All older cavers and I as an early spelunker remember fondly the
Annandale Ranch sign over the gate on highway 127 which was an
indication that we were approaching Concan, paradise on the Frio River.
My "discovery" of Concan was in 1950 but other than touring Carlsbad
Caverns as a kid of 10 or 12 on a YMCA tour, my first wild cave was Frio
Bat Cave on the Annandale Ranch in about 1952 at age 17. During those
years the wooden tracks and rails were still in place, along with
several rusty steel mining carts which I presume may have been left from
the guano mining operation during and after the War Between the States.
I still think that Frio Cave ranks high on the list for impressive
entrances and main room, not to mention probably the state's second
largest Mexican Freetail colony. This is my favorite part of our unique
and beautiful state. In the same area of 127 is the Stoner's Big Tree
Ranch with beautiful Frio River frontage and home to what I believe to
be the largest Bald Cypress tree in the state. I have not seen the
cypress elsewhere on the Frio River that claims to be larger but from
the picture, I doubt this claim. Enough rambling but I am glad to see
this protection for the aquifer watershed and this large undeveloped
tract. The Frio is The Hill Country's most beautiful river but is being
somewhat spoiled by the development explosion between Concan and Leakey.

Fritz Holt,  member of TSA and TCMA and proud father of Mandy and Jenny
Holt.

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
Sent: Friday, July 13, 2007 12:30 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [Texascavers] Another successful effort to protect the Edwards
Aquifer :

 

Note:  Many cavers will recognize the Annandale Ranch as a past caver
destination in Uvalde County.

 

Aquifer will be a little safer 


Web Posted: 07/10/2007 11:35 PM CDT


Jerry Needham
Express-News 

It took months for the surveyor to find all the old rock piles marking
survey points on the huge Annandale family ranch, but paperwork finally
was approved Tuesday that forever will protect the ranch from the urban
development that's overrunning much of the recharge zone of the Edwards
Aquifer. 

Trustees of the San Antonio Water System agreed in their monthly meeting
to pay $4 million for a conservation easement on 7,553 acres of the
ranch north of Uvalde that has been owned by the same family for almost
120 years. 

The purchase makes 11,518 acres of the approximately 12,500-acre ranch
protected under conservation easements - agreements that strictly limit
future development. SAWS, the Edwards Aquifer Authority and the Nature
Conservancy teamed up in 1999 to protect almost 4,000 acres of the
ranch. 

"There's a tremendous amount of recharge occurring in this area, and
that's recharge that's coming toward San Antonio," said Bruce Haby, SAWS
corporate real estate manager. 

"The ranch has 41/2 miles of frontage on the Frio River, but in an
average year, water never makes it through the ranch" because it drops
through the fractured limestone river bottom into the aquifer, he said. 

The appraised value of the latest easement was $6.4 million. The U.S.
Environmental Protection Agency will pick up $1.74 million of the $4
million cost under a rare grant. 

"This is one of the biggest tracts acquired for a conservation easement
for the Edwards Aquifer," SAWS trustee Douglas Leonhard said. "It's a
huge accomplishment." 

Haby said it wasn't easy. 

"It's just unbelievable how long it took," he said. "The property hadn't
been surveyed in over 100 years, and they used to survey these off using
leather chains. They didn't use metal pins as markers but piled up
rocks." 

The agreement limits the number of houses that can be added to the few
existing ranch homes and camps and how the property can be divided. 

Haby said the Annandale heirs - the Cofers and McQuowns - want it that
way. 

"The heirs are very conservation-minded," he said. "They want it to be a
family ranch. They want to be able to go back there forever." 

Haby said that since 1997, SAWS has spent $9.9 million to help protect
about 28,000 acres that drain into the Edwards Aquifer. But he said this
is expected to be SAWS' last aquifer protection land deal, because the
city now has jurisdiction and voter approval to use sales tax money for
such acquisitions. 

Although the area is not in immediate danger of being developed, it
would be only a matter of time if protections aren't locked in, Haby
said. 

"There's a golf course community development just north of Concan on the
Frio," Haby said. "That whole area has exploded in growth. People want
to be next to the river." 





  _____  

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