
Pixie Preserve
The North American Butterfly Association (NABA) is now the proud owner of the property formerly known as Chihuahua Woods, which we have renamed Pixie Preserve. Although it is relatively close to the National Butterfly Center, NABA's flagship project just 6 miles east in Mission, Texas, the Pixie Preserve seems a world apart. There is an old-growth ebony forest that is the last known nesting site of Hook-billed Kites in the United States. There is a barretal habitat that used to boast a large population of Longflower Tuberose, host plant for endangered Manfreda Giant-Skippers. There are a multitude of interesting native plants such as Jerusalem Thorn (palo verde), Saffron Plum (coma), Lotebush, Coyotillo, Brushland Shrubverbena (brushland lantana) and Crown of Thorns growing here that have never been very successful at the center, and last — but not least — more than three times the acreage to plant with a diversity of native host and nectar plants to support wild, free-flying butterflies.

With almost twenty incredible years invested in the fantastic experiment that is the National Butterfly Center, it is clear that educating people and equipping them to restore and rewild the land is just not enough — NABA and our members must take responsibility for more: We must create butterfly and native plant sanctuaries large enough to sustain species in meaningful numbers in order to advance our mission and accomplish our stated goal. Please join us on this new adventure. We want you to have a hand in the prosperity of Pixie Preserve, so that our natural treasures may remain a viable inheritance for generations to come.
