Been up there three different times.
The story about damming the Little River is accurate. They were looking at it to supply water to Williamson Countyagfan2013 said:
I've been out to the bridge at the foot of it and in the area several times, but never went up the mountain myself. Had a couple of college roomates decide on evening to go up in the middle of the night (might have been after a few beers) while we were still in school, but I had a full day of work at producer's coop the next morning and didnt feel like loading hundreds of feedsacks hungover and tired from shenannigans. Would love to hike up it, but dont want to get busted for tresspassing, as noted its alot more enforced/patrolled now from what I've heard.
I do know the farmer who works most of those fields to the north, farms a good chunk of owned & rented land in that Hearne/Gause/Branchville area. Supposedly there was talk years ago about damming up the little Brazos near there and turning that big field to the north of it into a resovior of some sort? Story I think he told me one time, but I've never seen anyone else talk about it, he's still farming over there so I guess it never happened.
A friendly state trooper wrote me a ticket right in front of it one timeFAT SEXY said:This old building is still standing right off of FM 485.. I'm guessing you've seen it a time or two.justnobody79 said:
I used to fish in the area a lot, tons of history in the area. The story of Port Sullivan on the Brazos is fascinating to me. Used to be able to catch a lot of catfish where the Little River merged with the Brazos river. The blending of the muddy water and the sandy water is unique.
https://kathiesees.wordpress.com/2019/01/15/exploration-dilapidated-gas-station-texas/
Herzog still owns the property and the top was mined prior to 1994.FAT SEXY said:
I still go back from time to time, but I only view from the road and fly my drone. I haven't actually went up there in years. I've heard that the new owners are less forgiving to trespassers.
15-20 years ago it wasn't as big of a deal to go on the property.
Here is an interesting article about a previous owner that wanted to donate it as a public park:
https://www.tdtnews.com/archive/article_6d466422-6b06-558b-9690-a239c23d0df4.html
I wish it was a State Park.
These articles have some good history on Sugarloaf. The second article is dated July 28, 1994 and mentions the hill having been mined.FAT SEXY said:
I talked to a guy that lived on that road a few years ago that said someone else owned the property now. I guess he was full of ****
If it isn't a new owner causing crack downs on trespassing, I guess it's just the sheriff's office exploiting it for ticket revenue.
Do you happen to know when it was mined?
First time I ever hit 100 mph was when I came over the bridge to the west and had a straightaway long enough to get my '68 Tempest going. Was slowing down at the old store.justnobody79 said:A friendly state trooper wrote me a ticket right in front of it one timeFAT SEXY said:This old building is still standing right off of FM 485.. I'm guessing you've seen it a time or two.justnobody79 said:
I used to fish in the area a lot, tons of history in the area. The story of Port Sullivan on the Brazos is fascinating to me. Used to be able to catch a lot of catfish where the Little River merged with the Brazos river. The blending of the muddy water and the sandy water is unique.
https://kathiesees.wordpress.com/2019/01/15/exploration-dilapidated-gas-station-texas/
AgLA06 said:
Wasn't this exact post done a couple years ago and it divalved into locating Jimbo's ranch?
Jackie Daytona said:
In the late 80s-early 90s we'd go out there all the time. High school years. We built a make shift rope swing a couple of trips. Some of the scariest fun I've ever had.