Kfreeman16
New member
IN TEXAS?
Would you happen to know what the type of permit is? I've tried looking and I'm not seeing it.It is illegal to remove things from the state park without a permit from the director. Texas Administrative Code 59.134
Dead wood provides nutrients to the soil and shelter for the creatures that inhabit the parks.Its just dead wood! My goodness.
Try removing "dead" wood from Arizona's Petrified Forest. You won't like what happens.Its just dead wood! My goodness.
Probably what people leaving graffiti on rocks in parks say, too: "It's just a rock! My goodness."Its just dead wood! My goodness.
This reminds me of David Benjamin Hall and Glenn Tuck Taylor who destroyed a 20 million year old rock formation in Utah’s Goblin Valley and boasted about their criminal vandalism in a YouTube video.Probably what people leaving graffiti on rocks in parks say, too: "It's just a rock! My goodness."
Dumpkoff.
It does not matter that it's "just dead wood". What matters , legally, is that it is legally protected dead wood.Its just dead wood! My goodness.
Those rules are pretty much what I've seen as standard throughout the country - whether, national, state or county parks.It does not matter that it's "just dead wood". What matters , legally, is that it is legally protected dead wood.
https://tpwd.texas.gov/state-parks/parks/park-rules/
Note in particular what is stated about "Collecting" and "Firewood". Don't go out of your way to violate federal and state laws.