May 14 thru May 16 2013 In the Pine woods of east Texas our assignment 
for this work trip was to continue the cleanup of the heavily damaged 
Lake Ratcliff Recreation Area in the Davy Crockett National Forest. The 
area remains closed due to high wind damage to the forest and there is 
still a lot of work to be done before the Park service can reopen the 
Recreation area to camping and general use.
Our leader there as usual was Ray 4, the other two Woodsmen of the 
Apocalypse, Chuck, and Riley (just Riley) were with him. The rest of the
 tamer crew was Derly, Mike, John, Robert, Charlie, and Andy . 
This particular trip was dedicated to splitting wood, a lot of wood that
 was downed trees that had already been cut into pieces that would fit 
into powered splitting machines. Ray explained that the 2 machines would
 do all the work for us. We found out quickly he erred in telling us 
that. For a day and a half we split wood as fast as we could and then 
distributed it around the camping area for later use in some good old 
campfires. Ray and Chuck also dismantled several camping sites that we 
no longer useable.  The two teams of wood splitters had quite an 
argument about who split the most wood. We did not have an impartial 
judge so there was no declared winner and we did not settle the age old 
question of "How much wood would a woodchuck split if a woodchuck could 
split wood" or something like that!
 About mid day of the second day the rains came and work was halted, fun
 began and a good time was had by all. Again Riley came thru with his 
famous "Stories Around the Campfire".
The Rec area may be opened by this fall after several years of closure. The Trail Tamers will return when Ray 4 calls.
by Andy, crew member who lived it 
Wednesday, August 28, 2013
MOTHER NEFF STATE PARK, MARCH 5-7, 2013
A hardy bunch of trail tamers converged on the oldest state park in 
Texas on March 5th 2013 and worked for 2 days. The crew was led by 
Robert Gross. The rest of the team was made up of The Three Woodsmen of 
the Apocalypse, Ray, Chuck, and Riley (just Riley) as well as Charlie, 
Terrance, Mitch, Mae, and Andy.
Our primary task was to clear a huge amount of dead and downed trees and brush that was choking an area along a trail and dry creek near a very popular spot known as Indian Cave . Several other standing and partially downed trees in the area were also cut down and removed for chipping, shredding, and some to be removed later. Other work involved naturalizing the work area and cleaning up after the commercial chipping machine was used. After quite a while of trial and error Ray guided the set up of a rope and pulley system using our large hand truck and powered by his Ram truck to pull the dead material up a steep slope to be chipped up.
Over 116 man hours were worked by the crew to get the job done. The park superintendant, Ms. Huth, seemed pleased with our work. She was very accommodating to all involved and everyone had a great time since Riley told us a few of his stories around the camp fire. The park still contains a lot of dead trees and brush due to the drought and a past flood. Much work remains even though the park is open and has some great scenery.
by Andrew Waters, crew member who lived it!
Our primary task was to clear a huge amount of dead and downed trees and brush that was choking an area along a trail and dry creek near a very popular spot known as Indian Cave . Several other standing and partially downed trees in the area were also cut down and removed for chipping, shredding, and some to be removed later. Other work involved naturalizing the work area and cleaning up after the commercial chipping machine was used. After quite a while of trial and error Ray guided the set up of a rope and pulley system using our large hand truck and powered by his Ram truck to pull the dead material up a steep slope to be chipped up.
Over 116 man hours were worked by the crew to get the job done. The park superintendant, Ms. Huth, seemed pleased with our work. She was very accommodating to all involved and everyone had a great time since Riley told us a few of his stories around the camp fire. The park still contains a lot of dead trees and brush due to the drought and a past flood. Much work remains even though the park is open and has some great scenery.
by Andrew Waters, crew member who lived it!
Letter of appreciation from The Nature Conservancy at Davis Mountains Preserve (west TX) - October 18, 2012
Good Afternoon All,
I 
wanted to send out an email to let everyone know what a fantastic job 
the Central Texas Trail Tamers did this week.  The group of 9 arrived on
 Sunday and were hard at work on Monday morning.  During the course of 
the week the Trail Tamers
 put in 216 hours of work on our new horse/atv trail.  This trail 
connects a 13 mile loop through Madera Canyon, Lockes Gaps, and Cherry 
Canyon back to the MCC.  All of the chainsaw work was completed ahead of
 time and the group focused on building a full bench
 trail around the hill in front of the MCC.  This trail was also worked 
on by Saint Stephen’s out of Austin in June.  I would also like to 
extend a special thanks to our wonderful Technician Greg Crow who made 
most of this possible and organized the crew throughout
 the week.  His experience on the preserve and trail building is 
invaluable.  
Best,
Shawn A. Benedict 
Davis Mountains Preserve Manager 
Cell- 409-658-2888 
Office- 480-458-6860  | 
The Nature Conservancy 
Texas P.O. Box 2092 Ft. Davis, TX 79734  | 
Thank You e-mail from Rebecca Flack with The Nature Conservancy's Love Creek Preserve, April 2012
Well,
 now that this email is late enough to be sufficiently embarrassing, I 
want to thank everyone again for your help and hard work during the 
trail building week out at Love Creek over a month ago (wow, time 
flies!). It was so great to work with all of you and to meet all of the 
new folks who came out to help!! Thank you so much for volunteering your
 time, energy, sweat, brains, brawn and enthusiasm for this project!! 
This was incredibly tough terrain to work in, and much time was spent 
marching up and down the hills with heavy tools and supplies, raking and
 digging out new sections of the trail, trimming and cutting 
branches/trees, all the while, looking at rocks, shopping for rocks, 
moving rocks, picking up rocks, tripping over rocks, throwing rocks, 
contemplating rocks, digging out rocks, cursing rocks, stacking at 
rocks, raking rocks, kicking rocks, breaking big rocks into smaller 
rocks, flipping over rocks, staring at rocks ,rotating rocks, rotating 
rocks back to their original alignment with encouraging remarks such as 
“ok, one last time” offered up from those nearby, silently judging rocks
 and, oh, did I mention, a lot of time was spent working with rocks? In 
spite of everything, everyone was extremely positive and we got a 
tremendous amount of work done!! Thanks to you, we are that much closer 
to completing a trail that will connect the two sides of the preserve. A
 special thank you to George Madding (aka, Captain Ahab), who not only 
conquered the White Rock (aka, the White Whale) during the final days of
 our trial building extravaganza, but who came out early, got things set
 up, lined out our volunteer crews and spearheaded the whole week of 
work, thank you!! Also, a big thank you to all of the Trail Tamers, who,
 in addition to all the help and assistance you provided, openly shared 
your trail building expertise with us and taught some of us newbies a 
few new trail building tricks which we will put to use as we progress on
 this project.
If  you would like to see the photos I took during the course of the week, please go to: http://s1058.photobucket.com/albums/t420/rebecca_flack/   Password: LoveCreekTrail
I
 apologize that I didn’t get photos of everyone who worked, I was 
running around to different parts of the preserve a couple of the days. I
 know several others took pictures though, so if you’d like to share 
them with the group, feel free to send them to me and I can upload them 
to my album. Also, for some reason, the photos uploaded in the reverse 
order I took them in, so if you want to look at them in order, skip to 
the end and work your way back.
Thank
 you again to everyone who came out, you guys were awesome!! You all 
have an open invitation to come back anytime to visit, hike, volunteer J,
 whatever, just give me a call!! Please share this email with any 
friends or family members I missed, as I know I don’t have email 
addresses for everyone who helped with the work week.
Thanks again,
Rebecca
| 
 | 
The Nature Conservancy 
Texas Field Office P.O. Box 1085 Bandera, TX 78003  | 
THE NATURE CONSERVANCY'S INDEPENDENCE CREEK PRESERVE, FEBRUARY 14-20, 2012
INDEPENDENCE CREEK PRESERVE, FEBRUARY 14-20, 2012
Trail Tamers President George Mading,
accompanied by Vick Hines, made an advance trip from Austin to the Nature
Conservancy's acquisition (300 miles west and south of Austin), and arranged
for our group to create a nature trail. 
Nine of us travelled to this preserve and following the path previously
flagged by George and Vick, managed to carve some one and a quarter miles over
very rough terrain to a viewpoint on the caprock where the confluence of
Independence Creek and the Pecos River is visible.
Even though Independence Creek is largely
fed by the amazing springs on this property (and subsequently, comprising 40%
of the Pecos River downstream) the surrounding terrain is Chihuahuan desert
limestone laid down eons ago and carved into canyons over time.  It is an awesome panorama but an arduous task
to devise and cut a hiking trail in these conditions.
Several trips will be necessary to
complete a proper hiking trail with full benching and rock steps at the steep
top section.  Nevertheless, our initial
path opens up this former ranch to adventuresome trekkers.  
Given the extreme drought conditions (dead
junipers and prickly pear cactus!) we were gratified to lay off one day when
more than an inch of rain fell:  this
spring season will produce a fantastic wildflower display. Trail Tamers worked
in excess of some 220 hours.  Driving daily
some five miles to the work site we were rewarded with many wildlife sightings--prairie
dogs, turkeys, mule ear deer, sheep, armadillo, road runners, ducks, hawks,
etc.  Because the Conservancy is slowly
creating wetlands with the spring source this area will be a prime destination
for birders and other wildlife seekers.
Participants:
Mitch Lopez
Mae Lopez
Dorothy Lay
Vick Hines
Dennis Walsh
Tom Dunlap
BIll Nelson
Martha Davies
BIG BEND NATIONAL PARK - OCT. 2010
Here's a report from Pat Dixon about the Trail Tamer work project in Big Bend National Park, Oct. 2010:
Subscribe to:
Comments (Atom)