TH36 said:$240 Worth of Pudding said:TH36 said:$240 Worth of Pudding said:Howdy Dammit said:$240 Worth of Pudding said:
Austin ain't the Hill Country. Sorry.
Have you driven 360/2222/1431
I grew up in Oak Hill in the 70's and 80's before it was swallowed up by Austin in the 90's sometime.
So yeah, I'm a wee bit familiar with the area.
You ever been through Bastrop? Just because
There are pine trees there doesn't make it part of the Piney Woods. Just because there are some hilly parts of Austin doesn't mean it's in the Hill Country.
It's been called "the gateway to the Hill Country" before, but again, it ain't the Hill Country.
I'm a native Austinite and have spent all 35 years of my life in this area (live in Driftwood/Dripping area now) and to say that Austin isn't the edge of the Hill Country is asinine. I have no love for this particular area anymore as far as people goes and the amount of but there's no denying that Austin and the I-35 corridor down to San Marcos/New Braunfels is the edge of the Hill Country. I mean the "Highland Lake's" literally end in Austin.
Oh and on edit my Mom is a native of the Hill Country, she literally grew up in the heart of it in Brady, Tx.
I guess you missed the part where I said it's been called "the gateway to the Hill Country".
Edited to add…I'm 50 and remember when Driftwood and Drippin' were a good drive from Austin. Pflugerville was very, very separate and distinct frim Austin and a good drive away. Round Rock was REALLY far north and in the middle of nowhere. And if you were going to Georgetown, you might as well have been going to Waco. Austin's ridiculous growth has certainly begun to encroach closer and closer out west towards the actual Hill Country.
I have no idea what your mom being from Brady (the actual Hill Country) has to do with anything.
I understand the at there are probably some butthurt folks in Austin who really want it to be the Hill Country and may actually believe it is. But it aint.
My point was just cause Austin is what it is doesn't mean it's not the edge of the Hill Country. There is no denying it. Anybody with a speck of knowledge of the area would know that.
You don't need to be 50 to remember everything you just said. It was the same when I was a kid. I grew up hunting everything from doves to deer within eye sight of Slaughter Lane on the street I grew up on. Nowhere anywhere near that area that you could do that on today. I hunted the Ruby Ranch just outside of South Austin/Buda before it was a neighborhood. Dripping was like going out of town and the drive from Oak Hill to Spicewood seemed like you had hit the country already.
Regardless, it's all the Hill Country. All the way to 35. That is the boundary of the Hill Country if there ever was one.
Im done with this silly argument but I'll say two final things.
You've gone from arguing that Austin is the Hill country to now stating it's the "edge" of the Hill Country. All while conveniently ignoring my comment about it being called rhe "gateway to the HC" for years.
Second, anybody from Austin or familiar with Austin knows that the 15 years that separate our age were a key 15 years in Austin's growth. It went from being a sleepy little college town by the river to something very very different in that exact time. You don't know what you don't know but it's pretty comical.
Also I'd sure like to know where you hunted deer within sight of Slaughter in the mid to late 90's.