

Our final stop for the day was Whole Foods. It’s much bigger than the ones in NC and has more prepared foods. Also, there are several little bars throughout for people to sit, eat and drink, but we got our food and left.

We had only a few minutes to visit the Johnson City settlement on our way back to Austin, but I got to see a couple longhorns real close.

Then we picnicked in the massive Zilker Metropolitan Park along the river. After lunch, we went to look at Barton Springs, a huge, natural pool fed by water from an aquifer. It looked cold, but people were swimming. We parked near the Nature Center, got out our bikes and started along the Town Lake Hike & Bike Trail. The trail is mostly hard-packed dirt.
It undulates up and down with some steep hills, easy for David, challenging but doable for me. I figured David could go around twice while I did it once. It’s very pretty along the river with lush vegetation and trees and a few pedestrian bridges to get across the river. David went on ahead but then waited for me because he was confused by the trail. So we stayed together the rest of the time. We saw only two maps along the way. Once away from the popular pretty section, it gets confusing. We found ourselves riding on sidewalks next to a busy road. This can’t be right, we thought. We saw a young woman with red hair jogging ahead of us. When we caught up with her, I asked her if this was the trail. She assured me it was and said it was the “ugly section.”
Then she pointed out where we would turn back to the river. In fact, she ended up helping us several times because we would take a wrong turn or stop to try to figure out where to go, and she would catch up. At one point you must go across a dam and then take a sharp right, go by a power plant and around a baseball field. I stopped to take photos and she caught up with us again. If she hadn’t been there to direct us, we probably would have gotten lost.
There were almost no directional signs, and the few there were weren’t much help or even misleading. There were even a few trail detours around construction. Eventually we got back on the popular and green part of the trail where a lot of people were walking, jogging or bicycling. So, after 2 hours and over 10 miles, we made it back. It was 4:30. David said it was enough. He put up the bikes, and we walked over to the Nature Center but had only 10 minutes to take a quick look before they closed.
Our final stop was the Zilker Botanical Gardens, which stays open later. We walked around about an hour, encountering surprises and treats at every turn--a dinosaur statue, a waterfall, a Japanese lantern, paving-stone paths with stepping stones over little streams, a rose-covered arbor, butterfly chairs, some historic buildings....
It was delightful, one of the best botanical gardens I’ve seen. Oh, and some flowers were blooming! We left around 6:00 to find a place to park to watch a million or so Mexican free-tail bats fly out en masse from under Congress Street bridge, but the few free parking spots were taken, and we didn’t want to pay $5 to park.
I had seen them many years ago and pointed out the bridge when we rode under it. It was still early for them to appear, and David was content to see them on YouTube. Our quick tour of Austin was over, but we’ll be back!
It undulates up and down with some steep hills, easy for David, challenging but doable for me. I figured David could go around twice while I did it once. It’s very pretty along the river with lush vegetation and trees and a few pedestrian bridges to get across the river. David went on ahead but then waited for me because he was confused by the trail. So we stayed together the rest of the time. We saw only two maps along the way. Once away from the popular pretty section, it gets confusing. We found ourselves riding on sidewalks next to a busy road. This can’t be right, we thought. We saw a young woman with red hair jogging ahead of us. When we caught up with her, I asked her if this was the trail. She assured me it was and said it was the “ugly section.”
Then she pointed out where we would turn back to the river. In fact, she ended up helping us several times because we would take a wrong turn or stop to try to figure out where to go, and she would catch up. At one point you must go across a dam and then take a sharp right, go by a power plant and around a baseball field. I stopped to take photos and she caught up with us again. If she hadn’t been there to direct us, we probably would have gotten lost.
There were almost no directional signs, and the few there were weren’t much help or even misleading. There were even a few trail detours around construction. Eventually we got back on the popular and green part of the trail where a lot of people were walking, jogging or bicycling. So, after 2 hours and over 10 miles, we made it back. It was 4:30. David said it was enough. He put up the bikes, and we walked over to the Nature Center but had only 10 minutes to take a quick look before they closed.

It was delightful, one of the best botanical gardens I’ve seen. Oh, and some flowers were blooming! We left around 6:00 to find a place to park to watch a million or so Mexican free-tail bats fly out en masse from under Congress Street bridge, but the few free parking spots were taken, and we didn’t want to pay $5 to park.

1 comment:
Still loving the pictures. Sounds like you had a good time. Saw stuff I've not seen. The bot. garden will be seen on my next time there. Brenda
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