Brazos Bend State Park - Needville, TX
Brazos Bend State Park in Needville, TX run by the Texas Parks & Wildlife Department.
Recorded with a Sony RX-100
Brazos Bend State Park - Texas Parks & Wildlife [Official]
Brazos Bend State Park
Known as a nature-lovers paradise, the diverse ecosystems of Brazos Bend State Park attracts equally diverse people from the nearby metropolis of Houston. Learn about some of the things visitors enjoy doing at this popular state park.
Find out more about Brazos Bend right here
Red Buckeye Trail at Brazos Bend State Park, Tx, USA
To celebrate Earth Day, I walked the Red Buckeye Trail at Brazos Bend State Park in Needville, Texas, USA. Red Buckeyes (Aesculus pavia) are beautiful bushes with red-tubular flowers in early spring. They provide an important food source for hummingbirds and bees. I also saw four juvinile Nine-banded Armadillos (Dasypus novemcinctus). This is the Texas state Small Mammal and is the only armadillo species in North America.
This video is the second episode of a three part-miniseries on camping at Brazos Bend State Park. The other two episodes are on Camouflage Camping / Riding a Trikke ( and Wetland Wildlife Observation (not yet uploaded ).
Videography by Ken Kramm, April 2013, Canon Vixia HF G10, Final Cut Pro X. Easy Lemon by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0.
Wetland Wildlife at Brazos Bend State Park, Tx, USA
To celebrate Earth Day, I observed wetland wildlife at Brazos Bend State Park in Needville, Texas, USA. It was fantastically beautiful, with a large variety of species. My camouflage clothing/mosquito netting allowed me watch the animals up-close and personal. This video is the third part of miniseries on camping at Brazos Bend. The other two episodes are on Camouflage Camping ( and Relaxing Woodland Walk (
Videography by Ken Kramm, April 2013, Canon Vixia HFG10, Final Cut Pro X. Music: Lightless Dawn by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0.
Arcadia by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0.
Static Motion by Kevin MacLeod is licensed under a CC Attribution 3.0.
Morning Snowflake by Kevin MacLeod, Originally recorded 2005, Public Domain,
Washington on the Brazos: Cradle of the Texas Republic
Historian Richard B. McCaslin discusses his book Washington on the Brazos: Cradle of the Texas Republic.
The saga of the Texas Republic begins on the west side of the Brazos River at Washington when a declaration of independence was approved on March 6, 1836. After approving this declaration of independence and constitution, the delegates fled as Santa Anna's army approached following the downfall of the Alamo.
The government of the Republic of Texas returned to Washington in 1842. After the United States annexed Texas in 1846, Austin became the capital of the Lone Star State because of its more central location.
A thriving river port during the 1850s, Washington remained a flourishing community with many buildings paid for from revenues from steamboat cargoes. The community declined at an accelerated rate when its leaders decided to rely on steamship traffic rather than invest in a rail line. Washington suffered a serious blow when the railroad bypassed it and the Civil War sealed its fate.
The Texas Centennial in 1936 and the efforts of citizens’ organizations beginning in the 1950s transformed this once-successful community into Washington-on-the-Brazos, the state historic site that serves today as the primary focus for preserving the history of the Republic of Texas.
Dr. Richard B. McCaslin is professor of history at the University of North Texas and is author of A Distant Thunder: The Civil War in the Trans-Mississippi and Fighting Stock: John S. Rip Ford of Texas (The Texas Biography Series). His book Tainted Breeze: The Great Hanging at Gainesville, Texas, was the Winner of the Coral Horton Tullis Memorial Prize and the topic of Dr. McCaslin’s dissertation at the University of Texas.
Snow Day in Manvel TX
Hey, it snowed in a place where it almost never snows!
Venomous Snakes of Texas - Texas Parks and Wildlife [Official]
Learn the difference between the two types of venomous snakes in Texas: the vipers (rattlensnakes, copperheads, cottonmouths and water moccasins) and the potent coral snake. To learn more about snakes, visit tpwd.state.tx.us/learning/junior_naturalists/snakefaq.phtml
Richmond, Rosenberg, Fort Bend county, Texas news story
Richmond / Rosenberg located in Fort Bend county, Texas. Classic news clip about one of the fastest growing communities in the U.S.
A trip to Tejas
Photo and Video tour of Houston, TX and surrounding Counties
Route 36 Bar And Dance Hall Rosenberg,tx 77471 (Always a Good Time!)
Route36Bar.com
Route 36 Bar and Dance Hall
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