Grab a cold one at pop-up beer garden on the Butler Trail

Grab a cold one at pop-up beer garden on the Butler Trail

sonya jevette at pop up beer garden Live music and beer will be available at the pop-up beer garden. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation[/caption]

Most folks head to the Butler Trail on Lady Bird Lake to work up a sweat, but on Oct. 9 and 10 they can grab a cold one at a pop-up beer garden, too.

The temporary beer garden at Sand Beach Park will be open from noon to 7 p.m. both days. The event coincides with the second weekend of ACL Fest at nearby Zilker Park.

Tickets are $50 for adults and $10 for children. Inside the garden, at 111 Sandra Muraida Way near the Open Room Austin picnic table, attendees can enjoy live music, food, and local beer.

Read more: Head to San Antonio for cultural arts exhibits this fall

Texas Beer Co., Fairweather Cider, Truly Hard Seltzer and Miller Lite will provide drinks. Non-alcoholic tea, sparkling water, and still water will also be available, courtesy of Weird Beverages.

Tje Austin and Zach Morgan, Sonya Jevette, Monk’s Jazz, Mariachi Relampago and others will perform.

Everyone who enters the garden must complete a health screening questionnaire within 72 hours prior to the event. Masks must be worn, except when eating or drinking. Tables will be placed 6 feet apart, with no more than 10 guests per table.

Proceeds will benefit The Trail Foundation, a non-profit organization that works to protect, enhance and connect the 10-mile Ann and Roy Butler Hike-and-Bike Trail at Lady Bird Lake.

For tickets, go here. 

 

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The Trail Foundation’s gala goes socially distant this year

The Trail Foundation’s gala goes socially distant this year

The Trail Foundation’s biggest fund-raiser of the year is adopting an in-person, socially-distant look this year.
The Twilight on the Trail gala will take place in three outdoor sessions Nov. 1, at the Four Seasons Hotel. Tables of various sizes will be arranged on the lawn, with plenty of space between them.
Guests can stroll the Butler Hike-and-Bike Trail before or after their session to enjoy pop-up performances from the foundation’s Austin Black Artist Music Series. Food and beverages will be served table side to avoid crowds at bars or food stations, and guests will be required to wear masks when not seated.
Sessions are scheduled for 3-4 p.m., 4:30-5:30 p.m., and 6-7 p.m. outside the Four Seasons Hotel Austin, 98 San Jacinto Boulevard
The event helps raise funds to protect and enhance the trail.
Tables for two, four or six people are available, starting at $500 for two, and can be purchased here. Those who don’t want to attend in person can have food and drink delivered on the same evening. Sponsorships are also available.

The Trail Foundation’s Twilight on the Trail fund-raiser (show here pre-pandemic) will take place in three outdoor sessions this year. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation

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Butler Trail updates: New bathrooms, a new deck, floating islands and cheese for a cause

Butler Trail updates: New bathrooms, a new deck, floating islands and cheese for a cause

A new deck and rain gardens has opened near the Four Seasons Hotel. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation

And now, some updates about the Butler Hike and Bike Trail, which for the moment remains open …
• First, you’ve got one more spot to pee, people. The new Festival Beach restroom has opened, replacing a crappy (sorry) facility at Edward Rendon Sr. Metro Park.
• You’ve also got a new place to take a different kind of break. A new deck has opened on the north side of the river, next to the Four Seasons Hotel. The unofficially-named Brazos Bluffs area features bench seating, rain gardens and behind-the-scenes infrastructure to prevent erosion. The project cost $438,000, according to Heidi Cohn, executive director of The Trail Foundation.
• Antonelli’s Cheese Shop will host a virtual cheese tasting on July 17, with a portion of proceeds benefitting the Trail Foundation. The “Cheese 1010: The Seven Styles of Cheese” class will costs is $40. Participants will pick up their cheese plates curbside the day of the event. (Wine pairings are also available.) The hour-long class will be followed by a 15-minute question and answer session, all done via video conferencing.
• Notice those floating islands of vegetation at the east end of Lady Bird Lake? Those aren’t lily pads, they’re wetland structures that provide habitat for plants and animals, and help with carbon sequestration, water quality and temperature regulation. The foundation installed the structures in February.

A new restroom has opened on the Butler Trail at Fiesta Gardens. Photo courtesy The Trail Foundation

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Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run goes virtual – and the trail will remain one-way at least through May

Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run goes virtual – and the trail will remain one-way at least through May

That’s me, posing with an unidentified runner, at the 2018 Moonlight Margarita Run. This year’s race is going virtual. Photo from 2018 race by Chris LeBlanc


The Trail Foundation’s biggest fund-raiser of the year, the Maudie’s Moonlight Margarita Run, is going virtual.

That means you can run the 5K race on your own time, wherever you want. The party half of the event will take place in October, and everyone who registers and runs the virtual race now will get a couple of free drinks then.
“Apart but together we can still celebrate the Trail while keeping our city safe,” said Heidi Anderson, director of The Trail Foundation, a non-profit organization that works to maintain and improve the beloved 10-mile Butler Hike and Bike Trail around Lady Bird Lake. “The Trail Foundation is grateful to everyone who is registering and supporting our efforts to ensure the Trail is in the best condition possible, even during these unprecedented times.”
These unprecedented times, in case you haven’t heard, have meant a temporary conversion of the Butler Trail to a one-way route. People are discouraged from using the trail at all right now, because it’s difficult to maintain a 6-foot social distance on narrow stretches of the pathway, but asked to travel clockwise if they choose to do so.
“The trail, at the Austin Parks and Recreation Department’s direction, will remain one-way at least through the end of May, and then they will re-evaluate,” Anderson said. “Our counters actually show that the majority of folks are complying. Depending on the day, between 75 and 85 percent of folks are moving clockwise.”
In the meantime, the one-way signs that were put up a few weeks ago are still disappearing. Another round of signs to replace them will go up today and Thursday. (Seriously, folks. Leave the signs alone. It’s a waste for the foundation to use its donations to keep replacing signs torn down, thrown away or swiped as souvenirs.)
As for the race, once you register online at https://eventdog.com/a/eventpage.php?eID=31787&refData=website, the foundation will send you links to create a virtual bib and submit your results. Everyone who signs up gets a T-shirt, and the first 700 will get a $10 Maudie’s Tex-Mex gift card.
You can run or walk any route you choose – on road, trail, treadmill or track – as many times as you want between June 4 (that’s the day after Global Running Day) and July 4. Send in your best time to compete against other virtual participants.
I try to do the race every year. I love the combination of fun and food, and the festive, outdoor atmosphere. I hope to see you at the October party.

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Trail Foundation reminds users – electric scooters not allowed on Butler Trail

Trail Foundation reminds users – electric scooters not allowed on Butler Trail

Annoyed by electric scooters buzzing around the Butler Hike-and-Bike Trail?

The Trail Foundation has teamed with Austin’s Beef and Pie Productions to create a social media campaign reminding people that electric scooters are banned on the trail, a 10-mile loop around Lady Bird Lake.

The Foundation is also selling limited edition “No scooters on the Trail” T-shirts for $20 via its website, www.thetrailfoundation.org.

The Trail Foundation is selling No Scooters on the Trail T-shirts.

“We’re asking our friends to become walking billboards with the message that electric scooters are not allowed on the Butler Trail,” Heidi Anderson, executive director of The Trail Foundation, said in a press release.

People who see e-scooters on the trail are asked to report them to the City of Austin by dialing 311.

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