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Spring Lake Natural Area

4.6 (11 reviews)

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Brent L.

This is my favorite San Marcos trail system. There's a waterfall (OK, it's more of a water cascade) on Centipede Trail and two more on Roadrunner - one of them is exactly where Porcupine turns into Roadrunner, and the other one is west of Grey Fox just a bit (left on the map for those that are Cardinally Challenged) The Tonkawa and Blue Stem trails are easy, but I'd consider the rest of the trails moderate. These trails aren't heavily trafficked, and if you get creative, you can get a good 5-6 miles in. Some parts of the trail get muddy, and stay muddy for over a week after a rain. Most of the trails are in the woods and shaded. Trail signage is pretty darned good, there's only a couple of unmarked trails. Parking at the Meadows Center is free on weekends but $3 on weekdays. You can also park free at the Lime Kiln trailhead (685 Lime Kiln Road) but there's only 10 parking spots. Print a trail map out before you go:: https://gato-docs.its.txstate.edu/the-rivers-institute/MCWE_NEW_SITE/SLNAgallery/SpringLakeNaturalArea.pdf How to find the trailhead: If you're parking at the Meadows Center, cross the street and walk toward the two buildings with trucks parked at them. They look like houses, but they're actually Texas State maintenance buildings. Walk between these two buildings and you'll find it. Restrooms available at the Meadows Center and there's a porta potty at the Lime Kiln trailhead.

Becky B.

I love this place. You can walk short or long trails. It's hilly on the escarpment side, flat on the Blackland Praire side. There's a little creek and beautiful little falls if there's no drought at the time. Trails are a bit confusing so pay attention. Very few people on these trails compared to Purgatory.

Month tablet accompanying Sun Dial numbers at the top of Tonkawa trail
E S.

Lime Kiln Entrace Review This park promotes Hiking and Biking and has no river access. It is not wheelchair accessible. There is a port-a-potty and mutt mitt station at this entrance. No water fountains at all. Somebody: Are there things you think San Marcos doesn't do well? Me: Yeah, promote it's other parks well. Like, zero percent brown signs pointing to trails. There's blatant intention to keep long and short-term residents from parks away from the river. Today after exploring the city's parks and rec website, I ventured out to this Natural Area aka a PARK. I'm a short term resident (student-ish) here and I was just wondering if there was somewhere else to take my dog to other than the perpetually muddy, ambiguously routed, and mosquito ridden Purgatory Creek at the Prospect Entrance or bland dog park. So I've wondered what San Marcos does with that park and rec money, since the parks near the river are kinda meh, and now I know. They put into these natural areas. It rained this morning so we encountered mud and more mud, going up the right Encorya (sp?) trail and coming back down on the left Heroin trail. It's kind of a insult having all that mulch piled up at the entrance after encountering the mud. However reaching Tonkawa Trail was awesome, there was actually a sun dial and calender slab at the top of the hill and the paths became paved and pebble covered. The Tonkawa trail runs for 2 miles to the Meadows center, which by the look of things is pretty inaccessible and easily missed. There was no definitive signage I could see from the road telling anyone they were near a park trail. Walking from the entrance, Meadows, and back it was 4 miles so it was a good leisure hike. However back at the top of the hill where the sun dial was you could actually go down another trail that took you all the way to North LBJ! So when I find the time I will go to that entrance and see what the area is like. Can't wait for the weather to dry up so me and the pup, can have another opportunity out there. Edit: 6:18:15: North LBJ entrance is closed and in the worst location possible. It's immediately behind those colorful townhouse apartments they squeezed onto LBJ before it becomes a residential area. I barely noticed it until I saw some of those prism boulders the city uses at all the parks down the road. This entrance is so narrow, I mistook it as an entrance to the apartment complex or a place for a dumpster to go in and haul trash. It looks like there's barely any parking there, just a few spots. I already know they have problems with students parking there and going to school. Definitely not using that or the Meadows entrance.

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11 months ago

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2 years ago

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3 years ago

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7 years ago

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7 years ago

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6 years ago

Love this spot. I hike Purgatory Creek more because it's closer to my house, but I honestly prefer this trail system.

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John J Stokes San Marcos River State Park

John J Stokes San Marcos River State Park

4.5(2 reviews)
2.4 mi

Love coming here & just listening to the water. Good views. Some good areas to sit & hang out…read more Limited space in my opinion to hang out but love taking the dogs for a walk out here. Parking can be difficult sometimes but overall it is a nice park. Hoping they will re-open the other side of it at some point.

You know those scenes in movies where kids are swinging off old ropes into a shady river while…read moretheir friends are making out downstream, and you think, "Where did these punks find such a cool and private place to hang?" Well, congrats, you just found that place via Yelp. John Stokes park is wedged between farmland on the other side of I35, down the narrow and unsuspecting Cape street. Even on a Sunday, the park wasn't so busy that there was nowhere to sit or have to ourselves, and the people there made a comfortable mix of college kids, adults, and families. The best part of the park is the 30ft high, man-made waterfall that drops into a sort of cove. A perfect touch. Chances are, you'll see fearless kids flipping from the falls into the water below, which is at least a sight to see, if you are not the daredevil type. There are also park benches here for eating, drinking, or talking. If you live here in town, forget the Sewell Park swimsuit competition. Forget the Cheatam Street theme park crowd. John Stokes state park is the best place to experience and enjoy the San Marcos river. Tip: Much of this river park is tree-lined, so if you need direct sunlight to enjoy swimming in the cool river water, visit around noon when the sun is overhead.

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John J Stokes San Marcos River State Park - Yakers.....

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John J Stokes San Marcos River State Park - John Stokes San Marcos River Park

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Blanco Shoals Park - Map of the park

Blanco Shoals Park

3.8(4 reviews)
1.8 mi

I was looking for a fishing spot, away from everyone. This is it. I didn't catch anything, but it…read morewas a nice, quiet, and peaceful day. If you want to get away from the noise of the city for a while, I highly recommend this quaint park. I spent several hours here and only saw a couple of people. The trails are great. For a nice walk and/or take a pet. Although it's requested to clean up after yourself, I was disappointed to see trash. There's a small free parking lot (gravel) at the beginning of that particular entrance.

I do really love this park, I come here all the time. It's super quiet and a great example of the…read morenative habitat in the area (post oak Savannah). However it's developed a bit of an off leash dog program. There's poop left everywhere, and dogs running loose despite the numerous environmental issues caused by off leash dogs, the citywide leash las, and the rule stated on the front sign. I even saw someone who let their cats run loose the other day who asked me to avoid a large section of the park with my (leashed) dogs. I would have been happy to, provided they were also leashed. And of course the people who let their dogs off leash aren't concerned about other people in the park so they'll yell and curse at you if you ask them to call their dog or try to defend yourself from a strange dog barreling at you across the field. It's happened several times. I bring my dogs on a long line and they get to run around and explore to their hearts content without increasing erosion, lowering biodiversity, or being rude to other park goers. The city really needs to take some responsibility for enforcing responsible pet ownership laws.

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Blanco Shoals Park - Relaxing and fishing

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Parking lot

Spring Lake Natural Area - parks - Updated May 2026

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