![]() ![]() In 2013 HCA initiated the Pedernales Program in an effort to support those networks. The landowners of this Hill Country river basin are motivated to protect these natural and cultural resources for future generations. ![]() Rural agriculture and ranching still make up the majority of land use in the basin, and hunting provides a critical source of income for many landowners. Riverside parks including the LBJ Ranch, the Pedernales Falls State Park, Westcave Outdoor Discovery Center and Milton Reimer’s Ranch Park attract hundreds of thousands of visitors each year, and the cities of Fredericksburg and Johnson City offer diverse cultural, historical and recreational opportunities. The Pedernales River basin also supports a budding wine industry that is quickly becoming a significant tourist draw. The diverse habitats across the basin support a variety of species of conservation concern, including canyon mock-orange, swamp rabbit, and breeding populations of federally endangered black-capped vireo and golden cheeked warbler. The river basin features a high level of biodiversity, including endemic species such as the Pedernales River springs salamander and the Guadalupe bass, Texas’ state fish. ![]() From its headwaters just west of Harper, through Gillespie County, Fredericksburg, Stonewall and Johnson City, and on to Lake Travis and the Colorado River, the Pedernales watershed represents the diverse culture, hydrology and landscape of much of the greater Hill Country region. The Pedernales River courses 106 miles through the heart of Texas Hill Country. ![]()
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