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DONATE NOW
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Clear Cut Decision
Dear KPC,
Here's the story of what happened right out of the apartment window. It's been awhile, but it all started when there were workman clearing away plants and I didn't know why at first. But a few days later when I came back from my mom's house, my dad told me that they were building a shopping center! It was a super bad location and I was very upset. Now all that remains from that pine forest is dirt. But there is another part of that pine forest in the back. That is why my dad is giving you an extra donation. Love, Dora, 8 years old This note from young conservationist arrived a few days ago tucked into an envelope with a donation to KPC's Into the Wild annual appeal. It is heartening to know that people love the outdoors and want to protect our native plants, our pine trees, and our wildlife.
We know how important it is for people to have a place where the sky is still huge and the landscape seems to stretch on forever, which is why we're working to make 2011 an even better year on the prairie - with fun activities including stargazing parties, bike riding events, and more.
But KPC couldn't have done it without you, our supporters. Thank you Dora, her Dad, and all the wonderful supporters to gave generously to the Katy Prairie Conservancy in 2010.
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Events on the Prairie
Wild West Tour with Glenn Olsen: Sparrows, Sparrows Everywhere Saturday, January 15 from 7:30 AM - 12 PM
Wild West Tours are your chance to get up close and personal with the explore the Katy Prairie with birding expert and local naturalist Glenn Olsen. These intimate tours let you catch a glimpse of some of the gems of the prairie. Winter on the Katy Prairie means plenty of chances to spot the diverse, energetic, and fascinating group of birds known as sparrows. Join Glenn Olsen as he teaches you how to identify and enjoy viewing sparrows. Date: Saturday, January 15 from 7:30 to 12 PM at Indiangrass Preserve Registration required. Email info@katyprairie.org to register. $65 per person.
What to wear for trips to the prairie? All participants should wear appropriate outdoor clothing, including closed-toe shoes and long pants. A long-sleeve shirt is also recommended. Be sure to dress in layers as sometimes the prairie gets cold and you need the warmth. If the prairie heats up, you can shed your outer layer. Hats are great if you want to be shielded from the sun. Please bring your own water and insect repellent.
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The Matt Cook Memorial Wildlife Viewing Platform Opening Saturday, January 8, 2011!
The time is finally here! KPC's new wildlife-viewing platform at Warren Lake will be open to the public beginning Saturday, January 8, 2011. The platform will be open from 7 AM to dusk every day for visitors to enjoy the spectacular views, sights and sounds of Warren Lake. We hope that you'll take advantage of another place to enjoy the Katy Prairie 365 days a year and you'll bring your friends and family so they too can experience the beauty of the prairie and understand why it's so important to save the Katy Prairie.
Stop by the Matt Cook Memorial Wildlife Viewing Platform - and remember to bring your camera because you never know what you'll see on the Katy Prairie! |
KPC Awarded Grant from Marathon Oil Corporation 
A $1,000 award was made to the Katy Prairie Conservancy in honor of one of Marathon Oil Corporation's employees, Jim Dyess, for his outstanding acheivement as a community volunteer. Dyess was one of 44 Marathon Employees honored with a Global Volunteer Award. Jim and his wife, Chris, have been volunteering regularly for KPC since the autumn of 2008. Jim's expertise as an Advanced Senior Geologist has enhanced his role as a volunteer for KPC. His ability to interpret geological formations for Open Trails, a program designed to provide the general public access to our preserves, greatly enriches KPC visitors' experiences on the prairie and complements our staffs' knowledge.
Jim also organized a Marathon Oil workday benefitting KPC's Native Seed Nursery. Eleven Marathon employees built six tables for KPC's native plant grow-out program. Jim also volunteers for KPC's Summer Science Nights, a summer youth camp for kids ages 5 to 10. His enthusiasm about nature and science carries over to the 100 children who have participated in the camp this summer, helping KPC touch the lives of the next generation of conservationists.
Thank you so much to both Jim and Marathon Oil for this special grant.
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Christmas Bird Count Summary
On New Year's Day 2011 87 observers reported 146 species of birds plus one form (a Harlan's Hawk) during the annual Cypress Creek/Katy Prairie Christmas Bird Count (CBC). This CBC is part of an international citizen science effort that includes over 2000 CBCs in North and South America and even a couple of Pacific Islands. The Cypress Creek/Katy Prairie CBC counts birds within a 15-mile diameter circle that includes all land that KPC has protected in Harris and Waller Counties, plus a lot more (including private properties whose owners have beneroulsy allowed access for the CBC). Joan Strassmann, one of KPC's Advisory Board Members, wrote a wonderful account of here CBC experience on New Year's Day (see article which follows). KPC's Advisory Board Member Fred Collins is the Compiler of the count; you can read his summary of the results at Texbirds.
Christmas Bird Count on the Katy Prairie - the measure of a day outside By Joan Strassmann, Advisory Board Member
We stood quietly on the edge of a dark field, listening for owls. A pair of killdeer anxiously called, but we did not hear any owls, so we waited. It was 6:30 in the morning and we were beginning to count all the birds we saw on four tracts of preserved Katy Prairie. There were six of us, and we were teachers, professors, engineers, and oil executives. Some of us were old friends, and some had never met before. But for the day we were a team, and we were going to do our best to identify and count every bird on the land and in the sky over our assigned piece of this planet. We were only one of several groups headed out over the threatened Katy prairies.
This was the 111th Christmas Bird Count in North America, and it involved thousands of people, focusing on their 15-mile diameter circles, breaking up into teams, and giving their counts to their compiler, in our case the amazing Fred Collins, now director of Kleb Woods Nature Preserve. Our count is called the Cypress Creek - Katy Prairie (TXCY) and there are lots of other counts in Texas listed at the Houston Audubon site. Our count is always on New Year's day, so you won't find me out partying too late the night before. The counts can run from 14 December to 5 January, and my goal is to do more counts in future, maybe including some in Mexico, and of course St. Louis.
Why? What's so great about spending the entire day outside, often in the company of strangers, walking over rough ground staring at flocks of thousands of blackbirds, with only the occasional rare gem? For me, it is one of the few times I can take the measure of a day, from the sun's first glimmer, and the morning clouds, through the blazingly clear sky of midday, through the afternoon winds to evening stillness. This happens every day, of course, but mostly we aren't paying attention. But if you walk the land you do.
Who else is here, sharing our planet? At this time of year, birds and plants are most easily observed, and so, for our fields, we learned exactly who depended on this land. We did hear an owl, a great-horned owl, at least two. We saw a kestrel fast-winged hovering over a possible mouse. We saw harriers swooping, mostly low, buzzing the grasses, then tilting up. Higher were red-tailed hawks. We saw no caracaras this year, but remembered the pair we saw last year near Live Oak Creek. The Katy Prairie Conservancy sold that property, but with a conservation easement. There is so much money in Houston, and so little shared with this vital group. Houston has no green belts, and funding for nature is tight. Houstonians are so friendly and seemingly generous, it just doesn't add up.
My heart still pounds when I hear geese, and look up to see their lines crossing overhead, sometimes in V shapes, sometimes merging and splitting. They're here for the winter, and they eat the remains in rice fields and prairies. What do they do when their landscape changes under them? Fred Collins could move the 15 mile circle that we count a little farther west when development paved over a large swath of the circle, but what do the birds do? Our best bird? An orangey Le Conte's sparrow, huddled at the base of a dead plant, only 10 feet away. It hopped after about 3 minutes, but only another foot or two forwards. It straddled the plant, each foot on a separate dead stem. I wondered how many we missed. Mostly what we saw were thousands of savannah sparrows.
We do our best at counting and seeing, but at no time are we more aware of the limitations of our method. What did we miss? Did we already see that bird? How many are in that flock? Audubon has rules to systematize counting, like you can't count birds you see when you retrace your steps, unless they are a new species. We know how to estimate numbers in a flock (count a small area, then judge how many areas of that size there are), and sometimes you can just photograph the flock, and take a count of the birds in the photograph. Rare birds have to be documented in various ways.
Inaccuracy, and error is a part of any scientific study. What is important is that we understand the nature and scope of the error. We most hope that there is no systematic bias in the error. Error that is noise obscures the true answer, but it is still most likely to be in the middle of the distribution. Christmas count error is mostly of the form of noise, not systematic bias. These data are invaluable for getting comprehensive long-term patterns, such as are needed for understanding global warming, and the bird's response. In science we depend on sampling, on understanding the strengths and weaknesses of our system, and these are well-known for Christmas bird counts. The Cornell University Lab of Ornithology is a scientific place for citizen science projects like the CBC, and there are also lists of publications based on the counts at the main Christmas Bird Count site.
I'm glad there is scientific merit to the Christmas Bird Count, but there is also personal enrichment. What better way could there be to welcome the new year than walking our land from dawn to dusk, taking the measure of a day?
View the original entry (and many more pictures!) at Joan's blog, Good-bye Houston. All photos in this section by Joan Strassmann. |
Wilderness First Aid Training 
The Woods Project is pleased to sponsor a 16-hour Wilderness First Aid course on June 25/26 and June 27/28, 2011. This course is phenomenal training for anyone who spends time in the woods out of immediate reach of rescue services.
Graduates will receive certification under American Safety and Health Institute, which is accepted by Philmont Scout Ranch as well as Foster/Calm certification. This course is required for Sierra Club backcountry trip leaders, Philmont leaders, and leaders of The Woods Project backpack trips.
The Woods Project is bringing in Bobbi Foster of Foster/Calm from California to teach the course; she is a wonderful teacher with great insights into wilderness issues.In addition to a half day of outdoor scenario practice of first aid and leadership skills, this class focuses on practicing skills and covering: patient assessment, shock and bleeding, head and spinal injuries, wounds, musculoskeletal injuries, heat and cold illnesses and much more. You will gain some good tools and knowledge to handle a wilderness first aid emergency. Successful completion of class includes a three year Wilderness First Aid certificate.
Cost of the course is $200. Attendees must be at least 16 years of age. For information and to sign up, please contact Andrea Iman at andrea@thewoodsproject.org
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Survivors: Winter Camp Video
KPC hosted a Survivors: Katy Prairie, a three-day youth winter camp, in December, where children learned how wildlife and people have survived winter on the prairie. Children were given a chance to try their hand at archery, build a winter dwelling, make a fire, and much more! Check out Channel 13's video about the event!

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Helping Hands - Volunteer News
by Terri Ficker, Volunteer Coordinator
Our volunteers are Flat Out Wonderful
KPC volunteers always come through when we need them most with an energy and enthusiasm for protecting the Katy Prairie and sharing their knowledge with others.
Volunteer Events
PrairieWorks - A Fun Way to End the Week! Want to get your hands dirty? Every second Thursday and Friday of each month, KPC hosts PrairieWorks at our Indiangrass Preserve. Volunteers can come and work in the Coastal Prairie Native Seed Nursery - watering, weeding, and potting seedlings. Thursday times are 8 am to 3 pm; Friday times are 9 am to 1 pm. Email info@katyprairie.org for more details.Spotlight Thanks to our Volunteers! KPC would like to thank all the following volunteers who generously gave their time in November and December:
November Open Trails Al & Kathie Shultz Trail MaintenanceCheryl Sedivec Trouble ShootingJoe Langlitz KPC Nursery WarriorsKarl BaumgartnerJim BrannonJim ButcherCraig CooperBob FeichtToni HuffJoe LanglitzSheryl MarquezKaren MillerCheryl Sedivec Flat Out Fun Day 2010Special thanks to Brad Breure & Angel Valdovinos of CITGO-In-Action, Jennifer Newton of the National Charity League-Star Chapter, Jennifer Hydes of the CyRanch Key Club, and Alan Richardson of IdexCorp for recruiting and providing volunteers from their respective organizations. Special thanks to Steph Bondy, John Cochrane, Janet & Phil Hepburn, Zan May, and the Boy Scouts of Troop 584 for organizing and operating the Orienteering Course, Iris Poteet for organizing and operating the Agriculture Station, Sarah Smith for organizing the Animal Track Making Station, Alan Richardson for organizing and overseeing logistics, and Nancy Sparrow for providing the recycling bins. Katina ArvidsonAmy Bickham BairdRichard BallCraig CooperLilly DeHavenChris Dyess Jim DyessLesli Edge Val FogalAndrea FrenchMargaret FrickMaria Cuthbert FrickJim GregoryBlake GriggsErin GriggsGary GriggsJared GrimesJenee HallSteve HendricksTaylor HohmannAmanda HoogerbruggeGabriel HoogerbruggeHans HoogerbruggeIsabel HoogerbruggeDiane KerrMark KleinOriane LeakeGrace LiggettCarolyn MauneyDon MayhallKelly McNabMelissa MooreDonna PisaniIris PoteetAlan RichardsonDoren SchottCheryl SedivecAl ShultzSarah SmithNancy SparrowAndrew SposatoKaia StephensKristin StephensWesley SykesAngel ValdovinosChris ValdovinosVera ValdovinosWally WardLaura WatsonTaylor WatsonB.J. WilsonDecember Prairie Discovery TourDon Mayhall Craig Cooper
Winter Science Camp
Sheryl MarquezHannah SmegoKelly SmegoChris DyessJim Dyess
Seed Packing Party Lan Shen Gail Weber Cassie Georgantas
Jennifer Georgantas Kelly McNabb Girl Scout Troops under the direction of Kelly Zuniga
Oops! Did you volunteer with us in November or December and don't see your name? If we missed listing your volunteer contribution, please email info@katyprairie.org, and we'll be sure you make it into the next newsletter.
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Support KPC
Regular support is critical to our success. Preserving the Flat Out Wonderful Katy Prairie depends on the support of people like you. Give to the Katy Prairie today and help protect this special place for all Texans. Please click the JustGive button to donate now or you can visit our website at www.katyprairie.org to find out how you can support our land conservation efforts, educational programming, permanent protection of the Warren Ranch, and preserve enhancement activities.
Do you like to shop? Do you buy your groceries at Kroger or Randalls? If you do, you can link your Kroger and Randalls cards to the Katy Prairie Conservancy. Every time you shop, a portion of the amount you spend will go to help provide educational programming on the Katy Prairie. To donate through Kroger, please click on the link Buy Groceries Now to download the form you need. Bring the form to Kroger's Customer Service booth and link your card to KPC! To link your Randalls card to KPC, simply visit the customer service desk at your nearest Randalls store and ask the clerk to link your card to our code: 6658. This is a one-time request so that Randalls can donate to KPC each time you use your Randalls Remarkable Card.
Earth Share of Texas represents the Katy Prairie Conservancy in workplace payroll contribution plans throughout Texas. You can help support the Katy Prairie Conservancy with a workplace giving pledge through EarthShare Texas. Earth Share Texas represents KPC and 69 other nonprofits across Texas . If you are an employee of the cities of Austin, Houston, Dallas, El Paso, San Marcos, the State of Texas, the Federal Government, REI, Dell Incorporated, Wal-Mart, Hewlett Packard, and many others where you can donate, please check out KPC's page for our numbers to fill out on your donation forms. Thank you! If you would like your company to consider establishing an EarthShare workplace giving program, please call Mary Anne Piacentini at 713.523.6135 for more information on how you can help.
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Photo Credits Carolyn Fannon - Prairie Flowers Michael Morton - Sparrow All other photos were taken by KPC staff unless otherwise noted.
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| The Katy Prairie Conservancy
3015 Richmond Avenue, Suite 230
Houston, TX 77098-3114
713.523.6135
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