en-USes-MX
Public Meetings and Events
«May 2024»
SunMonTueWedThuFriSat
2829301234
567891011
12131415161718
19202122232425
2627282930311
2345678
 
Disclaimer
NOTICE:  For purposes of public meeting notices that must be posted pursuant to the Texas Open Meetings Act, the official public meeting notice shall be as set out in the agendas published at https://agenda.wilco.org/agenda_publish.cfm. To the extent that any public meeting notice appearing on the Public Meetings and Events Calendar (https://www.wilco.org/meetings) conflicts with any official public meeting notice in the published agendas at https://agenda.wilco.org/agenda_publish.cfm, the public meeting notice in the published agendas shall control.
 
County Events

Groups Provide Native Plants Rescue on Corridor H / Sam Bass Road

  • 5 May 2023
  • Author: Connie Odom
  • Number of views: 988
  • 0 Comments
Groups Provide Native Plants Rescue on Corridor H / Sam Bass Road

Members of the Williamson County Native Plant Society of Texas and the Good Water Master Naturalist’s Native Plant Rescue Project gathered on Sunday, April 23, to dig up and rescue native plants along Sam Bass Road. The groups’ mission has been to save native plants that could be impacted by construction and relocate them to other areas. This summer, Williamson County will begin a project to construct Corridor H / Sam Bass Road from RM 1431 to Wyoming Springs Drive to enhance safety, improve mobility and meet current and future traffic needs as the county continues to grow.

“We work with the Native Plant Society and Texas Master Naturalists in our parks, so we were happy to partner with them on this project to save native plants prior to the start of construction,” stated Precinct 3 Commissioner Valerie Covey.

Forty-one species of native plants, such as Virginia snakeroot and Antelope-horns milkweed, were carefully extracted and placed in temporary containers for transport. The recipients of the plants are three elementary schools, a monarch butterfly waystation at Round Rock High School and a native plant area at Lake Georgetown.

According to Landry, the Native Plant Rescue Project has been averaging about two rescues per month since they started the project last fall. The group is comprised of members from the Native Plant Society of Texas-Williamson County and the Good Water chapter of the Texas Master Naturalists.

Print
Categories: PIO
Tags:

Theme picker