About the Author:
DAVID K. LANGFORD is former executive vice president of the Texas Wildlife Association and owner of Western Photography Company. He lives on the Laurels Ranch, his piece of the Hillingdon family land near Comfort. LORIE WOODWARD CANTU, of San Angelo, is president of Woodward Communications, a research, writing, and public relations company specializing in agriculture and natural resource issues.
Review:
“In Texas, 94 percent of the land is privately owned, so the future of the Lone Star State depends on the care of individual land owners. Hillingdon Ranch: Four Seasons, Six Generations tells the story of how one family's passionate stewardship translates into environmental benefits for our entire state. The Giles family's commitment to conservation is a model for all Texans as we work together to protect our state's clean air, clean water, wildlife habitats and magnificent natural landscapes.”—Mrs. Laura Bush, Former First Lady of Texas and the United States of America
(Mrs. Laura Bush 2013-06-06)
"Hillingdon Ranch: Four Seasons, Six Generations tells a story that is important to all Texans. Within its pages, you’ll discover how one family’s passionate stewardship of their land translates into environmental benefits for society as a whole. It is a story that plays out on ranch after ranch, and in family after family. While land stewards bear the direct responsibility, we can all work together to keep our legendary open spaces open and environmentally productive."--Nolan Ryan, Baseball Hall of Fame, rancher, and former Texas Parks and Wildlife Commissioner
(Nolan Ryan 2013-07-03)
null (George Strait 2013-07-29)
"More than a history of a Texas ranch, Hillingdon Ranch: Four Seasons, Six Generations is an allegory of a family and the land, how their stewardship for more than 100 years has sustained Hillingdon and how that land has nurtured and shaped Alfred Giles's descendants. . . Hillingdon Ranch is a rallying cry for urban and rural Texans to understand their intertwined fortunes and combine their substantial talents and energies towards ' . . . policies that conserve the common good, while protecting the heritage of private landowners.'"--Texas Wildlife (Texas Wildlife)
"A new book which is filled with more than 200 photographs... [and] has a strong environmental message that good stewardship of our open lands is key to the ecological health of the state...
The family also has played a crucial role in 'managing and improving watershed's condition...'
Langford [captures] numerous up-close images of cardinals, finches, woodpeckers, hummingbirds, warblers, wrens, and killdeer." -- Charles Ealy (Charles Ealy Austin American-Statesman 2013-12-29)
"If you're looking for the perfect coffee table book for yourself or to give for Christmas, you'd have a hard time finding a better one than this. It offers a multitude of color photos that bring to brilliant life the factual narrative about the 13,00-acre Hillingdon Ranch...
While Cantu's narrative is esssential to bringing together the multitude of color photographs, it will be the visual images that first capture the attention for those who open the book's covers... It is impossible to view just a few of Langford's photos without turning another, and still another page to see the next. It's a beautiful book. Buy it as a gift or for yourself, but either way, be sure to enjoy both the photographs and the text." --Marie Beth Jones (Marie Beth Jones The Facts)
“Langford and Cantu have recently combined their talents to produce a beautiful book, Hillingdon Ranch: Four Seasons, Six Generations, about land stewardship over six generations on a Texas Hill Country ranch. Most Texas Photographic books are just that, books of pretty photographs, but I learned something I didn’t know in each section from both Langford’s photograph’s and Cantu’s prose. If I were Going to give someone a book to explain how a modern ranch is run, this is the book I would give them. When I asked David Langford why he thought the Giles family had been such careful stewards of the land for so long, he said, “I think it has to do with continuity of ownership. When you’ve been the recipient of a great gift like this ranch you want to pass it on interact.” With Hillingdon Ranch: Four Seasons, Six Generations Langford and Cantu have passed that gift on to the public, and at a bargain price too.”—Lonn Taylor, the Big Bend Sentinel (Lonn Taylor 2014-02-06)
"Turning the pages of Hillingdon Ranch, readers will see both the beauty and the hardship of liver on the land. That mantle of responsibility has been handed down through the years to sons and daughters, who take the task of stewardship to heart." -- Stephanie M. Salinas, Texas Parks and Wildlife (Stephanie M. Salinas Texas Parks and Wildlife 2014-04-10)
"About this title" may belong to another edition of this title.