Mar 13 2025

Texas Discovery Gardens: Festival of Lights - Dallas (Dec. 13- March 23)

Dec 13 2024 - 5:00pm to Mar 23 2025 - 10:00pm
Texas Discovery Gardens
3601 MLK Jr Blvd
Dallas , TX

Stroll through Texas Discovery Gardens’ 7.5 acres of lush gardens illuminated with larger-than-life lanterns. The family event features performers, artisian venders and food and beverages. See link to event page for details.

Keep Texas Beautiful: Clean ups - Statewide (March 1-April 30)

Mar 1 2025 - 8:00am to Apr 30 2025 - 5:00pm
Statewide TX

See Keep Texas' Beautiful calendar for a cleanup event near you.

Fort Worth Botanic Garden: Butterflies in the Garden - Fort Worth (March 1-April 30

Mar 1 2025 - 9:00am to Apr 30 2025 - 5:00pm
Fort Worth Botanic Garden
3220 Botanic Garden Blvd
Fort Worth , TX

]Exhibit visitors will have the chance to see a diverse collection of butterflies from various parts of the world, including Central, North and South America, Africa, and Asia. The Blue Morpho (Morpho peleides), known for its striking beauty, is one of the most popular butterflies on display. Additionally, local favorites will also be showcased.

Lights Out Texas: Spring Peak Migration - Texas (April 22-May 12)

Mar 1 2025 - 11:00pm to Jun 15 2025 - 6:00pm

Texas is a major flyway for migrating birds. Outdoor lighting can be deadly for the wildbirds who mostly travel by night. The lights distract and disorient them leading to exhaustion and building collisions. Houston and Dallas are ranked in the top three most dangerous cities for migrating birds.

Building owners, businesses, developers and homeowners can help protect migrating birds by turning off all non-essential nighttime lighting on buildings and other structures from 11 p.m. to 6 a.m. each night. 

Migration season runs March 1-June 15. Peak migration is April 22-May 12.

Native Prairies Association of Texas, Fort Worth Chapter: How a Grant Expedited Invasive Species Control, Community Partnership, and Interns - Fort Worth

Mar 13 2025 - 6:30pm to 8:30pm
UNT Health Science Center
3500 Camp Bowie Blvd
Fort Worth , TX

Presenter:  Michelle Villafranca
City of Fort Worth Park & Recreation

For a decade, the City of Fort Worth Park and Recreation Department partnered with the Friends of Tandy Hills Natural Area to eradicate privet, a non-Indigenous shrub, which crowds out biodiversity in one of the last remaining examples of Fort Worth Prairie habitat in the city. Staff and volunteers spent thousands of hours manually removing privet on the 200-acre site. Unfortunately, privet is very aggressive and manual removal is a slow, labor-intensive approach. In 2023, the city had a rare opportunity to tackle privet and other improvements simultaneously when it received a $150,000 grant from the Conservation and Environment Fund at North Texas Community Foundation. The grant enabled the city to expedite 43 acres of privet removal through a combination of aggressive tactics including forestry mulching, targeted herbicide and eventually prescribed burns, while meeting other long-term partnership goals to build trails, install interpretive signage and hire natural resource interns. Many challenges, lessons learned and triumphs unfurled while saving a prairie.

Info: [email protected]