With 2025 on our horizon, we at Texas Parks and Wildlife Foundation (TPWF) remain in awe of the wild conservation gains we and our many dedicated partners have been able to achieve throughout the Lone Star State. Our wild things and wild places continue to bloom wholly because of the generosity of countless individuals who want to keep Texas wild.
But our work is never done, which is why we hope you will consider giving a year-end gift to TPWF to sustain our efforts and further our work. If you donate to TPWF by December 31, all gifts will be matched dollar-for-dollar, doubling your impact.
Your support enables TPWF to continue:
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STEWARDING OUR WILD PLACES. Since 1991, TPWF has permanently protected over 215,000 acres of vital wildlife habitat, including more than 7,100 acres of coastal barrier along Matagorda Peninsula. From the shores of our Gulf Coast to the mountains of West Texas, and everywhere in between, every reclaimed acre is a wild win for Texas wildlife.
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CONSERVING OUR WILD THINGS. From restoring pronghorn populations, studying the return of black bears, and helping to reverse the decline of desert bighorn sheep populations in West Texas, to addressing the overharvesting of oysters and degradation of reefs along the coast, and revitalizing vanishing grassland habitat for quail, butterflies, and native bees through our new Pollinators & Prairies program, our projects literally breathe new life into Texas.
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ADVANCING THE CAPABILITIES OF TEXAS GAME WARDENS. Since 2017, TPWF has delivered over $5.6 million in specialty equipment into the hands of our Texas Game Wardens for use in critical search and rescue operations, disaster response, routine conservation enforcement, public safety, and much more through the S. Reed Morian Gear Up for Game Wardens program.
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ENGAGING MORE TEXANS WITH NATURE. TPWF is actively bringing Palo Pinto Mountains State Park to life by managing the vertical construction of visitor amenities including the Visitors Center, outdoor pavilion, picnic area, a nature-inspired playground, and more exciting touches. Once open to the public sometime in 2025, this untamed gem of North Texas will provide 5,500 acres of rugged beauty for countless park goers to explore and enjoy.
For over 30 years, TPWF has worked with Texas Parks and Wildlife Department and our many dedicated conservation partners to conserve the wild things and wild places of Texas. The single most important factor in our work is you.
If you donate to TPWF by December 31, all gifts will be matched dollar-for-dollar, doubling the impact of your gift to support our efforts to keep Texas wild, now and forever.
We’re so very grateful for your generous support,
Anne Brown
Executive Director
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