Wednesday, June 29, 2011

Tailgating spaces for University of Texas 2011 football season now available

AUSTIN — RV parking and Centennial Park tailgating spaces are currently on sale for the 2011 University of Texas Football season through the Parking and Transportation Services (PTS) website.

Seasonal sales for RV parking and Centennial Park tailgating spaces opened on June 1 and will remain open until all spaces are filled, or through the close of business on Friday, July 15. Beginning Monday, July 18, any remaining RV parking spaces will be sold on a per-game basis.

There are 74 electrical and 12 non-electrical RV parking spaces available on campus. Each space accommodates one RV and one tow vehicle.

The Longhorn Foundation no longer rents RV parking spaces in lots 110, 111 or 113. PTS is now responsible for the management of these lots. If you have any questions regarding RV parking spaces for the 2011 football season, please email PTS at eparking@www.utexas.edu.

PTS also manages the tailgating spaces in the Centennial Park/tennis court area. There are 98 plots at Centennial Park for tailgating. Each plot is approximately 30 X 30; however, multiple plots can be purchased if you desire more space.

Questions about Centennial Park tailgating spaces can be emailed to centpark@utlists.utexas.edu.

Daingerfield State Park to reopen after closure, campground improved

After almost an entire calendar year of closure for repairs and renovations to facilities and campgrounds, Daingerfield State Park opened again to visitors June 24 at its Pineywood and lake setting.

During the last 11-plus months, Texas Parks and Wildlife invested more than $5 million in capital improvements and repairs to the 500-acre park located in far Northeast Texas. The money, which was appropriated in previous bienniums, has been used to upgrade campgrounds to include full hookup sites with water, electricity and sewer connections; three new restroom complexes; a new wastewater system and major overhauls to historic structures built by the Civilian Conservation Corp, which were constructed more than 70 years ago.

Buildings such as the large Bass Lodge overnight group facility that accommodates 15 people has new furnishings, new furniture, new appliances and central climate control; the boathouse near the ramp of the park’s centerpiece 80-acre lake has been renovated and features a new dock with canoe and paddleboat rentals. And the large pavilion-combination building has been remodeled with restrooms, a group meeting room and a State Park Store with convenience and souvenir items.

“There will be a ‘wow-affect,’ for sure,” said park superintendent John Thomas. “When people come here, they’ll notice some real changes. We have been able to add facilities and upgrades that people have been requesting for a long time. We went from old restrooms—some of which weren’t even usable—to state of the art. And it will be nice to offer folks the convenience of a State Park store. And for campers, we now have 40 full hookup sites instead of just 10.”

Reservations can be made beginning July 1 at the state park reservation center in Austin. To date, all of Daingerfield’s campgrounds and cabins are already booked full for July 1-4, evidence that reopening the park is a popular notion among outdoor enthusiasts.

An official grand opening and ribbon cutting of the park is being tentatively set for sometime in the fall.

For more information, contact Daingerfield State Park at www.texasstateparks.org. To book state park reservations in advance of your trip, contact the customer service center at (512) 389-8900.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Texas wildfire burns Top of the Hill RV Resort



A fast-moving brush fire temporarily closed Interstate 10 in Texas on Sunday afternoon and chased residents from an RV park in Kendall County before they could move their rigs to safety.

Several RVs and facilities were destroyed before the blaze was contained around nightfall, according to a report in mySanAntonio.

The wind-stoked fire moved swiftly into the Top of the Hill RV Resort, igniting propane tanks and ammunition stored in the roughly 70 travel trailers and recreational vehicles.

“We couldn’t hardly breathe due to the black smoke,” said Walt Lowell, 61, as he waited nearby at Po-Po Family Restaurant, the unofficial evacuation center, for permission to return to inspect the damage. “You could hear stuff blowing up left and right.”

Preliminary damage assessments indicated that six or seven RVs in the 103-site campground were destroyed, as well as three cars and a motorcycle, plus the RV park’s clubhouse, laundry room, and pavilion.

The fire danger was extreme Sunday, with strong winds and temperatures in the triple digits. The National Weather Service recorded 103 degrees in San Antonio, matching the record, set in 1918. Temperatures have hit 100 or higher since Tuesday. Low 90s are normal for June.

The wildfire is one of many that have spread through drought-stricken Texas since fire season began the middle of November. The Texas Forest Service has recorded 12,189 fires that have burned 3,012,876 acres--one-million acres more than the previous record set in 2006, forest service officials said.