Fort Boggy

State Park - Texas

Fort Boggy State Park is located in Leon County, Texas between Leona and Centerville. The park features swimming, hiking, mountain biking, canoeing, kayaking and fishing. The park has woodlands rolling hills, meadows, and wetlands. Large trees species include post oak, hickory, elm, sweetgum and pecan. Wildlife present in the park include white-tailed deer, raccoons, squirrels, foxes and beavers. Waterfowl and other varieties of aquatic wildlife reside in the park as the park is subject to flooding during rainy periods.

location

maps

Official Texas Travel Map. Published by the Texas Department of Transportation.Texas - Travel Map

Official Texas Travel Map. Published by the Texas Department of Transportation.

brochures

Interpretive Guide of Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.Fort Boggy - Brochure

Interpretive Guide of Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Map of Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.Fort Boggy - Map

Map of Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Birds at Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.Fort Boggy - Birds

Birds at Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Fishing at Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.Fort Boggy - Fishing

Fishing at Fort Boggy State Park (SP) in Texas. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Official Texas State Parks Guide. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.Texas State - Official Texas State Parks Guide

Official Texas State Parks Guide. Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Official Texas State Parks Guide (español). Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.Texas State - Guía de Parques

Official Texas State Parks Guide (español). Published by Texas Parks & Wildlife.

Fort Boggy SP https://tpwd.texas.gov/state-parks/fort-boggy https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fort_Boggy_State_Park Fort Boggy State Park is located in Leon County, Texas between Leona and Centerville. The park features swimming, hiking, mountain biking, canoeing, kayaking and fishing. The park has woodlands rolling hills, meadows, and wetlands. Large trees species include post oak, hickory, elm, sweetgum and pecan. Wildlife present in the park include white-tailed deer, raccoons, squirrels, foxes and beavers. Waterfowl and other varieties of aquatic wildlife reside in the park as the park is subject to flooding during rainy periods.
INTERPRETIVE GUIDE WE HOPE YOU ENJOY YOUR VISIT! FORT BOGGY STATE PARK EMBRACES 1,847 ACRES OF POST OAK SAVANNAH AND PINEY WOODS TWO HOURS NORTHWEST OF HOUSTON. YOU WILL SEE GREAT BLACK GUM TREES, DOGWOODS, DEWBERRY VINES, HONEYSUCKLE, LITTLE BLUESTEM GRASS, WHITE-TAILED DEER, SUNFISH, AND BLACK BASS WITHIN FORT BOGGY’S LAKE, FOREST, AND PRAIRIE HABITATS. The park offers many recreation activities, but is also a nature preserve. Please help us protect its plant and animal communities by following park rules. Some potentially harmful plants and animals live in the park. Walking on the trails will help you see snakes, feral hogs, and poison ivy before you get too close to them. Protect both park wildlife and your pets by keeping your dog on a leash. Now open seven days a week, Fort Boggy State Park welcomes you to see and enjoy all that is available for you. To rent the attractive pavilion and learn of special events, please call. FAMILIES ENJOY TENT CAMPING, THE COMFORT OF THE PARK’S CABINS, COOKOUTS, FISHING, KAYAKING AND HIKING OR BIKING THREE MILES OF WOODLAND 4994 Highway 75 South Centerville, Texas 75833 (903) 344-1116 www.tpwd.texas.gov/fortboggy/ AND LAKESIDE TRAILS. FAR AWAY FROM THE CARES OF THE CITY YOU WILL FIND A WOODLAND REFUGE SECLUDED WITHIN THE HEART OF RURAL TEXAS. © 2022 TPWD. PWD BR P4503-146E (7/22) TPWD receives funds from the USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, age, and gender, pursuant to state and federal law. To request an accommodation or obtain information in an alternative format, please contact TPWD on a Text Telephone (TTY) at (512) 389-8915 or by Relay Texas at 7-1-1 or (800) 735-2989 or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, please contact TPWD, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744, or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office for Diversity and Workforce Management, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041. This publication can be found at tpwd.texas.gov/park-pubs FORT BOGGY STATE PARK F O R T B O G G Y S T A T E P A R K FIELD AND FOREST RECREATION AND NATURE WATCHING OPPORTUNITIES Fort Boggy State Park offers a wide variety of recreation opportunities. Sullivan Lake invites you to swim, fish, or paddle. Bring your tent; hike into one of the park’s five primitive campsites; and take in the vivid night sky. Or, rent one of the five air-conditioned cabins beautifully sited between two dry creek beds, and look out into the forest from the cabins’ wide porches. Three miles of trails provide hikers and bikers a taste of the rich ecological diversity found throughout the park. Birders delight in the many different species that make migratory stops or nest here for a season. American crows, red-tailed hawks, great blue herons, eastern bluebirds, painted buntings, and pileated woodpeckers all live here. Relax at your campsite and listen for the eastern screech owls to announce their presence. Painted buntings and pileated woodpeckers call the park home. E Bring a canoe or kayak and see nature from a whole different perspective. SULLIVAN LAKE The clear, cold waters of this spring-fed lake bear the imprint of both nature and the human hand. Some 75 years ago, Joe Sullivan impounded a natural spring. Now, black bass, red-ear sunfish, and blue catfish meander through the hazel waters, as snapping turtles lie in ambush. Along the shore, great blue herons probe for a meal and mallard ducks float in the gentle waves. In autumn, orange, scarlet, and gold color the trees ringing the lake just before the surrounding forest invites a new winter. Spring rains raise the lake slowly by about 20 feet, and trees encircling it sprout their first buds. ileen Crain Sullivan donated the land that became Fort Boggy State Park which opened in 2001. More than 150 years earlier, Texas rangers built a log fort nearby to protect settlers from raids by native peoples. Long vanished, the structure was called Fort Boggy and gives the park its name. With a landscape much modified since the 1840s, today the site contains some old growth post oak woodlands and prairie openings. TPWD is in process of restoring some of the park’s earlier landscape. The park sits astride a dividing point between post oak savannah and piney woods, a landscape where grasses and trees compete for dominance. Crowds of native grasses and sturdy oaks and sweet and black gum trees vie for control of land and the sunlight. The canopy forms a cathedral of green that shields hikers and forest animals from the hot summer sun. The trees appear to swallow islands of native prairie grasses: look closely at the edge of the woods and you can observe this process of succession.
For assistance using this map, contact the park. Fort Boggy State Park TexasStateParks.org/App TexasStateParks.org/SocialMedia #TxStateParks #BetterOutside LEGEND Headquarters Boggy Creek Restrooms 75 Outdoor Shower Boggy Creek PLEASE NOTE • Park is open seven days a week, 8 a.m. – 8 p.m. • Public consumption or display of any alcoholic beverage is prohibited. • Gathering of firewood is prohibited. • Swimming, fishing, hiking and mountain biking is allowed. m ile s Cabin Access Bridge 2 • No pets allowed in swimming area. • The pavilion will hold approximately 50 people. Call our Reservations Center to reserve the group pavilion. N 45 • Please review complete Park Rules and Regulations posted at headquarters. C-5 • Stop the spread of invasive species. CLEAN, DRAIN and DRY your boat. Day Use Area Primitive Site 1 Cabins Group Picnic Pavilion Trailhead Hiking Trail Biking Trail Swimming Area Fishing Pier Boat Ramp Wheelchair Accessible Parking C-4 Park Trail Lake Trail – 1.5 miles C-3 C-2 C-1 TPWD receives funds from the USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, age, and gender, pursuant to state and federal law. To request an accommodation or obtain information in an alternative format, please contact TPWD on a Text Telephone (TTY) at (512) 389-8915 or by Relay Texas at 7-1-1 or (800) 735-2989 or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, please contact TPWD, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744, or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office for Diversity and Workforce Management, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041. © 2022 TPWD PWD MP P4503-146 (2/22) This publication can be found at tpwd.texas.gov/spdest/parkinfo/maps/park_maps/ Lake Trail 75 4994 Hwy. 75 South Centerville, TX 75833 (903) 344-1116 PARK RESERVATIONS TexasStateParks.org ParquesDeTexas.org (512) 389-8900 Proud Sponsor of Texas State Parks
FORT BOGGY SP BIRD CHECKLIST This checklist is a list of common and specialty birds seen in the park. Staf and volunteers have used previous checklists as well as eBird data to compile these lists. This list should not be used as a comprehensive list of birds seen in this park. Please help us protect the natural avian communities by refraining from using playback tapes of bird songs. Thank you for your cooperation. Waterfowl ___ Wood Duck Grebes ___ Pied-billed Grebe Pigeons and Doves Vultures, Hawks, and Allies ___ Black Vulture ___ Turkey Vulture ___ Mississippi Kite ___ Cooper’s Hawk ___ Rock Pigeon ___ Red-shouldered Hawk ___ Eurasian Collared-Dove ___ Red-tailed Hawk ___ Mourning Dove Cuckoos ___ Yellow-billed Cuckoo Nightjars ___ Common Nighthawk ___ Chuck-will’s-widow Swifs ___ Chimney Swif Hummingbirds ___ Ruby-throated Hummingbird Shorebirds ___ Killdeer Storks ___ Wood Stork Cormorants ___ Double-crested Cormorant ___ Neotropic Cormorant Herons, Ibis, and Allies ___ Great Blue Heron ___ Great Egret ___ Snowy Egret ___ Little Blue Heron ___ Cattle Egret ___ Green Heron ___ Yellow-crowned Night-Heron ___ White Ibis Owls ___ Barred Owl Kingfshers ___ Belted Kingfsher Woodpeckers ___ Yellow-bellied Sapsucker ___ Red-bellied Woodpecker ___ Downy Woodpecker ___ Pileated Woodpecker ___ Northern Flicker Tyrant Flycatchers: Pewees, Kingbirds, and Allies ___ Eastern Wood-Pewee ___ Eastern Phoebe ___ Great Crested Flycatcher ___ Scissor-tailed Flycatcher Vireos ___ White-eyed Vireo ___ Yellow-throated Vireo ___ Blue-headed Vireo ___ Warbling Vireo ___ Red-eyed Vireo Jays, Magpies, Crows, and Ravens ___ Blue Jay ___ American Crow Tits, Chickadees, and Titmice Finches, Euphonias, and Allies ___ Carolina Chickadee ___ House Finch ___ Tufed Titmouse ___ American Goldfnch Martins and Swallows New World Sparrows ___ Purple Martin ___ Chipping Sparrow ___ Barn Swallow ___ Field Sparrow ___ Clif Swallow ___ Dark-eyed Junco Kinglets ___ White-throated Sparrow ___ Ruby-crowned Kinglet ___ Savannah Sparrow ___ Golden-crowned Kinglet ___ Song Sparrow Nuthatches ___ White-breasted Nuthatch Treecreepers ___ Brown Creeper Gnatcatchers ___ Blue-gray Gnatcatcher Wrens ___ Lincoln’s Sparrow ___ Eastern Towhee Blackbirds ___ Orchard Oriole ___ Red-winged Blackbird ___ Brown-headed Cowbird ___ Common Grackle ___ House Wren ___ Carolina Wren Starlings and Mynas ___ Great-tailed Grackle Wood-Warblers ___ Black-and-white Warbler ___ European Starling ___ Prothonotary Warbler Catbirds, Mockingbirds, and Thrashers ___ Swainson’s Warbler ___ Gray Catbird ___ Brown Thrasher ___ Northern Mockingbird Thrushes ___ Orange-crowned Warbler ___ Nashville Warbler ___ Northern Parula ___ Chestnut-sided Warbler ___ Pine Warbler ___ Eastern Bluebird ___ Hermit Thrush ___ American Robin Waxwings ___ Yellow-rumped Warbler ___ Yellow-throated Warbler ___ Black-throated Green Warbler Cardinals, Grosbeaks, and Allies ___ Cedar Waxwing Old World Sparrows ___ House Sparrow ___ Summer Tanager ___ Northern Cardinal ___ Indigo Bunting ___ Painted Bunting © 2022 TPWD PWD CD P4503-0146F (3/22) TPWD receives funds from the USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, age, and gender, pursuant to state and federal law. To request an accommodation or obtain information in an alternative format, please contact TPWD on a Text Telephone (TTY) at (512) 389-8915 or by Relay Texas at 7-1-1 or (800) 735-2989 or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, please contact TPWD, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744, or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office for Diversity and Workforce Management, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041.
FORT BOGGY STATE PARK Visit www.tpwd.texas.gov/outdoor-annual for the most current regulations. 4994 Hwy. 75 South • Centerville, TX 75833 (903) 344-1116 Other info: www.texasstateparks.org Local Emergency: Where to Fish: Call 911 or Leon County Sheriff at (903) 536-2749. Shoreline access and by boat in a 15-acre, no-wake lake. Fort Boggy State Park is a day use only park and tackle loaner materials must be returned before closing. HARVEST REGULATIONS SPECIES DAILY BAG LIMIT LENGTH: MIN-MAX Bass: largemouth 5 Min: 14” – Max: No Limit Catfish: channel 5 No Limit No Limit No Limit 5 No Limit Sunfish Trout: rainbow (seasonal) All other fish: statewide bag and length limits apply. © 2022 Texas Parks and Wildlife Department TPWD receives funds from the USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, disability, age, and gender, pursuant to state and federal law. To request an accommodation or obtain information in an alternative format, please contact TPWD on a Text Telephone (TTY) at (512) 389-8915 or by Relay Texas at 7-1-1 or (800) 735-2989 or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, please contact TPWD, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744, or the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, Office for Diversity and Workforce Management, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041. PWD LF P4503-146B (12/22) HA N DY FISH ING BASICS HOW TO TIE A FISHING KNOT NATURAL BAIT HOOK PLACEMENT The palomar knot is very strong and easy to tie. HOW TO MEASURE FISH Pinch the tail together and take the longest measurement from nose to tail. Freshwater fish TIPS FOR RELEASING FISH SAFELY 1. For safety for you and a quick release of fish, mash down the barb of the hook with pliers. 2. Quickly play and release fish as soon as possible (take photos quickly). 3. Remove hook with pliers or cut line if the hook has been swallowed. 4. Gently place fish back into water. 5. Revive fish by holding upright in water and facing it into the current, gently forcing water through gills. Saltwater fish 6. If you don’t intend to eat the fish, NEVER place it on a stringer. FISHING ETHICS SAFETY • Wear a hat, sunglasses and sunscreen to protect your head, eyes and skin. • Use insect repellent – but keep off hands, as you will be handling bait and live fish. • Look behind you before each cast to avoid hooking someone or getting caught in a tree (practice casting before you go fishing). • Bring plenty of drinking water to prevent dehydration; soft drinks encourage dehydration. • Wear a life jacket if you cannot swim or you are uncom- fortable around the water. Supervise young children: it only takes a second for them to slip under the surface. Kids under 13 must wear life jackets if fishing from a boat. Before doing anything, ask yourself the following questions: • • • Is it legal? Would it be good if everyone did it? Would it make you proud? Ethical behavior is more than just following the fishing regulations. Ethical people go beyond what laws require and demonstrate good judgment and behavior for everyone – even if no one sees you do something ethical. Ethical behavior includes picking up trash around the area you have been fishing, calmly and politely explaining to others if they are breaking fishing regulations, and respecting the rights of other anglers and those that use the water in other ways.
-Official- FACILITIES Get the Mobile App: MAPS ACTIVITIES TexasStateParks.org/app T O Y O T A T U N D R A The Toyota Tundra is built to explore the great outdoors. No matter what the weekend throws at you, your Tundra takes it on with ease. | toyota.com/tundra Official Vehicle of the Texas Parks & Wildlife Foundation CONTENTS 4 100 Years of Texas Parks 6 Parks Near You 8 90 Checklist DIRECTORY TEXAS PARKS AND WILDLIFE DEPARTMENT 52 68 20 38 60 30 84 68 David Yoskowitz, Ph.D. Executive Director Rodney Franklin State Parks Director Mischelle Diaz Communications Director TPW COMMISSION Arch “Beaver” Aplin, III, Chairman Lake Jackson Dick Scott, Vice-Chairman Wimberley James E. Abell Kilgore Oliver J. Bell Cleveland Paul L. Foster El Paso Anna B. Galo Laredo Jeffery D. Hildebrand Houston Robert L. “Bobby” Patton, Jr. Fort Worth Travis B. “Blake” Rowling Dallas T. Dan Friedkin, Chairman-Emeritus Houston Lee Marshall Bass, Chairman-Emeritus Fort Worth 52 Panhandle Plains 48 State Parks Map Special thanks to Toyota and advertisers, whose generous support made this guide possible. Texas State Parks is a division of the Texas Parks and Wildlife Department. Cover illustration: Brad Woodard, bravethewoods.com Texas State Parks Official Guide, Nineteenth Edition © TPWD PWD BK P4000-000A (3/23) TPWD receives funds from DHS and USFWS. TPWD prohibits discrimination based on race, color, religion, national origin (including limited English proficiency), disability, age, and gender, pursuant to state and federal law. If you believe you have been discriminated against by TPWD, visit tpwd.texas. gov/nondiscrimination or call (512) 389-4800 for information on filing a complaint. To obtain information in an alternative format, contact TPWD on a Text Telephone (TTY) at (512) 389-8915, by Relay Texas at 7-1-1, (800) 735-2989, or by email at accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. If you speak a language other than English and need assistance, email lep@tpwd.texas.gov. You can also contact Department of the Interior Office of Diversity, Inclusion, and Civil Rights, 1849 C Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20240, and/or U.S. Department of Homeland Security Office for Civil Rights and Civil Liberties (CRCL), Mail Stop #0190 2707, Martin Luther King, Jr. Ave., S.E. Washington, D.C. 20528. In accordance with Texas State Depository Law, this publication is available at the Texas State Publications Clearinghouse and/or Texas Depository Libraries. WELCOME from Rodney Franklin, State Parks Director This year is very special for Texas State Parks: We are celebrating our 100-year anniversary in 2023. More and more Texans are discovering the beauty of State Parks and exploring the outdoors in new and adventurous ways. Our teams across the state are incredibly excited to welcome outdoor enthusiasts, especially those who have yet to discover what our parks have to offer. The variety of Texas’ lands is unmatched; from the mountains of west Texas to the Gulf shores, the Texas State Park system celebrates and preserves the natural and cultural treasures that make Texas such a special place. The 640,000-plus acres that make up the state park system are nearly as diverse as the people of Texas. Since 1923, our mission has been to help connect our visitors with the outdoors. As we honor those who have come before us, I invite a new generation to be a part of the story of the lands that connect us all. There is more to enjoy in our parks than you know, so please join us in our celebrations and activities. Every day we look for new and better ways to ensure your state parks are welcoming to every Texan, regardless of their background or experience being outside. I hope you’ll visit soon and often, while bringing your friends and family along. YOU are a natural and we’re looking forward to celebrating the 100-year anniversary of state parks with you! WHAT’S NEW IN STATE PARKS Galveston Island State Park reopened the beachside of the park with a new headquarters, campsites, restrooms, and more. Bastrop State Park unveiled an extensive new group of trails, the “Tree Army Trails,” many of which are ADA-accessible. Improvements and major repairs are planned for Indian Lodge, Tyler, Inks Lake, Cedar Hill, South Llano River, Eisenhower and several other state parks All-terrain “GRIT” wheelchairs are now available at 10 parks with more adaptive equipment on the way to help people of all abilities experience Texas State Parks. Learn more about our accessibility efforts, page 14. More information: TexasStateParks.org/whatsnew 100 Years of Texas Parks The crown jewels of Texas road trips started as an unfunded wish list before the Depression. Back in 1923, Governor Pat Neff realized rising numbers of new car travelers needed places to camp overnight on multi-day trips. Neff convinced the state legislature to create a six-member State Parks Board, half men, half women. Isabella, the Governor’s mother, and her family donated acreage on the Leon
Guía de Parques INSTALACIONES Descarga la Aplicacíon Móvil MAPAS ACTIVIDADES texasstateparks.org/app ¡Los niños entran gratis! La entrada es gratis para los niños de 12 años y menores. Encuentra un parque: parquesdetexas.org Contenido Estero Llano Grande SP 2 Actividades y Programas 4 Parques Cercanos 6 Lugares para Quedarse 8 Tarifas y Pases 9 Directorio 10 Mapa de Parques 18 Instalaciones y Actividades BIENVENIDO Rodney Franklin, Director de Parques Texas tiene algunas de las tierras públicas más diversas del país, con una gran riqueza natural y cultural. La vida silvestre está por todas partes, los paisajes florecen con belleza, y la historia es abundante. Sus parques estatales son parte del legado que nos enorgullece. La gente de Texas ayuda a asegurar ese legado para las generaciones futuras al visitar y ser voluntarios. ¡Gracias! Estos más de 630,000 acres exhiben algunos de los grandes tesoros del estado. Los parques nos ayudan a crear recuerdos con la familia y a encontrar consuelo en la naturaleza. Los parques fortalecen las economías locales y unen a las comunidades. Sobre todo, los parques nos permiten pasar tiempo al aire libre para recargar energías, estar saludables y relajarnos a nuestra manera. Les invito a disfrutar de sus parques estatales, explorando lo mejor de Texas con amigos y familia. Los parques están aquí para todos. Nos pertenecen a todos. ¡Visítelos, diviértase y ayude a protegerlos para siempre! Foto de portada: Estero Llano State Park, Chase Fountain © 2021 TPWD PWD BK P4000-000A (5/21) TPWD recibe fondos del Servicio de Pesca y Vida Silvestre de EE.UU. (USFWS por sus siglas en ingles). TPWD prohíbe la discriminación por raza, color, religión, nacionalidad de origen, discapacidad, edad y género, conforme la ley estatal y federal. Para solicitar un acomodo especial u obtener información en un formato alternativo, por favor contacte a TPWD en un Teléfono de Texto (TTY) al (512) 3898915 ó por medio de “Relay Texas” al 7-1-1 ó (800) 735-2989 ó por email a accessibility@tpwd.texas.gov. Si usted cree que TPWD ha discriminado en su contra, favor de comunicarse con TPWD, 4200 Smith School Road, Austin, TX 78744, o con el Servicio de Pesca y Vida Silvestre de EE.UU., Office for Diversity and Workforce Management, 5275 Leesburg Pike, Falls Church, VA 22041. De acuerdo con la Ley de Depósito del Estado de Texas, esta publicación está disponible en el centro de Distribución de Publicaciones del Estado de Texas y/o las Bibliotecas de Depósito de Texas. ACTIVIDADES Y PROGRAMAS ¿Qué puedo hacer en los parques estatales? ¡Disfruta de un día de campo, visita un sitio histórico o elige entre muchas otras opciones! Bicicletas Pedalea a lo largo de los parques a cualquier velocidad, en cualquier estilo, con cualquier grupo. Elige las rutas, el tipo de terreno y las distancias que cumplan con tu zona de confort. Caminatas Empieza con un circuito más corto, avanza a terrenos más difíciles o únete a una caminata guiada. Pescar Puedes pescar sin licencia en tantos como 70 parques estatales. Muchos parques ofrecen equipo para pescar a manera de préstamo y eventos especiales para aprender a pescar. Barcos Renta canoas y kayacs y explora uno de los senderos acuáticos en Texas. Nadar Animales Silvestres Acampar Descubre aves, mamíferos y plantas que tienen su hogar en Texas. Muchos parques tienen señalamientos y listados que te ayudan a aprender más. Encuentra un lugar que cumpla con lo que quieres. Prueba nuevas recetas, comparte historias favoritas y disfruta de las estrellas. 2 Más información y reservaciones: parquesdetexas.org Escape del calor en arroyos, ríos, lagos, manantiales, piletas y playas del mar. Tu seguridad en el agua es muy importante. Lleva el chaleco salvavidas. Aprende a nadar. Guarda a los niños. (512) 389-8900 ¡Pregunta en tu parque cuáles están disponibles! Los niños de 12 años y menores entran GRATIS Cielos Estrellados Escapa de las luces de la ciudad y goza de maravillosas vistas del cielo que no encontrarás en ninguna otra parte. Ven a una fiesta de estrellas o toma una excursión de constelaciones auto-guiada. Familias en la Naturaleza Elige un taller o diseña tu propia aventura. ¡Monta una tienda de campaña, cocina al exterior, prende una fogata y juega al exterior! Nosotros te Toma una publicación gratuita de actividades o pregunta por los paquetes gratuitos con los parques proporcionamos todo el equipo. No es necesario tener experiencia. participantes. Usa los binoculares, lupas, libros de bosquejos y libros de guías para explorar el parque. Mochilas para Exploradores Soldados Búfalo de Texas Descubre la historia con cuentos, vestuarios y herramientas. Sigue la pista de un animal, pesca con caña, cocina sobre una fogata, visita los fuertes y más. Adéntrate en las historias de vida de aquellos que sirvieron valientemente en los primeros regimientos Áfrico-Americanos de las Fuerzas Armadas. ! Seguridad en el Parque Ten cuidado con el agua Pre

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