Trip reports and photos, anyone?

 

 

(I need 'em!).

 

 

 

Thanks,

 

Mark

 

 

 

From: Mike Walsh [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Thursday, March 15, 2012 10:19 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Texascavers] City of Austin Groundwater Awareness Week

 


Sylvia Pope with the City of Austin Watershed Department made
arrangement for the Austin Area television stations and the Austin
newspapers to come out to the Texas Cave Conservancy owned Avery Ranch
Cave on March 12th.   We had all of the Austin television stations with
camera crews filming on the surface and in the cave.  The local Fox
television station even did a live interview broadcast of the TCC
President, Mike Walsh, inside the cave. To see some of the interviews,
go online and enter:  Avery Ranch Cave.  


The TCC CAVE DAY on Saturday April 14th was promoted on the interviews.
We expect record turnout so we need a number of cavers to assist us.
Christopher Francke will be in charge of CAVE DAY this year.  Contact
him if you are available to help on Saturday April 14th:  512-567-7853
[email protected]   Caving will be available for volunteers on Sunday
the 15th.  The TCC will have camping available the entire weekend. 


 Mike Walsh


 


Austin-area cave tour points to groundwater use


BENJAMIN WERMUND, Austin American-Statesman  Copyright 2012 Austin
American-Statesman. All rights reserved. This material may not be
published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
<http://www.chron.com/news/article/Austin-area-cave-tour-points-to-groun
dwater-use-3405371.php#license-4f6208f111b0c>  


BENJAMIN WERMUND, Austin American-Statesman


 Wednesday, March 14, 2012 


AUSTIN, Texas (AP) - Nestled in a three-lot patch of land in the middle
of the Avery Ranch neighborhood is a concrete and metal hatch the
entrance and only sign of an ancient, dripping cave of glistening
caramel-colored, calcite-covered limestone beneath.

Hundreds of similar karst caverns - about 750 in Williamson County alone
- honeycomb the Central Texas landscape. Water from the ground above
seeps through the soil, drips down the walls of the caves and into the 
Edwards Aquifer
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Edwards+Aquifer%22> . It then empties
through springs back into creeks and streams on the surface.

"It's all connected," said Mike Walsh
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Mike+Walsh%22> , president of the Texas
Cave Conservancy
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Texas+Cave+Conservancy%22> , which owns
the Avery Ranch land that covers the cave.

Avery Ranch Cave feeds water to springs that are home to the Jollyville
salamander - a candidate for the endangered species list and a source of
tension between Williamson County officials, federal officials and
environmental groups.

One such spring nearby is home to a "healthy" population of the
critters, an official said Tuesday.

Walsh and other officials were in far Northwest Austin at the cave
Tuesday as part of a city-sponsored event promoting Groundwater
Awareness Week. More than 50,000 Austin residents rely on groundwater,
city officials said. Most cities in Williamson County provide residents
a mix of groundwater and surface water, according to a representative
for the Brazos River Authority
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Brazos+River+Authority%22> , which serves
much of the county.

The Avery Ranch cavern was closed off for thousands of years before a
crew attempting to put in sewer lines discovered it in 2001. The U.S.
Fish and Wildlife Service
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22U.S.+Fish+and+Wildlife+Service%22>  then
granted the cave conservancy a contract to develop the site as an
educational show cave. It's open to the public twice a year; April 14 is
the next day for visitors.

Walsh's group helps maintain caves for entities that include Cedar Park,
the Brushy Creek Municipal Utility District and the Williamson County
Conservation Foundation
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Williamson+County+Conservation+Foundation
%22> .

"Cedar Park is very critical to the watershed," Walsh said. He explained
that water that enters one Cedar Park cave system - the roughly
1-square-mile Buttercup Creek watershed - flows through a series of
underground streams and then surfaces in springs in the Volente area.

Those springs feed Cypress Creek, which flows into Lake Travis, from
which much of Austin gets its water, Walsh said.

Water from Avery Ranch Cave also feeds a dozen springs in the area,
several of which are home to the Jollyville salamander - one of two
species of salamander that call the county home.

Officials have been fighting the potential endangered species listing,
arguing the county can maintain the species without federal regulation,
which they fear will inhibit development in the ever-growing county.

One spring, at the Avery Ranch Golf Course, supports a healthy
population of salamanders, said Sylvia Pope
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Sylvia+Pope%22> , a hydrogeologist for
the city. She said the public golf course is irrigated with water from
Brushy Creek and has a pest management system that's actually helped the
ecosystem.

"Avery Ranch has done a great job," Pope said.

Laurie Dries, a salamander biologist at the City of Austin, said
salamanders are important because they are good indicators of water
quality.

"This whole karst aquifer system is a sensitive system because water
runs through it so quickly," Dries said. "Those species are adapted to
live in that environment, so how they're doing tells us a lot about the
water."

The city is promoting Groundwater Awareness Week to remind residents to
use "green" gardening habits - such as using natural compost, as opposed
to chemical-heavy fertilizers - and emphasize that residents should
clean up messes, from motor oil to dog waste, said Wendy Morgan
<http://www.chron.com/?controllerName=search&action=search&channel=news&;
search=1&inlineLink=1&query=%22Wendy+Morgan%22>  of the city's
groundwater protection department.

"All of that moves through these rocks and becomes part of the
groundwater."

 

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