{"data":{"site":{"siteMetadata":{"title":"awst.in","author":"EB"}},"markdownRemark":{"id":"94bca282-00c3-5d7d-b487-47ab3206efbb","excerpt":"Mount Bonnell Address:  3800 Mount Bonnell Rd, Austin, TX 78731 Hours:  Daily 5am–10pm Cost:  Free   The Hook At 775 feet, Mount Bonnell is…","html":"<h1>Mount Bonnell</h1>\n<p><strong>Address:</strong> 3800 Mount Bonnell Rd, Austin, TX 78731<br>\n<strong>Hours:</strong> Daily 5am–10pm<br>\n<strong>Cost:</strong> Free  </p>\n<h2>The Hook</h2>\n<p>At 775 feet, Mount Bonnell is the highest point within Austin city limits — and locals have been climbing it for romantic reasons since the 1850s.</p>\n<h2>Key Facts</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>Elevation: 775 feet above sea level</li>\n<li>102 steps from the parking area to the summit</li>\n<li>Part of Covert Park, which surrounds the peak</li>\n<li>Views stretch west over Lake Austin and the Hill Country</li>\n<li>The Colorado River below was dammed in the 1930s to create Lake Austin (formerly Town Lake)</li>\n<li>One of Austin’s most visited spots despite being easy to overlook on a map</li>\n</ul>\n<h2>Story / History</h2>\n<p>The peak was named for George W. Bonnell, a newspaper editor and Republic of Texas commissioner of Indian Affairs who climbed it in 1839. Local legend — repeated so often it’s become lore — holds that any couple who climbs Mount Bonnell together will fall in love, or, in some versions, that climbing it on a first date guarantees the couple will marry. The legend is old enough that Austin diarists were writing about it in the 1850s. Whether it’s true or not, it’s made the summit a consistent destination for dates and proposals for over 150 years.</p>\n<p>The limestone bluffs here are part of the Balcones Escarpment — the geological fault line that separates the Edwards Plateau (Hill Country) from the Blackland Prairie. You’re standing at the edge of two entirely different Texas landscapes.</p>\n<h2>Insider Tips</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>Sunset views face west over the Hill Country — prime time for tours</li>\n<li>The 102 steps are steep; flag this for groups with mobility concerns</li>\n<li>From the top, point out the geological divide — west is the Hill Country, east is the flat prairie</li>\n<li>Combine with Mayfield Park for a 2-stop west Austin nature loop</li>\n</ul>\n<h2>Logistics</h2>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>Tour stop duration:</strong> 30–45 min</li>\n<li><strong>Parking:</strong> Small lot at the base; fills fast on weekends</li>\n<li><strong>Nearby stops:</strong> Mayfield Park (5 min drive), Lake Austin waterfront</li>\n</ul>\n<h2>Sources</h2>\n<ul>\n<li>City of Austin Parks: austintexas.gov</li>\n</ul>","frontmatter":{"title":"Mount Bonnell","date":"June 14, 2026"}}},"pageContext":{"slug":"/City of Austin/Mount Bonnell/","previous":{"fields":{"slug":"/City of Austin/Pease Park/"},"frontmatter":{"title":"Pease Park"}},"next":{"fields":{"slug":"/City of Austin/McKinney Falls State Park/"},"frontmatter":{"title":"McKinney Falls State Park"}}}}