I visited Mother Neff Park recently, traveling with my
husband. Expecting to stay in an older park, we were pleased to see the new
section we encountered after being directed to a second entrance. We drove
very slow when looking for the second sign. I think it would be passed if a
driver traveled at a normal speed. The entrance is between two hills and it
made me wonder how many accidents occurred while people were pulling a long
camper and making the left turn.
Luckily, Ranger Yvonne stopped by our campsite to inform us
about signing in regulations since we arrived after the front office closed for
the day. Yvonne is a former Mother Neff volunteer who just recently became a
ranger. She seemed to love her job and quickly came up with some unusual facts
about her work-place.
Items of interest:
Mother Neff is
usually referred to as the oldest state
park in Texas. It started with 6 acres of land that were given in memory of
Mother Isabella Neff at the time of her death (in 1921). In 1937, 192 more
acres were added to the park; most of them deeded by Pat Neff, former governor
of Texas and Mother Neff’s youngest son. Yvonne mentioned that Pat Neff also
started the Department of Transportation In Texas and got funding to build the
first roads in Texas parks. In 2012, 150 more acres were added to Mother Neff
State Park. It's a little less than 400 acres now.
I wasn’t able to stay long enough and hope to visit this
area again in the future. I would love to see a Golden Cheeked Warbler, an endangered species bird which Yvonne
said nests in the park. She stated that this bird’s nests have been found in
only 22 counties in the world: different sources said they breed only in Texas
but have been seen In California, Mexico and the Virgin Islands.
The Golden-Cheeked Warbler
She also mentioned the 3
ecosystems in the park:
Blackland prairie
Riparian Canyon
River Bottom
I walked down a path leading to a pond and found a few more pieces of trash here than at Somerville Park. I'm pleased at how clean the parks have been. There were a couple of shredded plastic bags, which led to more pieces to pick up. I found what my husband called a "spent shotgun shell". It was the first bullet I saw while "keeping America beautiful" by collecting trash.
I walked down a path leading to a pond and found a few more pieces of trash here than at Somerville Park. I'm pleased at how clean the parks have been. There were a couple of shredded plastic bags, which led to more pieces to pick up. I found what my husband called a "spent shotgun shell". It was the first bullet I saw while "keeping America beautiful" by collecting trash.
I close while looking forward to visiting the park I plan to
write about in May.
I always travel to the state parks with my husband. I write about what I observe but want to thank him for accompanying me since I wouldn't make the trips without him.
I always travel to the state parks with my husband. I write about what I observe but want to thank him for accompanying me since I wouldn't make the trips without him.