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HomeEvents13Th ANNUAL HIDALGO FALLS RIVER FESTIVAL

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13Th ANNUAL HIDALGO FALLS RIVER FESTIVAL

When:
Friday, April 25, 2014, 1:00 PM until Sunday, April 27, 2014, 5:00 PM
Where:
TRPA Hildago Falls on the Brazos River Near Navasota
Camp Road
Navasota, TX  77868
Category:
Non-HASK Other
Registration is not Required
Payment In Full In Advance Only
Attendees pay for their own charges
The 13th annual Hidalgo Falls River Festival will be held on April 26 at the TRPA Hidalgo Falls property on the Brazos River near Navasota. The festival is the year’s major fund-raising event to support our efforts to provide paddlers’ access to the rapid. Paddlers, their families, and friends can explore the property, check out the tidepool-like river features, play in the rapid, have relaxing floats up and down the river, and enjoy camping for the weekend. We ask that people contribute $10/person to help cover expenses (e.g., toilets, electricity). Our bathhouse, equipped with showers, flush toilets, and lavatories, has made camping appealing to families.

We have electricity for those with extension cords, but you will need to bring your own food and drinks. Camping is available only at the lower campground. For a map of the property, click on the Hidalgo Falls website. People will start arriving on Friday afternoon, so someone should be able to let you in the locked gate if you are not currently certified to access the property. (Opportunities to join TRPA and become certified to use the property will be available throughout the weekend.)

For general information about the festival, contact Steve Daniel (sdaniel@philosophy.tamu.edu)

 

Information about the location of Hidalgo Falls, TRPA ownership, pictures, etc. can be found at the Hidalgo Falls website:

http://philosophy.tamu.edu/~sdaniel/hidalgo.html

 
Hidalgo Falls, Brazos River: Location
Hidalgo Falls is located about five miles west of Navasota. It is a little more than an hour's drive from Houston (depending on where in Houston one starts) and about a half hour's drive south of College Station.

From Houston: take US 290 west to Hempstead, then SH 6 north to Navasota. As you are coming into Navasota take Business 6 into downtown Navasota and turn left (west) on SH 105. (If you live north of Houston, you can get to Navasota by taking SH 105 west from Conroe.) Go 3.5 miles west on SH 105. Immediately after you cross the Navasota River, but before you cross the Brazos River, turn right (north) on FM 159 and go 3.2 miles (past the cotton gin on the right). As the road bends to the left you will see a gravel road coming in from the right and crossing the railroad tracks (White Switch Rd.). At that point turn LEFT into the dirt road (Camp Road, small road sign) in the middle of the cornfield and go 1/2 mile to the tall chain link gated fence that marks the property. 
 
HISTORY AND INFO

The 13-acre Park at Hidalgo Falls is owned by the Texas Rivers Protection Association. It is located on the Brazos River about eight miles from Navasota. It is a private (locked) park available for use only by canoeists and kayakers who have been certified or registered with TRPA, and is not open to the general public for fishing, sunbathing, or swimming.

In April 2001, thanks to contributions of more than $65,000 by 160 individuals and paddling organizations throughout Texas, TRPA was able to purchase 10.1 acres of property at Hidalgo Falls on the Brazos River near Navasota. Since then, hundreds of canoeists and kayakers from across the state have used the property, developed camping facilities there, and spent many hours clearing debris. In March 2003, another sixty paddlers, with the support of local, state, and national groups, donated an additional $17,000 to acquire two more acres. In November 2003 we sold three of our acres downstream of the rapid, and with $15,000 contributed by another thirty paddlers, we added another four acres immediately overlooking the rapid. In 2009 and 2010 paddlers again contributed over $25,000 to drill a water well, install a septic fields, and build a bathhouse (with toilets, showers with hot water, and lavatories).

TRPA ownership of this property guarantees future kayakers and canoeists access to this popular and unique river resource. For whitewater enthusiasts, it offers a class II rapid with numerous surfing waves, holes, eddy lines and play spots. For flatwater paddlers, it provides a convenient and secure access point for float trips along a very historic stretch of the Brazos as well as a place to learn swiftwater techniques and rescue skills. In the four miles downstream from the rapid archaeologists have unearthed mastodon bones from the riverbank, and the remains of an early 20th-century lock and dam system still loom large in the river. All of this is just upstream from Washington on the Brazos, birthplace of the republic of Texas. Stephen F. Austin is said to have crossed the river often at Hidalgo Falls. It is said that you could tell if you had a knowledgeable riverboat captain if he could get his boat upstream of the rapid and back down before the river level dropped stranding the boat upriver near Millican or Port Sullivan.

There is always enough water in the Brazos (and even through the rapid) for float trips. Much of the flow is determined by releases from dams upstream on the Brazos (e.g., Lake Waco) and tributaries such as the San Gabriel and Little Rivers. There is usually about a 3.5' difference between the Brazos gauge in Bryan on Hwy 21 and the Hempstead gauge: if the Bryan gauge says 12', the Hempstead gauge reads about 15.5'. If the Hempstead gauge is more than 3.5' higher, that means that Lake Somerville is releasing into Yegua Creek upstream of Hidalgo, and that too needs to be added to the Bryan gauge. [Aaron Smith has come up with a relatively accurate calculator for the river level at Hidalgo: subtract the Bryan level (e.g., 22.24) from the Hempstead level (e.g., 27.07), then multiply that figure (4.83) by 0.55 (=2.66) and add it to the Bryan level to get the current Hidalgo level (24.9).] To see how much water is being released at Lake Somerville, go to the Corps of Engineers website. This is also helpful for those who might want to try a 14-mile float from where FM 50 crosses Yegua Creek to its confluence with the Brazos (4 miles), and then 10 miles on the Brazos to Hidalgo. (The problem with this trip is the 50 mile shuttle.) Playboaters prefer the level to be at least 12', with 17'-22' being super play levels. At 22' there is a great surfing hole at "Spin City" near the bamboo trail. At 23' a fantastic surfing wave forms at the bottom of the rapid. Above 24' most of the rapid washes out.

To check the levels, consult the USGS website. If the area between Bryan and Hidalgo (say, College Station) gets a lot of rain, the river could be up at the rapid and it might not show on the Bryan gauge. Just compare the Bryan and Hempstead gauges, subtract the inflow from the Navasota River from the Hempstead gauge, and you can get a pretty good idea of what is happening.

To anticipate release flows, the following can be used as a rough gauge: the release on the Brazos at Waco will reach Highbank about a day (24 hrs) later. It will take another 20 or so hours to reach Bryan, and another 18 hours or so after that to reach Hidalgo Falls. [For those interested in float trips: it is 32 miles from SH 60 west of College Station to Hidalgo Falls; to shorten that, put in at Koppe Bridge Rd (28 miles) or Batts Ferry Rd (26 miles). It is 3.5 miles from Hidalgo to SH 105 and another 2.8 miles to Washington on the Brazos Park. Taking out at the park is difficult due to the river's high banks there and thick poison ivy. It's much better to take out at SH 105.]

**The TRPA property at Hidalgo Falls is a controlled access site and is not open to the general public.** In fact, the gate to the property controls access not only to the TRPA property but also to the property of two other landowners. TRPA users must respect their property boundaries and adhere to the regulations spelled out in the access agreement. To get the combination to the lock on the gate at the entrance to the property (which is changed every year in mid-April), paddlers must go through certification either on-site, in a club meeting, or (coming soon) on-line. They must also fulfill at least one of the following:

Lifetime certification: donate a total of at least $500 to the TRPA Hidalgo Falls fund
Annual certification: be a Protector ($25/yr) member of TRPA (click here to join online or to get a membership form to mail in).
Annual certification: donate at least five hours of labor at the property on an organized work day
Annual certification: be designated by a paddling club as a club-supported Hidalgo Falls user
Since only TRPA keeps track of donations, memberships, work hours, and club-support, only the TRPA President (Tom Goynes) and the Hidalgo Falls coordinator (Steve Daniel) can give out the combination.
Here is the way the certification process usually works. After someone goes through the orientation, the orienter sends the signed orientation form either to Tom Goynes (444 Pecan Park Drive, San Marcos, TX 78666) or Steve Daniel (7988 Drummer Circle, College Station, TX 77845-8087) or leaves it at the property for Steve to pick up in the sign-in box. Steve confers with Tom to find out about the person's status regarding TRPA membership or past HF support or work done at the property. When it is determined that both conditions for certification have been fulfilled, Steve sends the person the combination (usually by email).

There are currently about 100 people who have been certified and with whom any paddler can access the property.

To arrange to meet other paddlers at the property, interested paddlers should contact other paddlers on the Hidalgo Falls e-group. Visitors must abide by the rules described in the access agreement