Field Trip: Jim Rodgers Hiking Trail, May 29, 2022 at 6:00PM

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Where: Jim Rodgers Hiking Trail in Southwest Williamson County Regional Park  in Leander.  (Google map)
When: Sunday, May 29, 2022 at 6:00PM

Join us for a leisurely walk along this relatively flat, mulched, 1.7-mile trail and see some of our chapter’s interpretive plant signs. (Read the related blog post here.) Habitat includes oak/cedar/mesquite woods and grass fields. Restrooms available.  All ages welcome!  Our field trips are free and open to the public.

Directions to the park and where to meet: From IH-35, take Exit 256 (RM 1431, University Blvd), go west on RM 1431 for about four miles, and then turn right and go north on CR 175 for about one mile. At the next traffic light, the park entrance will be on the right. Meet at the gravel parking lot on the left just past the traffic circle (next to the disc golf course).

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New Plant Signs at Jim Rodgers Hiking Trail

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— by Kathy McCormack

The Native Plant Society of Texas (NPSOT) Williamson County chapter recently worked with the Williamson County Parks & Recreation Department to install nine new interpretive plant signs along the eastern half of the Jim Rodgers Hiking Trail in Southwest Williamson County Regional Park. Six signs were previously installed along the western half of the trail. Maps for these signs can be found at the bottom of our chapter’s Interpretive Plant Signs webpage.

There is ample parking for this relatively flat, mulched, 1.7-mile trail (plus an additional 0.5-mile walk along the park road back to your vehicle). You can check out the new signs any time on your own, or join us on May 29, 2022 at 6:00pm for an evening field trip on this trail. (See this field trip announcement.)

sign identifying a native plant
Honey Mesquite, Prosopis glandulosa. Photo by Nancy Pumphrey.

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Full of Fun – Family Nature Fest, Garey Park on April 9, 2022

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— by Vicky H.

On April 9, 2022, the Williamson County Chapter of the Native Plant Society of Texas (NPSOT) hosted a booth during the annual Family Nature Fest held at Garey Park in Georgetown, Texas. This annual event, originally to celebrate Earth Day, took a hiatus during the pandemic but came back with renewed excitement on a sunny and windy Saturday.

image of children at info booth
Future NPSOT members?

Geared towards the kids in attendance, our blue tent was set up in a mowed field near the Play Ranch and Equestrian Center. This new location opened with a nature poetry walk and continued around a semicircle with booths sporting ways to get closer to nature, including native plants, master naturalists, outdoor enthusiasts, Balcones Canyonlands, and the quintessential pony rides, tortoises, owls, opossums and a menagerie of snakes!

volunteers at info booth
Susie and Vicky

Our fearless volunteers (thank you, Susie Hickman, Marcia Wutke, Vicky Husband and Beth Erwin) alternated handing out starts of Cowpen Daisy-Golden Crownbeard (Verbesina encelioides) with chasing flying sheets of stickers, brochures and plant lists. The 250 plant starts were introduced to the kids as a great monarch butterfly nectar source, and billed as a tough and showy plant for planting directly into the yard. The parents loved the grab-and-go aspect of the plant starts, and many showed serious interest in expanding their knowledge of native plants for use in their home landscapes. Grown by Wright’s Nursery in Briggs, Texas, all starts were handed out by the end of the event!

Take-aways from this educational event include a definite “yes” for attending future Family Nature Fests due to the success of the outreach: the volume of families in attendance, the excitement of new homeowners and young gardeners at the formative point of their learning, while keeping in mind the elementary school age of the kids and their dual interest in attracting pollinators and growing flowering native plants.

Thank you to everyone who helped to make our booth a success – a great event for our chapter!

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