| Landowner noted for being an ace steward
SAN ANGELO TIMES
By MATT PHINNEY, mphinney@sastandardtimes.com
or 659-8253
June 26, 2005

Standard-times photos by PATRICK DOVE
Mary, the ranch dog at the Treadwell
Brady Ranch, cools herself in a water tank between two open
pastures that once were overgrown with mesquite and cedar.
Brian Treadwell, owner and operator of the 7,930-acre ranch
straddling Menard and McCulloch counties, received the Lone
Star Land Steward Award for his efforts in land and animal
conservation. The award is given by the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department and is designed to educate landowners and the public
and to encourage participation in habitat conservation. |

Standard-times photos by PATRICK DOVE
Treadwell talked with ranch hand Felix Reynas
before going out to mend some fencing in a pasture. His ranchs
main sources of income are cattle and hunting. |

Standard-times photos by PATRICK DOVE
Brian Treadwell loads his horse Elmer onto
a trailer before heading out to a pasture to move cattle to
the next pasture. Treadwell clears portions of his land of
mesquite and cedar trees to make way for lush grass pastures. |
MCCULLOCH/MENARD COUNTIES - According to conventional
wisdom, today's trophy whitetail deer are grown behind high fences
and stuffed full of enough protein supplement to choke a prized
show cow.
That costs money, and Brian Treadwell said he doesn't
have much of it. But he does have some time and a lot of patience.
Instead of quick fixes, he uses a detailed habitat
management program that allows his land to get the most of what
Mother Nature has to offer.
Treadwell, 35, and his father, John Treadwell, were
awarded the Lone Star Land Steward Award for the Edwards Plateau
Region last month at a ceremony in Austin. The award recognizes
ranchers for exceptional efforts in range and habitat management.
The award-winning ranch encompasses about 8,000 acres
in southwest McCulloch County and northeast Menard County.
''We don't feed anything, because we don't have to,''
he said. ''You can run with (Mother Nature), but you can't compete
with her. We attract deer because we have a better program. We grow
every bit as big of deer as the people that feed or have high fences.''
This is the 10th year the Texas Parks and Wildlife
Department handed out the stewardship award, said Linda Campbell,
private lands and public hunting program coordinator. Private landowners
are crucial in protecting wildlife habitat, she said, because 94
percent of the land in Texas is privately owned.
The award honors those who enhance the habitat and
is meant to provide an example that other landowners can follow,
she said.
''We want to honor them for their dedication,'' Campbell
said. ''They have a tremendous amount of dedication because they
have to stick it out for a long time.''
Brian Treadwell graduated from Southern Methodist University
in 1992 with an advertising degree. Growing up in Dallas, he spent
his summers on a ranch in Fort McKavett that his family has owned
more than 100 years.
His first career took him across the country filming
hunting television shows. He spent 18 months on the road during
which he realized hunting in the Hill Country is some of the best
in the country.
Traveling also taught him he wanted to have a place
to call home.
He and his father bought the land at the end of 1998,
wanting a place to run cattle and market a hunting program. They
found the land, which was two ranches at the time, along the San
Saba River. The land had been degraded by heavy sheep grazing.
Buying land that seemed overused turned out to be a
blessing for the family because it allowed them to repair the land
into something they wanted.
The Treadwells' management plan consists of clearing
strips of mesquite and cedar trees, rotational grazing and prescribed
burning, which is widely considered one of the best and least expensive
means of rejuvenating native grasses.
Fire opens the ground and adds nutrients to the soil,
Brian Treadwell said. The fire also helps control brush that competes
with grass for ground moisture.
When the family took over the ranch, there was so little
grass that Brian and John had to walk through the pasture burning
any clumps of grass they could find one at a time. Brian now can
burn about 400 acres in an hour and a half.
The Treadwells burn around 2,500 acres of land each
year, he said. They burn close to 2,000 acres in the winter and
the rest in the summer months, he said.
''I think this year is when we really started seeing
the improvements,'' he said. ''Maybe I can start playing golf again.
It's very rewarding seeing the changes we make on our land - doing
something and seeing the results.''
Brian Treadwell is a member of the Menard County Wildlife
Co-Op, a group of landowners that got together in 2003 to carry
out management recommendations to grow larger whitetail bucks. There
are 57 landowners in the group covering 188,691 acres, more than
one-third of the county.
Treadwell drove through a pasture last week that had
been burned in February, and the land had already been replenished
with green grass.
Treadwell also refuses to use herbicide or pesticide
to control brush.
''We work at it pretty hard,'' Treadwell said. ''That's
our job. The more work we do on habitat will return us more money
on our investment and income. By evaluating the land, the amount
of grass cover I have lets me know if I have too many cows or not
enough cows. If grass is all eaten up, I'm doing something wrong
with the cattle. Then I have to adjust accordingly.''
Treadwell has 350 cows.
Habitat management helps Treadwell increase his deer
herd with no supplemental feeding. About 300 whitetail
deer lived on the two ranches when he bought the land. There are
now more than 1,000 deer, he said.
The constant improvements have probably tripled the
land's value, Treadwell said. He is also a land broker and owner
of Treadwell Ranch & Recreation Investments.
The Treadwells started making changes on the ranch
during an extensive drought, said Jerry Kidd, McCulloch County Texas
Cooperative Extension Agent. The ranch has gotten some good rain,
and the improvements they have made are becoming evident, Kidd said.
''It's quite impressive what they have accomplished
since they've been out there and turned around the ecosystem they
have,'' Kidd said. ''The proof is really coming out. It's quite
impressive when you get into the operations and see what they are
trying to get done.''
To Treadwell, it's just part of the job.
''We knew what a ranch could produce and we what we
could do with our deer hunting,'' he said. ''The only real question
was, how do we manage and improve the ranch?
''... It's quite an honor and culmination of all our
efforts. By us focusing on managing the habitat instead of worrying
about cow herd and deer herd, we think about what can we do for
the ranch, and the cow herd and deer herd work out.' |