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for projects in the park, and is examin- ing the possibility of working with the park staff to develop interpretive programs for the amphitheater. Park visitors may inquire at the headquar- ters about tours of Honey Crk Guadalupe River State part of the Upper Guadalupe, the stretch of river above C Reservoir. That portion of ti
below the dam is known as the Lower Guadalupe and in the past few years has become notorious for its crowds and trash. (See Texas Parks & Wildlife, July 1982 and September
ree 1983.) Park is The newly opened state park is that is, destined to be a popular river access Canyon for recreationists, but the trash of he river the Lower Guadalupe will not be Glen Mills tolerated in the park. Parks staff have the authority to enforce laws against littering and they will do it.
Some 24,000 people visited Guada- lupe River State Park the first month it was open this past summer, and visitation over the Fourth of July weekend exceeded 10,000. It goes without saying that if each person leaves behind even a small amount of trash, the litter problem on the river will be serious. The effort required for people to remove their own trash is small compared to the aggravation that accumulated trash will cause future recreationists. ** Glen Mills
Texas. Parks and Wildlife Department.Texas Parks & Wildlife, Volume 41, Number 11, November 1983,
periodical,
November 1983;
Austin, Texas.
(https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1568780/m1/15/:
accessed July 16, 2024),
University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.;
crediting UNT Libraries Government Documents Department.