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Brazos Bend State Park

Brazos Bend State Park is a 4,897-acre (1,982 ha) state park along the Brazos River in Needville, Texas, run by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. The park is a haven for a diverse mix of native wildlife and plants covering an equally diverse range of ecosystems. Brazos Bend contains areas of coastal prairie, bottomland forest, and a wide range of wetlands including open and semi-open lakes and transitional marshlands. Highlights of the Park's numerous inhabitants include over 300 species of resident and visiting migratory birds and mammals like White-tailed deer, Nine-banded Armadillos, Raccoons, and North American River Otters. The most noteworthy and popular residents of the park are the relatively large population of American Alligators. The Park is open year round, with the exception of several weekends a year during which the Park is closed off for controlled hunts to manage the White-tailed deer population.

Contents

History

Brazos Bend State Park occupies land bordering the Brazos River and includes within its boundaries low-lying areas left over from the River's previous meanderings. Pre-Columbian inhabitants included a series of Native American groups, most notably the Karankawa. The land passed through a variety of landowners' hands, resulting in some of the existing structures on the Park grounds, including a brick cistern built with slave labor. The Park's current nature center is built into a structure previously utilized as a hunting cabin. Over the years, improvements were made to the various water bodies in the Park for both recreational and flood management purposes. A low-elevation levied walkway surrounds the perimeter of some of the larger water bodies (Elm Lake, 40-Acre Lake, etc.). While significant modifications were made to the land within the Park in the past, the current management strategy is to allow, in balance with the recreational elements of the Park's mission, the maintenance of a natural landscape. In 1984 the Park was officially opened to the public, its lands having been donated to the state several years previously. In 2009, the Park celebrated its 25th Anniversary with a variety of special events and recognitions. Today the Park is run by the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department, with the assistance of an active non-profit volunteer organization.

Recreational Opportunities

Although it contains recreational day-use areas (including a dining hall, campground, and picnic areas) Brazos Bend is by primary character a natural park. Its recreational opportunities revolve around enjoyment of its diverse ecosystems and species. Popular activities include hiking, fishing, and wildlife viewing. Like in much of the upper Gulf Coast located along the northern vanguard areas of the Central Flyway migratory route, bird watching in Brazos Bend is a popular activity, especially during the migratory seasons. The park offers numerous Scouting programs, an orienteering course and is a popular spot for geocaching.

Educational Programs

The Texas Parks and Wildlife staff and the Brazos Bend State Park Volunteer Organization put on a variety of education programs on a weekly basis at the Park, and actively conduction outreach efforts in the local area. Popular programs include bird and photography hikes, alligator and snake education programs, and guided hikes of Creekfield Lake. In addition, a rotating assortment of crafts, story time and other educational programs are offered each week. Outside of scheduled programs, the Volunteer Organization also staffs and maintains a Nature Center containing live individuals representing many of the Park's venomous and nonvenomous native snake species, baby alligators, and a host of educational displays and activities.

George Observatory

The park is also home to the George Observatory, a satellite facility of the Houston Museum of Natural Science. This astronomical observatory contains three domed telescopes; the largest is the Gueymard Research Telescope, which has an aperture of 36". The facility is primarily focused on public education; it includes the Challenger Learning Center for space science education and also features an exhibit of meteorites.

Brazos Valley Energy plant

The Brazos Valley Power Plant, located less than 10 miles from Brazos Bend State Park.

Somewhat controversial is the power plant, owned and operated by Brazos Valley Energy LP, which is located less than 10 miles from the park.[3][4] The plant's vicinity to the state park has been criticized by environmentalists for the pollution and potential harm it could have on the plant and animal life in the park.

See also

External links

References

  1. ^ WildTexas
  2. ^ TPWD
  3. ^ http://www.epa.gov/airmarkets/emissions/extracts/55357-17dec2008.txt
  4. ^ BRAZOS VALLEY GENERATING FACILITY

Elm Lake during evening.

American Aligator near Elm Lake

Windmill near Nature Center

Brazos Bend State Park Entrance Sign.

Armadillo near Burr Oak camping area.

Blue dragonfly in Elm Lake.

Horseshoe Lake with reflection of clouds.

Flooding of Hale Lake in July 2007

vdProtected Areas of Texas
Federal
National Parks Big BendGuadalupe Mountains
National Monuments and Memorials Alibates Flint Quarries National MonumentChamizal National Memorial
National Historical Parks and Historic Sites El Orcoquisac Archeological DistrictFort Davis National Historic SiteLyndon B. Johnson National Historical ParkPalo Alto Battlefield National Historical ParkSan Antonio Missions National Historical Park
National Historic Trails El Camino Real de los Tejas National Historic Trail
National Recreation Areas AmistadLake Meredith
National Wildlife Refuges AnahuacAransasAttwater Prairie ChickenBalcones CanyonlandsBig BoggyBrazoriaBuffalo LakeGrullaHagermanLaguna AtascosaLower Rio Grande ValleyMcFaddinMuleshoeSan BernardSanta AnaTexas PointTrinity River
National Forests AngelinaDavy CrockettSabineSam Houston
National Grasslands CaddoLyndon B. JohnsonMcClellan CreekRita Blanca
Other Protected Areas Big Thicket National PreservePadre Island National SeashoreRio Grande Wild and Scenic River
State
State Parks and Natural Areas AbileneAtlantaBalmorhea • Barton Warnock Environmental Education Center • Bastrop • Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley • Big Bend RanchBig SpringBlancoBoca ChicaBonhamBrazos BendBuescherCaddo LakeCaprock CanyonsCedar Hill • Choke Canyon • CleburneColorado BendCooper LakeCopper BreaksDaingerfieldDavis Mountains • Devils River State Natural Area • Devil's Sinkhole State Natural Area • Dinosaur ValleyEisenhowerEnchanted Rock State Natural Area • Estero Llano Grande • Fairfield Lake • Falcon • Fort Boggy • Fort Parker State Park • Fort Richardson State Park • Franklin MountainsGalveston IslandGarner • Goliad • Goose IslandGovernment Canyon State Natural AreaGuadalupe RiverHill Country State Natural Area • Honey Creek State Natural Area • Huntsville • Indian Lodge • Inks Lake • Kickapoo Cavern • Lake Arrowhead • Lake Bob Sandlin • Lake Brownwood • Lake Casa Blanca International • Lake Colorado City • Lake Corpus Christi • Lake Livingston • Lake Mineral Wells • Lake Somerville • Lake TawakoniLake Texana • Lake Whitney • Lockhart • Longhorn Cavern • Lost Creek Reservoir State Trailway • Lost Maples State Natural Area • Martin Creek Lake • Martin Dies, Jr. • Matagorda Island • McKinney Falls • Meridian • Mission Tejas • Monahans SandhillsMother Neff State ParkMustang IslandPalmettoPalo Duro CanyonPedernales FallsPossum Kingdom • Purtis Creek • Ray Roberts Lake • Resaca de la Palma • San AngeloSea Rim • Sheldon Lake • South Llano River • Stephen F. AustinTylerVillage Creek • Walter Umphrey • Wyler Aerial Tramway
State Historic Sites ActonAdmiral NimitzBarrington Living History Farm at Washington-on-the-BrazosBattleship TEXASCaddoan Mounds • Casa Navarro • Confederate Reunion Grounds • Eisenhower BirthplaceFanthorp Inn • Fannin Battleground • Fort GriffinFort Lancaster • Fort Leaton • Fort McKavett • Fort Richardson • Fulton Mansion • Goliad • Hueco TanksKreische BreweryLandmark InnLevi Jordan Plantation • Lipantitlan • Lyndon B. JohnsonMagoffin Homestead • Mission Espiritu Santo • Mission Rosario • Monument HillPenn FarmPoint Isabel Lighthouse • Sabine Pass Battleground • Sam Bell Maxey HouseSamuel T. Rayburn HouseSan FelipeSan Jacinto BattlegroundSauer-Beckmann FarmSebastopol House • Seminole Canyon • Starr Family HomeVarner•Hogg PlantationWashington-on-the-Brazos • Zaragosa Birthplace
State Forests E.O. Siecke • I.D. Fairchild • John Henry Kirby • Masterson • W. Goodrich Jones
State Wildlife Trails Great Texas CoastalHeart of TexasPanhandle PlainsPrairies and Pineywoods
Texas Parks and Wildlife Department

Categories: Texas state parks | Astronomical observatories in Texas | Fort Bend County, Texas | Protected areas established in 1984

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