broxson, bookkeeper at the
campground and cabins resort east
of Mount Baker.
Fish and Wildlife enforcement
Sgt. Bill Heinck said the bear did
try one can of Busch, but ignored
the rest. The beast then consumed
about 36 cans of Rainier.
A wildlife agent tried to chase
the bear from the campground but
the animal just climbed a tree to
sleep it off for another four hours.
Agents finally herded the bear
away, but it returned the next
morning.
Agents then used a large,
humane trap to capture it for
relocation, baiting the trap with the
usual: doughnuts, honey and, in
this case, two open cans of Rainier.
That did the trick. “This is a
new one on me,” Heinck said.
“I’ve known them to get into cans,
but nothing like this. And it
definitely had a preference.”
Webpage for Hawkwatch
The web site for the hawkwatch is www.ccbirding.com/thw/ or
www.ccbirding.com/ and click “Texas Hawk Watches.”
This web site has extensive photographs of different raptor species
plus data from past years’ watches. There is an excellent section on how
to count kettles with hundreds/thousands of raptors.
While there, to get a map to the park, click “History of the Watch/Info
on the Park.” Click “map.”
September 2004 7 Bexar Tracks
San Antonio Water System and Audubon Texas
cordially invite you to attend
Mitchell Lake Audubon Center
Press Day
Upcoming Events
RECURRING EVENTS
San Antonio Audubon Society’s
Beginners’ Birdwalk is held at 8 a.m.
on the second Saturday of each
month. Meet at the Judson Nature
Trail in Alamo Heights. Visitors are
welcome.
There are binoculars to lend.
Meet at the Nature Trails next to the
Alamo Heights Swimming Pool on
Viesca St. From the 5900 block of
Broadway, turn west on Ogden to
Greeley St., turn left one block, then
right again to the parking lot on the
left. More information at 210-342-
2073.
Birding trips to Mitchell Lake are
still occurring. Information appears
on the Mitchell Lake Wetlands
Society’s web site www.mlws.org.
MITCHELL
LAKE ACCESS
Tours of the refuge will run
every fifteen minutes from
7:30a.m. to 8:15a.m. The
ceremony begins at 9:00am.
Speakers will include John Flicker,
President, National Audubon
Society, SAWS Trustee Douglas R.
Leonhard, and representatives and
Friday, September 24, 2004
7:30am – 10:00am
Mitchell Lake Audubon Center
10750 Pleasanton Road
community leaders. Light
refreshments will be served.
For those who can’t attend
on Friday, an informal Open House
will be held on Saturday, September
25, 8am – 12noon.
If you will be attending the
Friday event, please RSVP by
Friday, September 17; call Iliana
Peña at the Mitchell Lake Audubon
Center, 210-628-1639. More
information is also available at this
number.
SECOND SATURDAY PROGRAM - Sep. 11, 7-9 pm
by Peggy Spring
Welcome to my Web
A lively spider hunt with Cary Guffey
of Our Lady of the Lake University
Come and find out about the
true nature of two kinds of insects,
Daddy Longlegs and venomous
spiders. Why are the former so
funny looking and are they
dangerous and how dangerous are
the latter and how will I know if
I’m in trouble? To provide answers
to these questions and hopefully
find some, Cary Guffey, Ph.D.,
Associate Professor of biology at
Our Lady of the Lake University in
San Antonio, will lead us on a
merry hunt. Guffey holds a
bachelor’s degree from the
University of Missouri at Rolla, a
master’s from SW Missouri State
University, Springfield, and a Ph.D.
in ecology and evolution from the
University of
Louisiana at Lafayette.
Call 210.698.1057 for
reservations and information.
Walk-ins accepted on a limited
basis. Suggested donation: $3.00
each/$5.00 per family. Eisenhower
Park, Harris (Mass Pavilion),
19399 NW Military Hwy. Take FM
1535/Military Hwy exit off Loop
1604 on the city’s northwest side.
Go north for 2 miles. Park entrance
is on the left, just before Camp
Bullis. Gates open 6:30 pm. Web
site: www.sanaturalareas.org
Sponsored by San Antonio Parks
and Recreation Department and the
Bexar Audubon Society.
September 2004 8 Bexar Tracks
Bexar Audubon Society, Inc.
P. O. Box 6084
San Antonio, TX 78209
Non-profit
Organization
U.S. Postage Paid
San Antonio
Permit #590
Membership Form
National Audubon Society
Bexar AudubonSociety
Membership rates are:
Student/Senior $15 Basic $35
Introductory 1-year $20 (2-year: $30)
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Address___________________________
_______________________________
City______State __ Zip_________
Phone: ( )________________
Email:___________________________
For a new membership, mail this coupon
and your check—payable to “National
Audubon Society, Chapter W19” to:
Bexar Audubon Society
P. O. Box 6084
San Antonio, TX 78209
W19, 7XCH
Opt out for other mailings
By using this form, 100 percent of
your first year’s dues will benefit the
chapter.
Earth Share of Texas represents the Audubon Foundation of
Texas and the National Audubon Society in payroll deduction
plans for charitable giving. For information, call 1-800-GREENTX
or email <estx@earthshare-texas.org>.
Saturday,October 2, 2004 — BEXAR AUDUBON OUTING
BEAU CHEYE RANCH
We hope you can join us on
Saturday, October 2, for a field
trip to the Beau Cheye Ranch
near Nixon, Texas. Owned by
Audubon members, Rolan and
Margo Brown, this property has
rolling terrain, a creek,
wildflowers, and over 250 oak
trees. They also have some cows
and a burro. Plan on enjoying a
morning of leisurely walking,
birdwatching and general nature
observation. Tennis shoes, long
pants and sleeves are
recommended attire. We will
finish with a Bar-B-Que catered
by Texas Pride at $5.99 per
person. If we don’t have at least
25 ordering Bar-B-Que we will
bring our own sack lunches. We
will meet for carpooling at 7:30
am at a location to be
determined (it takes
approximately 1 hour to drive
from San Antonio). Call Patty
Leslie Pasztor for reservations
& directions at (210) 824-1235.
Rolan will call in the Bar-B-Que
orders on the afternoon of
Monday, September 27, so let
us know soon!
Upcoming Second
Saturday Programs
· October 9 —10:00 am - 2:00 pm.
San Antonio Naturally
Our second annual celebration of
nature; numerous presenters. Watch
for details; family friendly.
· November 13 — 10:00 am - 12:00
pm. Fur and Feathers
Join members of the Texas Wildlife
Association for a fun program on
the Hill Country’s white-tailed deer
and turkey.
· December 11 — 10:00 am - 12:00
pm. Tuna, Nopales and More!
Local experts will share their
knowledge of native plants and their
uses by past and present people;
family friendly.
Mark your calendar
Feb. 25-26 — 2005 South Texas
Farm and Range Forum