Gracie's San antonio 2007 blog

Sunday, December 2, 2007

Haven on Earth











Nestled in the great Northwest of San Antonio sits a sprawling wild animal sanctuary, called the (WAO) Wild Animal Orphanage. It is located on Leslie Rd. and 1604. It is an ideal location with easy access. It was established in 1983 through the efforts of Carol Asvestas. It started with her nursing a bird back to health. She saw the crucial need for an animal sanctuary in the area. It is through her determination and great efforts that this sanctuary was made possible. She is the founder and is still the acting director. This facility houses 150 animals at this time. Guided tours are offered to schools in an effort to educate children that wild animals do not make good pets.



This is an excellent facility. On my arrival, I was impressed with the openness of it. My granddaughter and I took a late tour on an ideal day. Terry Minchew, our friendly tour guide, was very informative as she walked us through our tour. I told our guide that I am from Palo Alto college and I am writing a story for my Humanities class. She was open to any question that we had. On this day there were many lemons in the various cages. Our guide explained that Whole Foods grocery had donated the lemons. I asked her who they received many of the donations from and she said occasionally they receive donations from various agencies and from Target, HEB, and Wal-Mart. We saw that one of the monkeys was hitting a water spigot and would hold the lemon under the running water. He would then proceed to suck on it. The bears were also wetting the lemons then sucking the fruit. Terry said, “They are making lemonade”. The monkeys loved the attention and were putting on a show for us. We met a red tiger Trina, and Senura, a white bear. Two brown bears Boris, from Washington and Natasha were paired off. We saw many exotic birds, lions, panthers, cougars, sugar gliders, and domestic cats, up for adoption. There were so many more that I can’t even list.


The most unusual were the ligers. This is a cross between a lion and a tiger. The mother was a tiger. The two there were referred to as Beauty and the Beast. They had a lion's head with a stripped body. I was able to take a few pictures that I hope will show this. Terry said that this is not a normal occurrence in the wild. This was done in captivity, and intentionally. Another practice that has occurred is when a cross between a lion and a tiger results in a tigon. The mother was a lion. They didn’t have any of those at the refuge.


I interviewed Carol Asvestas and she told me that there are two facilities. The other location on Tally Rd., houses 450 wild animals. She said that they do not have any volunteers due to liability issues. They do however, use court appointed community service volunteers. These workers help maintain the grounds under supervision and instruction and also build structures as needed. The organization relies solely on donations. The veterinarians do not donate their time but do offer their services at a reduced rate and are on call 24/7.



I asked her if there has ever been an escape. She said there was a tiger cub about five years ago who got out. It wasn’t officially an “escapee” because a visitor let it out. It was eventually recovered. I asked her if there was a danger of any infected animals escaping since their location is in close proximity to a residential area. She said that there wasn’t a possibility of that ever occurring.



I asked her if any animals are ever rehabilitated for release to the wild. She said none of the animals are ever released back to the wild because their defense mechanism has become unlearned. They would perish. They become lifetime residents to live out the remainder of their life. The organization is contacted by agencies who have come in possession of wild animals and need to find a home for them. The rescue facility has to pay for expenses for retrieval of these wild animals. They are called from many states. Some of the animals have been rescued from abusive situations, the entertainment industry, roadside zoos, and some have been involved in breeding and rescued. Some have been used in labs and are retired from lab/research testing facilities or are old pets. Most (80%) are in critical condition and in poor health upon arrival and fortunately have a remarkable recovery rate.



I posed the delicate question about the horrible allegations brought up by their organization's former vice president Kristina Brunner. Carol Asvestas said that this disgruntled employee went after people that had had animals formerly confiscated from their abusive or negligent care. She conspired with these people and formed a website to personally attack her. Carol Asvestas said, “What led to her dismissal on this particular occasion, was Ms. Brunners entered an infected area without protective equipment. I told her to get out and she became confrontational, and was dismissed“. Further more she stated,” If we’re such a bad organization, people wouldn’t be coming to this so called Hell Hole”.

According to an article on the website, US Animal Protection .ORG., Ms. Brunner states that the poor conditions and negligence of monkeys, resulting with at least five of them consequently freezing to death, was her reason for leaving. Since leaving her position, Ms. Brunner has filed numerous complaints against the WAO.

Reportedly both the state (TCEQ) Texas Commission on Environmental Quality and the (USDA) United States Department of Agriculture have the (WAO) under pending- investigation charges. The TCEQ has two sites under investigation concerning the burial remains of potentially infected animals, without proper permits. A trouble shooter for WOAI, Tanji Patton , obtained a letter from WAO to the state that the orphanage had relocated remains from a site that had been in a"potential flood plain", to a permitted landfill. Still other allegations from the San Antonio Lightning are allegations of pot- bellied pigs gone missing and the burial of pit-bulls who although euthanized, and bodies still warm, may have been buried alive. These proposed charges are still under investigation. You draw your own conclusions.


I recommend that if you get a chance to visit this fine refuge, you will find it enjoyable, memorable and well worth your time. For those of you who do not know, they do have house cats up for adoption.

Saturday, November 24, 2007

The Rhythm of the Heart

The Rhythm of the Heart

In Songs of the Heartland by Hector Galan, we are introduced to the origin of our Spanish and Tejano ancestor’s passion for music. Music was a big part of the migrant workers. I was fortunate enough to have had this experience. We would follow the crop so to speak, and in our traveling from one place to another, we were exposed to this music.

My parents used to listen to play music on the stereo of a group called Los Relampagos del Norte. I loved this music. I remember the popular station they listened to back then was KCOR. I can understand why the button accordion is called the “heart of music”. The sound produced when playing a waltz is so flowing. Narcisco Martinez is considered the father of conjunto music.

Last October I went to the Pan American located on Southcross on the southside here in San Antonio. It was a wonderful night of dancing to the music of Los Fantasmas del Valle. They are a conjunto group from the valley. Like in Songs of the Homeland they follow the circuit of the migrant workers. They tour to Corpus Christi, Robestown, Brownsville, Alice, San Carlos, Rio Grande City, Seguin, Carlota, George West, Port Aransas, Weslaco, Mc Allen, Santa Rosa, Zapata, Roma and make many bookings here in San Antonio. I have found that many people who attend these dances, follow Los Fantasma’s music circuit to these little towns, to enjoy the group’s lively music and dance. The atmosphere is so electric yet relaxing. Some of their popular hits are El Troquero, La Curva, Contigo.

Rodney Rodriguez is about 20 and the youngest of the group. He is the accordionist. The lead singer is Hector Barron who plays bajo electrico. The bajo sexto is played by 2nd voice Julian Figueroa. The drummer is Cruz Gonzales.

Whether the rhythm is an upbeat two-step or the waltz, we enjoy the enthusiastic sounds of Tejano music that is a part of our heritage.

Monday, November 19, 2007

Hidden Treasures

Hidden Treasures

Hidden away on Jones St. in San Antonio is the San Antonio Museum of Art. It has four floors of different cultures, periods of time, and a variety of colorful art. There are not only oil pieces, but sculptures and treasures of artifacts to see. My granddaughter accompanied me to the museum. We were even fortunate to see the Classic movie, Cleopatra, starring ; Elizabeth Taylor, Richard Burton, and Rex Harris in the theater.

The sculpture in the Contemporary Art section called “Moon,“ 1992 captivated me. It is a fairly large size metal frame cage, with a television set on its back, and the screen facing up . The television is entrapped in the framed box, showing whatever happens to be playing in real time. There is a bronze or copper colored bear standing on top of it. A ball and chain is attached to the base of the cage. The ball has a smiling face etched on it. Upon closer inspection, I noticed that the bear is made of belts, gloves, ties shoes and holsters.

This sculpture was created by Ken Little, a native Texan, born in 1947.His work introduces a metaphor of our society’s obsession with television. The cage houses our controlling media with heavy exposure to commercial advertising and political commentary. While it entertains us, it also serves to influence both our conscious and unconscious activities and decisions. The bear astride represents a surrogate for the average South westerner. The ball and chain attached to the base of the cage, with the face of the moon, represents dreams and imagination.
I was captured by the color and the artist’s imagination in which he brought it all
together. I admire the message he is projecting and understand the concept he is trying to impress upon us.

In the Graphic Instructions section, one piece in particular caught my eye. A framed letter written by Joseph Lindon Smith was sent to his brother.(1863-1950)
In this letter he drew a self portrait and sent it to his little brother. He instructed him to take the two dollars from under the arm of the sketched figure (he had made a slit in the sketched figure’s underarm and inserted the dollars) and give them to their father. To the right of the sketch he wrote “I-O-IT-2-Him”. He sent this letter to clear a debt.

Mr. Smith expressed ingenuity and humor in his letter. This is quite a creative form of art.
There is a freshness to his creativity. He used a lot of lines and the richness of texture is evident in the illustration.

There are impressively large religious paintings and statues. The Egyptian slabs with their etchings tell interesting stories. Right now there is a wonderful exhibit of animal portraits giving ironic examples of oppression, greed, and industry.

Experiencing these wonderful exhibits in person greatly outweighs the perception
in comparison to seeing them on the internet. We spent quite a bit of time at the museum and found art that provoked both our tastes.

Sunday, November 4, 2007

Haven on Earth








A Myriad of Color









A







Myriad of Color

The Daniel F. Sullivan Carriage House was built in 1896. This Is located on the property now known as the Botanical Gardens. It was built in the European Gothic style with a huge archway to allow carriages to enter. It has several stables and the upstairs area was the hayloft. The structure shows a rhythm in the repetition of the side by side stables and symmetry in the peaks angled in the roof. There is a balance evident in the two side off setting the main archway entrance. It was built behind the Sullivan house on Broadway and Fourth Avenue.

In the 1960’s the house and carriage were split and sold separately. The Hurst Corporation bought the Carriage House and donated it to the San Antonio museum association with the option for improvements. They in turn offered it to the Botanical Society.

In 1988 the Carriage House was moved by skilled stone masons who disassembled it . They cleaned and marked each limestone block and painstakingly reassembled it on its present site. Through much funding of trusts, organizations, societies, donations, and through funding of many private individuals, it was finally completed and opened in early summer of 1995.

The Botanical Gardens has a vast array of display gardens each distinctive in arrangement but each one blending in with the next. The gardens have so many aromas intermingling.
My favorite exhibit was the Lucille Halsell Conservatory. The orchids have such vivid colors. The exhibit has a myriad of strange plants. I felt like I was in a tropical rainforest. The Carriage House was a beautiful addition to the Botanical Gardens and has a steady stream of visitors, many of which are tourists visiting our city of San Antonio.

Sunday, October 21, 2007

commentary on AGUA speaker

Gracie Teniente
October 21,2007
Humanities 1301


Commentary on guest speaker Elizabeth Earnley

Elizabeth Earnley has a genuine passion for her job. She works as a field assistant for AGUA ( Aquifer Guardians in Urban Areas). Her beliefs are evident in her motivation to inform us of the urgency of our water situation. I felt she presented us with vital information regarding our water system. I appreciated the background information we discussed in class prior to our talk. It helped to simplify the element of our discussion.

The City Council shoulders a big responsibility for our city. They meet with the Zoning committee, Planning, and Engineering Departments, to review proposed plans for development. They must decide if the building of a said proposal will comply with city ordinance codes. They also meet with the SAWS (The San Antonio Water System). One concern is how this construction will affect The Edwards Aquifer Recharge Zone.

Many factors have to be taken into consideration in the developing of a pristine area. Besides destroying the natural beauty of the land, many developers want to obliterate all trees and plants with reckless disregard to how this will effect wildlife and surrounding residents. More importantly, how will this will affect our water resources? This is called progress.

AGUA helps regulate how much impervious cover will be sectioned off in the proposal of a particular project up for construction. They make sure the proposal meets with the WQA (Water Quality Ordinance) of 1995. The AGUA Commission is kind of a neighborhood watch dog. They are looking to protect the community of San Antonio and other areas affected in the preservation of our valuable water system.

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Renovated Leeper House

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Mitchell lake and company

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Bird Pond

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Amphitheatre and Toyota crew

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Beautiful flowers and butterflies

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Audubon Society Center

Port of Call, Calling All Birds

Port of Call, Calling All Birds
Mitchell Lake Wetlands
Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.

Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.

The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while..
MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.

In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.

Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.

There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.

When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.


Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.
Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.
The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while..
MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.
In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.
Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.
There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.
When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.

Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.
Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.
The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while..
MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.
In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.
Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.
There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.
When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.

Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.
Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.
The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while..
MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.
In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.
Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.
There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.
When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.

Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.
Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.
The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while..
MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.
In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.
Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.
There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.
When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.

Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.
Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.
The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while..
MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.
In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.
Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.
There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.
When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.


Port of Call, Calling all Birds

Port of Call, Calling all Birds

I went to visit the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center this weekend. It was a breezy and sunny day. Today, October 27, 2007, is National Public Lands Day. The Toyota company had 150 plus team members volunteering to do brush clearing, mulching , weeding, gardening, excavating and building benches to place at different locations on the trails at this center. Since there was such a huge group out there working, there were not any tours today.

Ms Betty Walters is a fountain of information and a member of the Audubon Society. According to Ms Walters, In the early 1900’s Asa Mitchell, a colonist soldier
and planter, purchased 14,000 acres, including the Mitchell lake acreage, that was later used as a sewage treatment center. This area was later an abandoned sewage lagoon. It was designated as a wildlife refuge for shorebirds and waterfowl.

The Mitchell Lake area was given by San Antonio in 1973 to the Audubon Society. In 1997 San Antonio Water System (SAWS) was formed and Mitchell Lake fell under their ownership. Since the society was unable to afford insurance for the site, they got together with the SAWS and through a grandfather clause, got around this issue. SAWS has a 25 year lease so the society is covered for a while.

MS Walters said that the Leeper House built in 1910 is the original farmhouse of the McNay Art Institute on New Braunfels. It was moved on the Mitchell Lake property in 2003 and the Audubon Society helped with the restoration.

In 2004 SAWS contracted with the National Audubon Society to Manage the site now known as the Mitchell Lake Audubon Center. They manage this site in partnership with SAWS. The entire area of 1,200 acres includes Mitchell Lake, wetlands and ponds. There are 250 oil wells on the property. KB homes has constructed an impressive amphitheatre for classes and water-workshops.

Ms Walters loaned me a pair of binoculars and mapped out a route to take on my self- directed tour. Even with all the work crew in the area, there was an undisturbed quietness to the place. I saw many geese and ducks at the Bird Pond but I was disappointed that they were at a distance and I couldn’t get close up pictures. There was a funny looking contraption in the pond but I failed to ask about it.

There were a lot of different type of butterflies all around me. The vegetation was lush with lots of greenery. At one of the basins I saw what appeared to be a group of ducks perched on a log but when I looked through the binoculars, I saw it was a line of huge turtles with heads weaving in and out of their shells at times.

When I finally reached Mitchell Lake clearing, I saw a long line of huge birds, Geese I think all in a line on a type of pipe in the lake. It did not smell bad, Ms Walters said that the lake smelled sometimes and people mistake it for a sewer smell but she said that it is the blue-green algae. I had a very pleasant and informative afternoon.