Hit the brakes, Dallas City Hall, on fighting invasive beetle by logging in Trinity Forest
Naturalist and watchdog Ben Sandifer makes a strong case for why doing nothing may be a better strategy than cutting out green ash trees.
Dormant ash and willow trees line the banks where White Rock Creek meets the Trinity River in the epicenter of the Great Trinity Forest.(Lynda M. González / Staff Photographer)
I hiked Wednesday into a southern Dallas spot rarely visited by us two-legged creatures: the remote epicenter of the Great Trinity Forest, where the wild end of White Rock Creek glides into the Trinity River.