A 2021 FWAS Community/Civic Grants award
Earlier this year, the Fort Worth Audubon Society announced three $1,000 grant recipients. One of those recipients, the Great Plains Restoration Council, has already put the money to good use and sent us a wonderful report full of great pictures. Their project was grassland nesting bird habitat restoration through diversity and inclusion community engagement. They cut and cleared tree and brush on the Ft. Worth Prairie Park south of East Dutch Branch Creek. The grant money not only helped help fund tree cutting but provided some community work payments for young people working on the Prairie.
Jarid Manos, project manager for the Great Plains Restoration Council sent the following report to FWAS:
Great Plains Resoration Council update for Grassland Nesting Bird Habitat Restorartion
Check out the difference in the trailhead! The front entrance to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Richardson Tract for the Fort Worth Prairie Park partnership was overgrown with trees and brush. The overgrowth completely shaded the native prairie.
In the historic absence of bison and fire, mechanical management helps keep the grassland open and alive.
Two crews mobilized. The chainsaw crew led by Jumbo Property Management a community-engaged Fort Worth Black-owned business. A second crew, consisting of 7 formerly incarcerated youth from Tarrant County Advocate Program (TCAP) followed. This crew removed downed limbs and cleared other brush. The Youth earn $10 per hour. The crews received introductory Ecological Health training.
The work week concluded with reseeding from carefully-sourced native Fort Worth Prairie ecosystem seed, and yoga on the prairie.
We have a lot more to work do, a couple years’ worth, but America’s 10,000-year-old native Fort Worth Prairie ecosystem is now one of the rarest ecosystems in North America.
While endeavoring to protect as much vulnerable wild prairie as we can add on to the Fort Worth Prairie Park preservation complex, we concurrently work to restore to 1800s ecological conditions what is already under protection.
The work in the field helps people and wildlife, costs about $1,000 a day, and increases prairie acreage.
We thank you as always for your financial donations and community engagement support! Preservation and restoration saves much of the vital Fort Worth Prairie as possible.
Also thank you to Congressman Marc Veasey, a thoughtful ecological leader, who came out to the Fort Worth Prairie to talk with and hike with our youth.
A conservation project photo journal – 2021 Restoration of the Fort Worth Prairie Park at East Dutch Branch Creek
Place your pointer on each photo for description. To advance to next photo, place pointer on photo and drag toward left of page.
by Michael K. Francis and Jarid Manos