Nov 9 2024

Lights Out Texas: Fall Migration Season - Texas (Aug. 15-Nov. 30)

Aug 15 2024 - 11:00pm to Nov 30 2024 - 6:00am
Statewide TX

Lights Out Texas organizers ask that residents, building managers and businesses turn off their outdoor lights from 11 p.m. till 6 a.m. from Aug. 15 to Nov. 30 to prevent bird deaths. Outdoor lighting distracts and confuses migrating birds who typically fly at night.

Peak fall migration season is Sept. 5 to Oct. 29.

Native Prairies Association of Texas, Fort Worth Chapter: Tandy Hills Natural Area - Fort Worth

Nov 9 2024 - 9:00am to 3:00pm
Tandy Hills Natural Area
3325 View St
Fort Worth , TX

Continuing our exploration of urban prairies, the Prairie Seekers are visiting the lovely Tandy Hills Natural Area this November.

Registrants will receive additional information 3-7 days prior to the event. Lunch will be provided thanks to a generous grant from Marsha Stephens.

$30. Register on the website link below.

Wild DFW & Dallas Sierra Club: Piedmont Ridge Hike - Dallas

Nov 9 2024 - 9:30am to 2:00pm
Scyene Overlook Trail Piedmont Ridge
2725 N Jim Miller Rd
Dallas , TX

Enjoy long-distance hikes through fascinating large preserves and parks — without leaving DFW. Dallas Sierra Club joins with Amy Martin, author of Wild DFW: Explore the Amazing Nature Around Dallas-Fort Worth, to offer quarterly hikes on trails as wild as North Texas has to offer. Explore these places with naturalists and others that know them the best.

First up: Piedmont Ridge, part of the Dallas parks system and the northernmost section of the Great Trinity Forest. Best place to experience fall foliage in Dallas. We’ll hike every trail there. Two sections of soaring limestone escarpment with unique upland woods (Scyene/Lacywood Overlook Trails and Piedmont Ridge Trail), connected by a long stretch of lush bottomland forest (JJ Beeman Trail). About 5 miles.

Points-of-interest naturalist mini-breaks: 4 overlooks that afford views of the Great Trinity Forest (in autumn colors!), downtown and across the county to Cedar Hill... historic Comanche eastern red cedar lodgepole woods... historic settlers' black walnut grove... ridge top Blackland Prairie.

NTREG: The Future of Energy with Focus on Renewables - Irving & Zoom

Nov 9 2024 - 10:00am to 12:00pm
Dallas College
North Lake Campus 5001 North MacArthur Boulevard
Irving , TX

Presenter: Jeremy Mazur, Senior Policy Advisor, Texas 2036 Project

Presentation: To ensure Texas is the best place to live and work, we must address the biggest challenges facing our state as our population and economy continue to grow. Our Nov. 9 presentation will cover aspirational goals across several different policy areas that can help guide Texas towards ensuring it is the best place to live and work, with a specific focus on renewable energy.

See website link below for details and Zoom link.

Event Website:

Fort Worth Audubon Society: Birdie Big Year: Elevating Women Birders - Fort Worth

Nov 9 2024 - 10:00am
UNT Health & Science Center
3500 Camp Bowie Blvd. RES Bldg., Room 100
Fort Worth , TX

Featuring professional bird guide Tiffany Kerstan.

This meeting will be live in-person ONLY. Coffee and refreshmenats at 9:30 a.m. and the program will start at 10 a.m. 

Event Website:

River Legacy Nature Center: Family Orienteering - Arlington

Nov 9 2024 - 10:00am to 11:00am
River Legacy Nature Center
703 NW Green Oaks Boulevard
Arlington , TX

Bring out the whole family and learn the sport of Orienteering at a slower, gentler family pace. Parents and kids will work together to locate hidden orienteering markers throughout River Legacy Nature Center park. See who can locate the most within a set time limit.  Speed or smart planning, which will get you the most points?  No experience required and no compass needed.  Simple trail map reading skills and a sense of adventure are all the tools you need.

$10.

Texas Master Naturalists, Indian Trail Chapter: Night Hike - Midlothian

Nov 9 2024 - 5:30pm to 7:30pm
Mockingbird Nature Park
1361 Onward Road
Midlothian , TX

The Indian Trail Master Naturalist Chapter invites you to come and use all your senses to experience the park at night. 
Our sight is diminished, which puts our other senses on high alert. Feel even the smallest temperature drop as we move into the wooded area. Smell the earth and vegetation, while the smallest sounds are magnified and our imaginations run wild. We will make your taste buds happy with refreshments.
This is a family friendly hike of about .5 mile. Closed-toe shoes and flashlights are recommended. Plan to be outdoors about two hours.