Looking for a sweet creek to explore? Wade up Bull Creek

Looking for a sweet creek to explore? Wade up Bull Creek

Chris LeBlanc relaxes in Bull Creek. Pam LeBlanc photo

Most parks around Austin have reopened, but actually getting in one lately can feel like trying to get a reservation at the most popular restaurant in town.
Day-use slots fill up quickly at state parks. Barton Springs requires a reservation (unless you go between 6-8 a.m.) and the Barton Creek Greenbelt is too crowded for comfort.
So where have I been getting my dose of Mother Nature? Lately, the far reaches of Bull Creek.
I used to slosh through Bull Creek when I was 8 or 9 years old, once cut a massive gash in my foot there during a day camp and had to be carried out, and got engaged on its banks when I was 33. The key these days is walking far enough up the creek that your only company is the tiny frogs, nesting sunfish and giant spiders.
If you park along Winding Ridge Boulevard, just on the west side of Capital of Texas Highway (the park has multiple entrances), you can walk down to the creek and wade upstream a quarter of a mile. Even on a busy Saturday, you probably won’t find many others beyond the area closes to the road. Look closely – up on the right bank, you can see the rusting hulk of an old, old car. Keep going and you’ll find plenty of big boulders to climb. The rock skipping’s great. So’s the fish watching.
If you want to kayak or canoe, you can access West Bull Creek from Lakewood Drive just north of FM 2222. Be careful where you walk – most of the land along the road is private property, and it’s marked No Trespassing. But if you turn left along the guardrail and follow the narrow trail toward the FM 2222 bridge, you can get to the deeper part of the creek. Put in boats under the bridge and paddle downstream, toward the fire station and County Line restaurant. Or wade through shallow water for a cool hangout spot upstream. (Again, stay in the creek; don’t wander onto privately owned land.)

Pam LeBlanc paddles a canoe in a cove near Pennybacker Bridge, where Bull Creek opens into Lake Austin. Chris LeBlanc photo


Downstream, the creek widens and you’ll emerge into a large cove that opens onto Lake Austin near the Pennybacker Bridge.
We took our Alumacraft canoe there recently, and loved jumping in the water and practicing getting back in the boat in deep water. We also saw a snake, so keep an eye peeled.
You never know what you’ll find. I’ve been spending a lot of time in the area lately, and have spotted a turtle the size of a pecan, a heron hunting for food and lots of minnows. The best part? Stretching out in a Pam-sized rut carved into the limestone bed and reveling in the feeling of water rushing over my skin.
For more information about Bull Creek District Park, go to https://austinparks.org/bull-creek/.

Chris LeBlanc cools off in Bull Creek. Pam LeBlanc photo

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Virtual launch of fly fishing book by local author set for Saturday

Virtual launch of fly fishing book by local author set for Saturday

Chris Johnson, left, and Aaron Reed, right, fly fish in Brushy Creek in early March 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo


A few months ago, I spent a few hours casting in Brushy Creek with local fly fisherman (and tugboat driver) Aaron Reed, and Chris Johnson, owner of Living Waters Fly Fishing in Round Rock.
We waded through knee deep water, hiked alongside a gorgeous grayish-white escarpment, and prowled after fish we could see lurking in the shadows. They caught a bunch; I got a few nibbles.
As we fished, we talked about Reed’s new book, “Fly Fishing Austin & Central Texas” (Imbrifex, $24.95), which includes tips about the best places and techniques for fishing right here at home.
The book arrived from the printer just as the coronavirus pandemic hit, and the book signing Reed had scheduled for May got postponed. This Saturday, he’d do a virtual launch of the guidebook with Davin Topel (Real Spirits Distilling) and Dustin Scott (Heart Wood Trade). The event starts at 5:30 p.m. on Scott’s site, https://heartwoodtrade.com/live/.

Aaron Reed will host a visual launch of his new fly fishing guide on Saturday. Pam LeBlanc photo


The show will celebrate the entire central Texas Fly Fishing community and will include giveaways, prizes and music. Special guests will include Alana Louise Lyons, Edgar Diaz, Josh Crumpton, Jeff Troutman, David Fason, Chris Johnson, Matt Bennett, Chris Barclay and others. The event is free and open to the public, and should last about 90 minutes.
And in case you needed a reminder, fly fishing is one of those activities that makes sense right now. You can do it away from crowds, in a safe, socially distant way. Plus, some quiet time in nature always soothes frayed nerves.

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Third Coast Cowboys finish strong at Louisiana border

Third Coast Cowboys finish strong at Louisiana border

The 3rd Coast Cowboys pull into Walter Umphrey Park outside Port Arthur on June 1, 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo


West Hansen pulled his kayak up the boat ramp at Walter Umphrey State Park in Port Arthur at about 5 p.m. Monday, stepped around a dead fish and greeted the small crowd of family members gathered there to cheer him in.
“Well, that’s done,” he said, 13 days of stubble bristling from his chin.
Hansen, 58, and four other paddlers left the tip of South Padre Island on May 20, then spent two days chugging through swells and chop in the Gulf of Mexico before shifting into the Intracoastal Waterway for the rest of the trip up the Texas coast. Tim Curry dropped out after four days, but the others – Jeff Wueste, Jimmy Harvey and Branndon Bargo – celebrated Monday afternoon by sharing stories and eating homemade chicken, potato salad and cookies in the shadow of the Sabine Lake Causeway Bridge between Texas and Louisiana. The 3rd Coast Cowboys Epic Kayak Journey covered 420 miles in all, and the kayakers paddled an estimated 65,000 to 70,000 strokes most days.

The team paddles past a barge in the Intracoastal Waterway near Matagorda, Texas. Pam LeBlanc photo


The paddlers spent their final night in cattle pens at a grassy crossing of the ICW about 5 miles northeast of the State Highway 124 bridge, lulled to sleep by croaking bull frogs, under the watchful gaze of a 6-foot alligator. Paddling into Port Arthur that last day, they went through another downpour, and steady headwinds.
“It was hard,” Harvey said while driving back to Austin a few hours later. “Today was a slog because the wind was blowing in our face all day and it felt like we were going upstream.”
Hansen originally guessed that the trip would take eight days; that stretched to 13 when the team encountered stiff winds, coastal squalls and swells so big they lost sight of one another. Instead of 50 miles – the distance Hansen covered on an average day during his 2012 Amazon Express expedition down the entire length of the Amazon River – they paddled closer to 35 miles.
“Was there ever a moment you wanted to quit?” someone asked Hansen as he feasted at the finish.
“Yeah, every one,” joked Hansen, his nose sunburned and lower back rubbed raw from his seat.
Besides challenging conditions in the Gulf, the team endured a series of storms, including one that wrecked several tents, swarms of mosquitos, and enough sticky ooze at one campsite to host a mud-wrestling competition. They also paddled alongside pods of dolphins, pitched tents on spoil islands covered in lush green and rust-colored grass, and watched serene sunrises and sunsets. One night Hansen sang songs from his tent; each morning they gathered for coffee before pushing back into the liquid highway. Along the way they swapped stories, tried to trip each other up with riddles, and pondered trivia questions.

The sun rises over a spoil island where the team camped along Matagorda Bay. Pam LeBlanc photo


They also met people, including a friendly fisherman who shared bags of fresh fruit, someone who needed a hand righting an overturned bathroom, and a constable who escorted the kayakers around a construction zone to replace the last operating swing bridge in the state. In the busy Galveston Harbor they paused to admire the three-masted Elissa, a tall sailing ship launched in 1877, before sprinting across the Galveston Ship Channel to Bolivar Peninsula, where they camped on a beach strewn with litter.

The team stops to admire the Elissa in the Galveston Harbor. Pam LeBlanc photo

Thirteen days into the adventure, the paddlers finished strong and looked happy.
I’m writing about the adventure for a statewide magazine. I’ll share details when it publishes.

West Hansen paddles through Matagorda Bay. Pam LeBlanc photo

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Clean shirts, rogue waves, and a family visit for kayakers paddling the Texas coast

Clean shirts, rogue waves, and a family visit for kayakers paddling the Texas coast

The team paddles under the SH 124 bridge between High Island and Winnie. Pam LeBlanc photo


It looks like West Hansen and the 3rd Coast Cowboys will roll into Sabine Pass sometime Monday afternoon, completing their kayaking trip from the southern tip of Texas to the Louisiana border in 13 days.
The four paddlers – Hansen, Jeff Wueste, Jimmy Harvey and Branndon Bargo – started this morning with a delivery of clean, fresh shirts from Game Guard Outdoor Outfitters, compliments of photographer Erich Schlegel, who handed out the gear before the guys climbed into their boats for the day. They looked ready for a formal sit-down dinner, complete with sandwiches spread with Grey Poupon.

Erich Schlegel hands out free clean shirts to the paddlers this morning. Pam LeBlanc photo


Other highlights of the day?
A massive suck followed by a major wave, delivered by a passing barge as the team broke for lunch at Rollover Pass. The wave flipped Jeff Wueste’s boat, dumping and flooding half his snacks. It also slurped up some of our shoes, assorted water bags, and Jeff’s just-opened can of tuna.
That didn’t matter to Schlegel, who fished the tin out of the water, swished it around in the murky brown channel to rid it of the worst germs, and tossed it back like a waiter at a fancy restaurant had just placed it in front of him. (I’m still waiting for the after effects of this move, but Schlegel still seems fairly perky as of 8:30 p.m.)
At about 5:30 p.m., the crew pulled into the State Highway 124 Bridge, where Hansen’s mother, two sisters, and brother-in-law had gathered to deliver water and barbecue sandwiches.

Ann Hansen, West Hansen’s mother, went to the SH 124 Bridge over the Intracoastal Waterway to deliver barbecue sandwiches and water to the team. Pam LeBlanc photo


From there the guys paddled another 5 miles and made camp on the side of the Intercoastal Waterway.
Schlegel and I fueled up at a Vietnamese restaurant in nearby Winnie, lost the will to camp, and are currently shacked up at the Motel 6.
We’re expecting the adventure to wrap sometime tomorrow afternoon, then I’ll head back to Austin. It’s been a crazy two weeks, but I’m going to miss this nomadic lifestyle.

Branndon Bargo, top, and Jimmy Harvey, bottom, nap during a lunch break on May 31. Pam LeBlanc photo

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Galveston in the rear view mirror, the 3rd Coast Cowboys aim for Sabine Pass

Galveston in the rear view mirror, the 3rd Coast Cowboys aim for Sabine Pass

The paddlers passed the tall ship Elissa this afternoon before heading across the Galveston Ship Channel. Pam LeBlanc photo

The 3rd Coast Cowboys wrapped up the 11th day of their trip by forging across the Galveston Ship Channel to Bolivar Peninsula, where they’re currently sacked out, amidst a field of trash and sand.
The paddlers – leader West Hansen, plus Jeff Wueste, Jimmy Harvey and Branndon Bargo – began today’s journey (not an expedition, and definitely not a cruise, but positively a journey, I’m told) at the western tip of Galveston Island.
I met up with them early afternoon at the end of Sportsman’s Road, where I tossed over a few jugs of water and some snacks purchased at the closest gas station. Harvey took his usual afternoon nap, and the others sipped instant coffee to boost their enthusiasm.
“I’m never fucking doing this again,” Hansen told me, but in a positive, upbeat way. Maybe he’ll do the same 385 miles in reverse direction next time.

.

Jimmy Harvey takes a quick nap during the team’s lunch break at the end of Sportsman’s Road on the west end of Galveston Island. Pam LeBlanc photo

I intercepted the team again a few hours later, in front of the tall ship Elissa, which launched in 1877 and now serves as a museum on Harborside Drive in Galveston. That ranked high on my excitement-o-meter, but the biggest accomplishment for the paddlers came in the form of the channel crossing.
The team got a fairly calm harbor, and bunched their four boats together before starting across the busiest stretch of waterway of the mini-expedition. Halfway across, they spotted a large reddish-orange freighter coming in from the Gulf, “just hauling ass right at us,” according to Hansen.

Jeff Wueste checks a paddle after cracking it on Saturday, May 30, 2020. Pam LeBlanc photo


They paused a moment, wondered if they could outrun it, then turned around and started to beat a hasty retreat to the Galveston side. After a few minutes, the ship passed, the guys rode out the wake, and continued their way across without further adieu.
“It took forever to make crossing – exactly forever, because we timed it,” Hansen said.
I’m planning to catch the 5 a.m. ferry to Bolivar Peninsula to meet up with them early tomorrow. Looks like they’ll make it to Sabine Pass late Monday or early Tuesday, where they plan to pull out at Walter Umphrey Park in Port Arthur.

Jimmy Harvey and Branndon Bargo prepare to head back into the water after a lunch break on Saturday, May 30. Pam LeBlanc photo


In the meantime, Hansen’s already dreaming about doing the trip again – only in a cabin cruiser, with an ice chest and a good supply of wine.
“I think that would be kind of neat,” he said.

Today’s “journey” took the guys through the Galveston harbor. Pam LeBlanc photo

About Pam

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