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Dateline: August 28,
2003
TPWD
maps highlight Donley Co. locations
By Roger Estlack, Clarendon Enterprise
Local
tourism boosters are welcoming the issuance of a new map from the Texas
Parks & Wildlife (TPWD) which features Donley County.
The
map is part of the new Panhandle Plains Wildlife Trail opening this month
and features 97 different parks, ranches, and other locales where
motorists can discover the best places to see wildlife and get back to
nature. Road signs will go up this fall to help drivers find sites on the
trail.
“We
have been working on this for three years,” said Clarendon Economic
Development Director Dee Dee Autry. “This will be a great opportunity
for ranches to diversify and for local nature and birding tour
operators.”
True
to the Lone Star tradition of all-things big, the new driving trail runs
through 60 Texas counties stretching from just south of Abilene up through
the Rolling Plains and Panhandle to the Oklahoma border.
It’s
the second of four driving trails developed by the Texas Parks and
Wildlife Department and local communities with funding from the Texas
Department of Transportation, all modeled upon the success of the Great
Texas Coastal Birding Trail, which was done in the late 1990s.
“When
the maps on the coastal trail came out, tourism increased by 13
percent,” Autry said.
The
Panhandle Plains trail is organized into 13 loops, which provide travel
itineraries for those who want to check out a particular region. Unlike
the coastal birding trail, which was largely fashioned around public parks
and refuges, the new trail features 29 private properties, from small bed
and breakfasts to large ranches offering many activities.
“An
outstanding feature of the Panhandle Plains Wildlife Trail is the awesome
private ranches that are now open to guests,” said Linda Campbell, TPWD
nature tourism coordinator.
“We’ve
got more private ranches on this trail because of the limited number of
public lands in this part of the state. These are some of the state’s
best-kept secrets-places few people have ever seen before that are now
opening to serve nature-based recreationists.”
Donley
County has six of the eight locations on the Salt Fork Loop. Those
attractions include Lake Greenbelt, the Bar H Dude Ranch, the James
Pinkney Rodgers Bird Sanctuary, the Taylor Lakes wildlife area, Coyote
Ridge Ranch, and the Finch Ranch.
The
back of the 35”x33” full-color map gives precise directions to each
location and details what native flora and fauna can be found there.
Texas
was the first state in the nation to build wildlife viewing driving trails
that provide economic incentives for landowners and communities to
conserve habitats while providing recreational opportunities for the
traveling public.
The
Panhandle Plains and Heart of Texas Wildlife Trails were funded with
$948,480 in grants approved by the Texas Transportation Commission. The
Panhandle Plains trail was also supported by a $25,000 grant from The CH
Foundation of Lubbock.
Local
and regional groups that helped gather information for the maps were the
Clarendon EDC, the Clarendon Chamber of Commerce, Donley County Tourism
Development, Texas Prairie Rivers, and the Panhandle Tourism &
Marketing Council.
Autry
said TPWD will have 500,000 of the maps printed and distributed to Texas
travel and visitor centers around the state. The CEDC office in the
Newhouse Building has a few of the maps available now, and more are
expected to arrive soon. Otherwise, TPWD’s wildlife trail maps may be
purchased for $3 each by calling toll-free (888) 900-2577.
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