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What Is Vanderpool, Texas?

A community of about twenty on the Sabinal River — it's on the map because of what's four miles up the road: Lost Maples.

Vanderpool sits on Ranch-to-Market Road 187 in the Sabinal Canyon of western Bandera County, about ten miles north of Utopia and thirty west of Bandera. It isn't incorporated, has no city government, and isn't a Census Designated Place. The population has hovered near twenty for decades. There's a country store, a winery, and ranches. Nobody comes for the town — they come for Lost Maples State Natural Area, four miles up the road, where an isolated stand of bigtooth maples turns color in late fall and draws more visitors per acre than almost anywhere in the Hill Country.

Lost Maples and the Fall Color

Lost Maples is a 2,906-acre state natural area protecting a relict stand of Uvalde bigtooth maples in the canyons of the upper Sabinal. The maples' main range is the Rocky Mountains, hundreds of miles away. They survive here because the canyon gives them what they need — north-facing limestone walls that block the afternoon sun, spring-fed water that keeps the soil cool, deep shade, and shelter from the plateau heat. That geographic accident is the whole reason the trees, and the park, exist.

In late October and November it's the most crowded place in this part of the Hill Country, and TPWD says plainly that the park reaches capacity daily during peak season. Day passes are reservable in advance through TPWD, and on fall weekends that isn't optional — without one you'll be turned away at the gate. Peak color moves year to year; TPWD posts a foliage report in mid-October. Check it before you drive. Weekdays are a different park than weekends. Park hours are 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.

The natural area holds more than ten miles of trail, including a loop along a 2,200-foot canyon rim. The golden-cheeked warbler nests here, which makes it a birding destination well beyond the fall. There's no cell service in the park.

The River and the Canyon Drive

The Sabinal is spring-fed, shallow, rocky, and seasonal — clear when it's flowing, dry in stretches during summer drought. It is not a tubing river the way the Frio at Concan is: narrower, rockier, lower-volume, with no outfitters and no tube rentals. Fishing and wading are the right uses. RM 187 itself is the other draw — about twenty-two miles of winding two-lane through the canyon, limestone bluffs above and the river below, connecting north to Ranch Road 337 and the Twisted Sisters.

This is Flash Flood Alley. The canyons rise on rain that fell miles upstream under a clear sky overhead. Low-water crossings on RM 187 and RR 337 go under early and go under fast. Know your high ground before you sleep near the water, and keep a weather radio. Never assume a crossing is passable, and never assume a river is safe.

History

The Sabinal valley was settled in the 1850s, briefly abandoned in the late 1860s during frontier conflict, and resettled by the 1880s. A post office opened in 1886 and the town took the name of its first postmaster, L. B. Vanderpool. Before that the settlement was called Bugscuffle. Hunting replaced cotton as the ranch economy in the mid-twentieth century, and the community has never been large — one business and twenty-two people in 1990, twenty in 2000, about the same today.

What's Here

PlaceWhat It Is
Lost Maples State Natural AreaThe anchor — relict maples, canyon trails, fall color. Reserve ahead in fall.
Lost Maples Country StoreThe only retail in town — fuel, supplies, beer and wine. Last fuel to Leakey.
187 North Winery & BreweryEstate Black Spanish grapes; tasting room Thursday–Sunday.
RM 187 / Sabinal Canyon DriveThe canyon road itself — ~22 miles of bluffs, shade, and river.

Practical Information

Getting there: RM 187 from Utopia (10 miles south) or from the RR 337 junction (~12 miles north toward Leakey). From San Antonio, about 65 miles via SH 16 and RM 470 to Utopia, then north on RM 187.

Fuel: Lost Maples Country Store — the only fuel between Utopia and Leakey on this route.

Cell service: None in the park, spotty in the canyon. Download maps first.

Why It Matters for the Hill Country

Vanderpool exists because of a geographic accident — a cool canyon that preserved a stand of trees that shouldn't be this far south. The trees draw the people, the people need fuel and a place to pause, and the town provides that and nothing more. It doesn't pretend to be anything else.

Planning a trip up to Lost Maples? Ask Ray, the Leakey local guide — he covers Vanderpool too. When the color's likely to turn, how bad the reservation crunch is, what the canyon drive is like. Ask Ray at leakey.ai →