Dairy Barn Restored

Before restoration

Before restoration

The restoration of the Voelcker dairy barn was celebrated April 13, 2013. The 1500 square foot dairy barn went through a major transformation.

Rotted wood was replaced; the windows and roof were repaired; new electrical work was installed and the exterior was given a new paint job.

After restoration

After restoration

The restoration of the barn was funded through the Voelcker Trust and money raised by members of the Associated General Contractors’ Construction Leadership Forum (CLF), who also donated their time and expertise to the restoration.

This restoration is culturally and historically significant because the barn is the remaining symbol of Hardberger Park’s roots and heritage as a dairy farm. Hardberger Park is a natural area, a place to run and play. It’s also an outdoor classroom where visitors can learn about urban ecology and our south Texas farming heritage.

Phil Hardberger Park is the BEST!

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Readers of the San Antonio Current recently voted in the magazine's "Best of San Antonio" poll.

They chose Phil Hardberger Park for the Best Dog Park, Best Playground, Best Jogging Trails, and Best City Park. About the dog park, they said, "Dogs love it and you love it (they exercise while you chill). Your furry loved ones can enjoy two dog parks, each divided into separate areas for small and large dogs. Plenty of water fountains are available, providing a perfect way for your pups to beat the heat. Just expect an exhausted, muddy canine companion on the ride home."
 
Thank you, San Antonio! We couldn't be more proud.

Harberger Park wins AACOG award

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The Alamo Area Council of Governments recently recognized the Phil Hardberger Park Conservancy with its Air Quality Stewardship Award in the Nonprofit Organization Category.

The award highlighted several accomplishments:

  • Located the Hardberger Park Urban Ecology Center, a project overseen by the conservancy, to optimize public transportation access. It provides preferred parking for low-emitting and fuel-efficient vehicles.

  • Used construction products for the Urban Ecology Center that met LEED's requirements for reduced VOC emissions, and many finishes were eliminated from the building project to avoid emissions altogether.

  • Implemented strategies to reduce energy demand at the Urban Ecology Center including effective use of daylight, a reflective roof, a heat pump split and ductless minisplit, energy recovery ventilators, and a photovoltaic array that serves as a demonstration tool for visitors to learn about sustainable building practices.

  • Installed an electric vehicle charging station on park grounds.

  • Conducts educational programming at the park that helps build awareness and appreciation for the natural environment and the importance of conserving and protecting it, including what can be done to help improve air quality, especially through the planting and care for trees.

Wild Turkey Federation

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On Nov. 16, 2013, members of the Alamo Chapter Wild Turkey Federation presented Wild Turkeys in Texas at Phil Hardberger Park. The Alamo Area Master Naturalists sponsored the program. Here are highlights of the presentation.

Wild Turkey Presentation Highlights at TWPD’s sponsored event at Phil Hardberger Park on November 16, 2013 – by Alamo Chapter NWTF.

The turkey you eat at Thanksgiving is probably NOT anything like the beautiful wild turkey we have in Texas and throughout the North American continent. “Mr. Butterball” is generally all white, fat, doesn’t fly and is not known to be very smart. The wild turkey, however, is very dark (with the male being an iridescent black and the female a dark shade of brown); it can fly 55 mph and it can run with speeds up to 25 mph. (Hint: domestic turkey legs are much tastier, but wild turkey breast meat can be most enjoyable.)

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Once found in great numbers throughout North America, the wild turkey became nearly extinct in the late 1800’s through early 1900’s. A concerted effort was made to reverse this trend through legislative action changing the laws so that turkeys could be hunted only during specific seasons and with restricted numbers. In 1973, the National Wild Turkey Federation (NWTF) was formed to continue the efforts of conserving this noble bird. From only 30,000 turkeys in the early 1900’s to more than 7 million today, this intriguing species has truly made an awesome comeback.

Be thankful for the wild turkey because it gave your tasty Thanksgiving domestic turkey its beginning. Interestingly, when the wild turkey numbers were so low, attempts were made to take wild turkey eggs, put them with “tame” turkeys, and release the newly hatched birds into the wild. None survived. The poults needed their wild turkey mama hen to imprint them with knowledge on how to survive in the wild. Through NWTF efforts, net-capturing and transplanting the turkeys into other areas successfully increased the numbers.

The wild turkey has five subspecies within North America. The majority in Texas is the Rio Grande Turkey, and those in the eastern part of Texas are known as the Eastern subspecies. The other subspecies include the Merriam’s, Gould’s and Osceola. The wild turkey is now found in all 49 states, except Alaska. The Oscellated turkey is a sixth subspecies. Unique to the Yucatan Peninsula, it looks totally different and seems to have more peacock-like features.

The adult female (hen) lays 10 to 14 eggs, about one a day. It then sits on the eggs for about a month until the eggs hatch all at one time. Of course, it seems like everything enjoys eating these eggs—coyotes, raccoons, armadillos, snakes, bobcats, skunks, crows—and as a result only about half of the eggs make it to hatching. Once hatched, life hardly gets any easier since now hawks, eagles, and foxes all want a piece of that cute poult. Thank goodness these little ones can fly within 8 to 10 days and get into trees to escape from predators. Before you know it, the whole flock is enjoying a good night’s sleep high in the trees.

When the young poults get a bit older (if they were humans, it would be their teen years), the male is called a jake and the female is called a jenny. The jakes tend to get in gangs and try to impress the females by strutting around with their bright red heads. Only, the jakes’ tail feathers give them away, because they are not fully developed-- only the center feathers are long, while the side feathers are shorter, making a notched appearance. The male also grows a beard and spurs, both of which are much shorter on the young jake. When the male gets older, around 2 ½ years old or more, he is referred to as a tom and has a full, even-length tail, longer spurs and a beard of about 9” or longer. The tom’s head can be white, blue and red—a most patriotic bird! Both the jake and the tom are referred to as gobblers, because they make a gobble sound to attract the female. The female is smaller in size and her plumage is dark brown with just a small amount of red on her neck and the back of her head is thinly feathered. She, too, can have a beard, but this is not very common.

These birds enjoy eating things like insects, acorns, berries, and because they also like corn, it is used as bait in many hunting areas in Texas. In the natural order of things, during mating season in the spring, the gobblers strut around and gobble a lot, basically telling the females, “Here I am; don’t I look great; come over here.” In order to outsmart them during hunting season, the hunter attempts to sound like a very enticing female, making noises called yelps and purrs and hopefully is saying, “Here I am, sweetie. You better come over here to me, instead.” The hunter cannot move around and try to get close to a turkey, because it has VERY good eyesight and will run away. In fact, turkeys can see almost all the way around, about 270 degrees. They are aware of every movement (another reason hunters wear full camo and stay very still). Turkeys can also hear very well, but do not have a good sense of smell—thank goodness, or they just might outsmart us hunters every time!

Learn more about how to get involved in conserving our Hunting Heritage and keeping our native wild turkey around for future generations by visiting www.nwtf.org. For youth, ages 9 to 17, go online to Texas Youth Hunting Program and find out how you can participate in a future turkey hunt.

Wednesday, 08 January 2014

Golden Age in Phil Hardberger Park

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Like many of Anne Wallace’s public commissions, Golden Age addresses life growing up in a Texas ranching family, Wallace sought to engage the natural and agricultural history of the land that has become Phil Hardberger Park.

Anne Wallace explains the inspiration and symbolism of Golden Age…

"For more than 100 years this land was a family dairy farm and cattle ranch. Before that it was part of an enormous prairie ecosystem shaped by two elemental forces: grass fires and the mass migration of buffalo.   The trackless and seemingly boundless "prairie sea" awed and disoriented pioneers as they traveled west.  In the 1870s, as part of the campaign to exterminate the Plains Indians or force them onto reservations, buffalo were hunted to near extinction: from 1872 – 1874 alone, approximately 4.5 million bison were killed and left rotting on the plains.  Wildfire was suppressed as agriculture and settlements spread.

Using off-the-shelf side-roll irrigator wheels clad in custom reflective hardware, Golden Age creates a flickering effect that alludes to the natural phenomenon of wildfire.  As Hardberger Park's restored grassland matures, the gold will appear to hover just above the prairie, using the sun and wind to bounce light off the tops of the grasses. I hope that my work will draw the eye and the imagination out into the restored savanna and encourage contemporary viewers to appreciate its beauty and reflect on the course of our relationship to the natural world.

The title of the work refers to its color but is also somewhat ironic. The earliest attested reference to a golden age is 6th century Greek poet Hesiod's description of a good and noble era before the invention of the arts and private property, when the earth's abundance provided for all and people lived communally and in harmony with nature."

Wallace lives and works in San Antonio.  She was chosen from a group of artists and commissioned to create a work for Hardberger Park after consideration by a panel representing the city’s art community, the San Antonio Parks & Recreation Department and the Phil Hardberger Park Conservancy.

Wallace was selected to participate in Artpace’s International Artist-in Residence program in 2004 and has received awards including a San Antonio Artist Foundation grant in 2006.  She has exhibited work in the United States, Mexico and Northern Ireland and is in the collections of the City of San Antonio, the Museo Alameda Smithsonian, the John Michael Kohler Arts Center and City of Sheboygan, Wisconsin, and the Arts Council of Northern Ireland.

Other works in San Antonio by Anne Wallace:

  • Everything was close, South Presa Street, 2004

  • Glorieta, Brackenridge Park, 2005

  • Unofficial History, Florida Street from South St. Mary’s to I-37, 2008

  • The Once and Future River, San Antonio Riverwalk Mission Reach, the pedestrian bridge at Mission Concepción, 2010

Hardberger Park will continue to evolve in 2012

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The new year will usher in the third phase of the five-phase development of Phil Hardberger Park.

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Phases 1 and 2 consisted of the grand openings of the the public-access areas on both the east (Blanco Road) and west (NW Military Highway) sides of the park, including signage, walking trails, lighting, parking, playgrounds, play fields, sports courts, dog parks, Salado Classroom / Restroom Building and Salado Creek Overlook. The signature project of Phase 3 is the Urban Ecology Center to be built on the west side off the park located at 8400 NW Military Highway.

The 4,000-square foot building will include a classroom / research laboratory, gathering hall, offices, restrooms, covered porch, water harvesting and solar power. The Urban Ecology Center will serve as an institution for teaching park visitors about coexisting with nature in an urban environment. The Urban Ecology Center will also become the central headquarters for the Alamo Area Master Naturalists, an organization that provides training for volunteers who focus on the preservation, conservation and restoration of parks and natural areas all over the city and region.

The City of San Antonio staff has recommended $3 million of the proposed 2012 Bond Program be dedicated to the Urban Ecology Center. However, the Urban Ecology Center, as envisioned in the master plan for Hardberger Park, is projected to cost at least $5 million. The Parks Community Bond Committee — a group of citizens tasked with recommending bond projects to the City Council — can raise or lower the initial recommendation of $3 million.

“If we underfund the Urban Ecology Center, it’s not the same as cutting a swingset out of another park. The effect would be much more far-reaching,” said former Mayor Phil Hardberger, chairman of the Phil Hardberger Park Conservancy. “The Urban Ecology Center is intended to be a teaching institution for all the people of San Antonio. If we build something less than what the community asked for, we would be completely thwarting the purpose of the park, and it’s award-winning, very expensive master plan would fail.”

The Parks Community Bond Committee is scheduled to tour Phil Hardberger Park on Saturday, December 3 from 1:30-2:00. The Conservancy Board of Directors urges you to stop by the park at this time and express your support for the park to committee members.

New Classroom Building is a Model of Sustainability

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The construction at the north end of the parking lot on the east side of Phil Hardberger Park is nearing completion as the long-awaited Salado Classroom Building is expected to open to the public in November.

In addition to providing public restrooms, the building will be used to host educational programs and provide office space for Parks and Recreation staff. The building features an open-air classroom with seating for approximately 50 people. The classroom is shaded and contains a huge overhead fan to allow for year-round utilization of the facility.

In keeping with the mission of the Phil Hardberger Park Conservancy to advocate renewal, recreation, and learning through nature in an urban setting, the building includes numerous sustainability features, including solar panels that will completely power the building and allow for excess energy to be put back into the grid and water cisterns that will collect and store rainwater for irrigating new plantings.

Along with the public restrooms, the building offers park visitors a filtered water bottle filler. The Salado Bypass Trail, which connects Hardberger Park to the Salado Creek Greenway / Voelcker Lane, will run right through the middle of the building.

The building was designed by Fisher Heck Architects with Stephen Stimson Associates and was built by Sabinal Group.

New Overlook showcases Salado Creek

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Also scheduled to open in November is the new Salado Creek Overlook, a steel structure perched high on a bluff overlooking Salado Creek.

It was built with metal grating so when users walk on it, they can see the natural landscape 30 feet below them. The Overlook connects to the Salado Creek Greenway/Voelcker Lane and is designed to be a place where visitors can take a break, reflect in nature and study the geologic features of the normally-dry Salado Creek.

Futures of public parks may need private dollars

By Jennifer Hiller

When New York City entered a period of economic and social upheaval in the 1970s and Central Park suffered years of neglect, San Antonio native Elizabeth Barlow Rogers came to the rescue.

Born Elizabeth Browning, the daughter of an Alamo Heights construction company owner, Rogers became the park's first administrator, in 1979. And when it became obvious that city funding alone couldn't revive the landscape architecture jewel, she started the Central Park Conservancy, bringing CEOs,8 philanthropists and millions of private dollars to the park.

That conservancy model Rogers created later would be adopted by two more San Antonio natives turned New Yorkers, Warrie Price and Robert Hammond, to revamp or create major New York parks.

But while the parks conservancy model was invented by a San Antonian and copied across the country, it hasn't become widespread in San Antonio.

The city has just a handful of parks with foundations raising specifically targeted dollars. But with a difficult economy and limited government budgets, the public-private model is being seen as a way to bring amenities or programs to parks — everything from public art to bird-watching or farmers markets.

"A successful park is going to require substantial programming," said Andres Andújar, CEO of the HemisFair Park Area Redevelopment Corp. "The city does not have money for that."

When Price created the Battery Conservancy in 1995, the 25 acres at the tip of Manhattan, previously known as Battery Park, had some trees, picnic tables, benches, memorial statutes and little else. Now it has an urban farm and the largest public perennial gardens in the United States.

"We had different lives, but we had the sense and the will to improve cities through new public spaces or revitalize our old wonderful public spaces," Price said.

Read more of the full story here

Friday, 05 August 2011

Shavano Park Women’s Club

The Shavano Park Women's Club came to Phil Hardberger Park for a walk and talk about native plants and future plans for Hardberger Park and the Salado Creek Greenway.

Gail Gallegos, Nature Preserve Officer with the City of San Antonio, led the tour and identified the many native plants in the park. Betty Sutherland, Phil Hardberger Park Executive Director, invited the group to join the Conservancy and provided brochures and wild flower seed packets.