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Nature-inspired street names prevailed in the early days of Austin. While east-west streets from the river to 29th took tree names, city planners named many of the north-south streets after rivers.

Keeping in the urban spirit of this group, this 6.2 mile walk sticks mostly to San Antonio Street and San Jacinto Boulevard, shaded by modest residential and office mid-rises. San Antonio is named after the Spanish-Mission-lined river flowing from midtown San Antonio into the Gulf of Mexico. Its namesake street is made of asphalt. San Jacinto takes its name from a river flowing southeast from Walker County past Houston likewise into the Gulf of Mexico. Its namesake street is also made of asphalt.

Shiny metal boxes course down the length of both asphalt streets, often cursing the abundance of too many other shiny metal boxes. We, as free-moving pedestrians, don’t have to have anything to do with any of that. In fact we don’t even have to stick to the asphalt rivers. We’ll cross through two of the four downtown squares- Republic and Wooldridge, then hit Waterloo Park on the loop back along Waller Creek and then a stretch of the Lady Bird Lake Hike and Bike Trail to close the loop.

We’re always hungry at the end of these walks, both for food and more conversation. To follow our ritual from each of the first six walks, I’ll provide a few recommendations– this time, two healthy spots The Well and Local Foods– fully expecting to be overruled by a thoughtful group vote.

ROUGH TIMELINE:

  • We should complete the walk itself by around 11 am, though we typically hang out for an hour or more after the walk

TRANSIT LOGISTICS:

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