The Trailist: Historic Trueheart Ranch has mile-long trail, big plans

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The Trailist: Historic Trueheart Ranch has mile-long trail, big plans
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Opinion: The historic ranch's long-shuttered farmhouse, the abandoned equipment, overgrown pastures and orchards create a spooky vibe.

Restrooms:Visitors are currently allowed to walk right up to the farmhouse, a white building that “was said to be the first two-story rock house built on a Texas ranch,”to the San Antonio Conservation Society.

Nearby, visitors can also see a small shack labeled “scale house,” along with metal gates and corrals once used for livestock. The river authority has also opened a path that circumnavigates a former pecan orchard, a roughly mile-long route they named the Acequia Trail. It includes a path cutting through the circle from northeast to southwest. I started at a point downhill from the farmhouse, where pipes emerge from underground and lead to an empty concrete basin drained by a couple concrete ditches. Nearby stood a wooden building, half leaning over, surrounded with an orange barrier. Inside, I could see an old, white stove and the remnants of bedding left on the floor. Most of the 351-acre property remains closed to the public. Credit: Brendan Gibbons / San Antonio ReportThe trailhead continues past an open gate with a metal emblem of a longhorn head. On the ground nearby stood a stone marker that read: “Pecans Planted 1920-22, High Water Mark Sept. 27 — 46, C.A. Goeth & Sons.” It felt like a strange coincidence to be standing there on the exact date of this flood, 77 years later. The downpour killed four people and was known as the most severe flood in the city’s history at the time, surpassing the prior record flood of 1921. I later foundthat said that the flooding was mainly concentrated on the West Side Creeks. The San Antonio River “did little damage through the city” because of the Olmos Dam, built in the mid-1920s to protect wealthier downtown areas from flooding. Of the part of the river that includes Trueheart Ranch, the report stated that “although extensive flooding occurred downstream of the city, damages were relatively light as the flood plain is not well developed.” Still, the rising water clearly made enough of an impact on the Goeth family for them to mark the high water point in stone on their property. Though San Antonio has experienced many severe deluges since the flood of 1946, lack of water appears to have taken a greater toll on the pecan orchard since their planting a century ago. Only a few dead or struggling pecans remained, their bare branches reaching far above the mesquites and other small trees that have sprouted around them. On the north side of the Acequia Trail near one of the two trailheads, I found a couple girthy pecans that still looked healthy. The Goeth family bought the land in 1913 from the San Antonio Hunting and Fishing Association, which created the nearby duck sanctuary called Blue Wing Lake, according to a historical sign at the park. They cobbled together parcels from nearby properties until they had built up the acreage nearly to the original 800 acres that de la Garza deeded to his daughter when she married Trueheart in 1848. Fred Goeth and his wife even lived in the house from 1936 until he died in 1962. After that, the property changed hands multiple times, including to the now-defunct utility Bexar Metropolitan Water District. San Antonio-based OCI Solar Power owned it for three years, building its 573-megawattThe land has clearly seen many uses over the years, and its life as a park is only beginning. I’m excited to see what ends up happening with the property and what new trail miles it might offer as the park continues to be developed.

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