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West Texas Rangelands
West Texas RangelandsWe hope to provide a variety of science-based rangeland information and current research on prescribed fire, wildfires, brush management, and grazing management!
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Archives for May 2025

Escaped Prescribed Fire Patterns

May 28, 2025 by jaime.sanford

Prescribed fires are a necessary process for rangeland management, helping to reduce fuel loads, restore ecosystems, and mitigate the risk of catastrophic wildfires. More importantly, the estimated escape rate across the U.S. is quite low, at 0.16% (2022). A recent study by Li et al. (2025) sheds light on the spatial and temporal patterns of escape prescribed fires, offering crucial insights for rangeland managers and fire professionals.

[Read more…] about Escaped Prescribed Fire Patterns

Filed Under: Grazing Management, Prescribed Burn Associations, Prescribed Burning

The Best Time To Plan For Drought Is When We Are Not In One! Second Best Time Is Now!

May 21, 2025 by jaime.sanford

drought pictureWe’re thrilled to welcome our guest blogger, Mr. Mike Mecke, to the West Texas Rangelands blog! Mr. Mecke brings a wealth of knowledge and passion for land stewardship, drawing from his unique background as a San Antonio native who as of 2008 retired into the Texas Hill Country outside of Kerrville. He is a graduate of Texas A&M University with Biology and Agriculture degrees. He later earned a Masters of Science in Rangeland Ecology & Watershed Management at the University of Wyoming. Helping people by improving agricultural management, land stewardship, water resources conservation and water resources planning has been the primary aspects of his career. We’re excited for him to share his insights and practical expertise with our West Texas rangeland community. Take it away sir! 

That is a really great headline written by Ms. Emily Seldomridge, writing for Texas Water Solutions a few years ago and it is fantastic advice for ranchers, farmers, agencies or water utilities. Caught my attention right away, which a title should do. You can’t beat developing a good conservation plan and then applying it. The blog article contains some very good conservation proposals as well. This is a rewrite of my Ranch & Rural Living magazine article some years ago. 

[Read more…] about The Best Time To Plan For Drought Is When We Are Not In One! Second Best Time Is Now!

Filed Under: Drought Management

Texas Land Trends: A Shifting Landscape

May 14, 2025 by jaime.sanford

A fascinating new report from the amazing team at Texas A&M Natural Resources Institute sheds light on the changing landscape of Texas. Their sixth edition of a five-year study dives deep into population growth, land values, ownership patterns, and how land use is changing across Texas. The takeaways, reveal some significant trends that paint a picture of a state undergoing considerable transformation.

[Read more…] about Texas Land Trends: A Shifting Landscape

Filed Under: Conservation, Land

Moving to the Country

May 7, 2025 by jaime.sanford

A recent study from Dr. David Matarrita-Cascante, Texas A&M University Department of Rangeland, Wildlife and Fisheries, explores why people are migrating towards rural communities, their previous rangeland management experience, and their goals and expectations for their newly owned private property. 

[Read more…] about Moving to the Country

Filed Under: Publications, Staff

Recent Posts

  • When Does Grazing Become Overgrazing?
  • Prepared Today, Resilient Tomorrow: Making Wildfire Preparedness Part of Rangeland Stewardship
  • Fuel, Weather, and Risk: Monitoring Wildfire Conditions on Your Land
  • Roads, Buffers, and Water: Preparing Your Ranch for Wildfire
  • Fuel on the Ground: Managing Vegetation to Reduce Wildfire Risk 

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