Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Inks Lake State Park is a state park located in Burnet County, Texas, United States, next to Inks Lake on the Colorado River. It contains facilities for swimming, camping, hiking, boating, fishing and general enjoyment of the natural beauty. [2] The landscape consists mainly of hills and includes both forest and cleared land made up of mainly ...
831 acres (3.36 km 2) Max. depth. 60 ft (18 m) Surface elevation. 888 ft (271 m) Inks Lake is a reservoir on the Colorado River in the Texas Hill Country in the United States. The reservoir was formed in 1938 by the construction of Inks Dam by the Lower Colorado River Authority. Located near Burnet, Texas, the lake serves to provide flood ...
Huntsville State Park swimming area: Inks Lake State Park: Burnet 1,201 acres (486 ha) 1950 Inks Lake State Park: Kickapoo Cavern State Park: Kinney, Edwards 6,368.4 acres (2,577.2 ha) 1991 Kickapoo Cavern State Park: Lake Arrowhead State Park: Clay 524 acres (212 ha) 1970 Lake Arrowhead State Park: Lake Bob Sandlin State Park: Titus, Camp ...
The rare Texas Star Mushroom has been spotted once again at Inks Lake State Park, officials announced in a Dec. 18 Facebook post. “The fungus is entirely unique to Texas, with the exception of ...
Inks Lake in Central Texas etched its name in the Toyota ShareLunker record books with its first Legacy Class largemouth bass, while O.H. Ivie delivered its sixth Legacy Lunker this season. Darrly ...
Park Road 4 ( PR 4) is a 15.5-mile-long (24.9 km) park road in western Burnet County, Texas that travels through and provides access to Longhorn Cavern State Park and Inks Lake State Park. The highway connects State Highway 29 (SH 29) to U.S. Route 281 (US 281). The highway was constructed between 1934 and 1942 by the Civilian Conservation ...
Pedernales Falls State Park. Pedernales River running over limestone. Pedernales Falls State Park (/ ˌpɜːrdəˈnælɪs / PUR-də-NAL-iss) is a 5,212-acre state park situated along the banks of the Pedernales River in Blanco County, Texas in the United States. [2]
Inks Dam. Inks Dam was constructed from 1936 to 1938 and forms Inks Lake, one of the seven Texas Highland Lakes. The lake and dam are owned and operated by the Lower Colorado River Authority for hydropower generation and recreational purposes and are named for Roy B. Inks, one of the original members on the LCRA Board of Directors.