Trip Report: Grasses at River Ranch County Park, September 2025

— by Anne Adams and Cindy Chrisler

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Ricky Linex shares his expertise! @ River Ranch County Park, September 2025. Photo by Cindy Chrisler.

The field trip on September 12, 2025, to River Ranch County Park near Liberty Hill, was attended by 22 participants and led by Ricky Linex. This field trip was a follow-up to Ricky’s presentation at NPSOT Williamson County’s chapter meeting on September 11, where he presented “Guidelines for Learning to Identify Common Grasses of Central Texas.”

Calling on his decades of service with the NRCS, as well as information presented in his book, Range Plants of North Central Texas: A Land User’s Guide to their Identification, Value and Management, Ricky is a wealth of knowledge. 

The hike covered about 1 mile through live oak-juniper savannah, where native grasses included tall grama, little bluestem, seep muhly, slim tridens, hairy grama, Texas grama, hairy tridens, and indiangrass, as well as rosettegrass, lovegrass, KR bluestem, and threeawns. Forbs included frogfruit, wooly vervain, pasture heliotrope, slender greenthread, broomweed, skeleton flower, doveweed, Drummond’s rain lilies, bullnettle, and noseburn.

Along the trail, Ricky demonstrated how touching or smelling plants can aid in identification. For example, to tell the difference between buffalograss and curly mesquite in the vegetative stage, he showed us how to rub a piece of stolon between the lips. If smooth, it is buffalograss, while stolons of curly mesquite are rough. At various stops, participants smelled crushed leaves of juniper, chewed leaves of prickly ash, or bravely rubbed leaves of noseburn on their skin. On finding bullnettle, Ricky explained how to safely collect its edible seeds. However, he cautioned that touching the leaves can be a very unpleasant experience.

At one point we stopped to study a motte of woody plants that included live oak, ashe juniper, hackberry, elbowbush, agarita, and white honeysuckle. From a wildlife perspective, Ricky explained that this dense vegetation would provide excellent cover for doves, quail, and other birds. For a land manager, such a motte could be duplicated in other areas by simply taking a shovelful of soil from under the canopy, which contains a diverse seed bank, and distributing it to other places on the property.

After the leisurely hike along the trails, the participants returned to the starting point and continued conversations with Ricky until the end of the allotted time. The field trip ended before the temperature became too uncomfortable.

River Ranch County Park includes 20 miles of hiking trails within its 1,354 acres. The trail chosen for this hike is one of the furthest from the park entrance, and less used than other trails, but was perfect for observing late summer grasses, which were still green thanks to recent rains. Although this hike covered a tiny portion of the park, the hike was a good introduction for those who had not previously visited River Ranch.

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Seep muhly, Muhlenbergia reverchonii @ River Ranch County Park, September 2025

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See photos from this trip and others in our album =>

Recording Available for September 11’s topic, “Guidelines for Learning to Identify Common Native Grasses of Central Texas” with Ricky Linex

The video recording of September 11, 2025’s chapter meeting featuring Guidelines for Learning to Identify Common Native Grasses of Central Texas with Ricky Linex is now available on our YouTube channel. The presentation begins after a short business meeting.

Ricky’s slides are at this link. Ricky’s handout is here.


See more recorded topics on our YouTube channel. Like and Subscribe!


See our page Prior Guest Speakers for a list of past meeting topics by year.

Business slides for recent chapter meetings are here, listed by date. (If this particular meeting’s business slides were not added yet, they will be soon. Please check back later.)

NPSOT-Williamson County meetings are free and open to the public. We hope you attend!  Meetings may be in person, virtual, or both, so be sure to check details in the meeting announcement. Meetings are announced on our website, our calendar and Facebook.

Field Trip: River Ranch County Park, Friday, September 12, 2025

— by Anne Adams

Want to brush up on your grass ID skills? Our next field trip will be to River Ranch County Park, near Liberty Hill. We will hike about 1 mile on a gravelly trail through Live oak/Juniper savannah, where we will observe a variety of grasses native to this habitat. As hike leader for this trip, we are very fortunate to have Ricky Linex, wildlife biologist and author of Range Plants of North Central Texas: A Land User’s Guide to their Identification, Value and Management. Ricky is also the current President of the Native Plant Society of Texas.

  • What:    Hike along 1 mile of unpaved trail with slight inclines and some loose gravel.
  • When:  8:45 am to 11:45 am, Friday, September 12, 2025
  • WhereRiver Ranch County Park, 194 Reveille Way, Liberty Hill, TX

Directions, including where to meet:

– Entrance to the park is off CR 279 near Liberty Hill. Stop at the registration office to pay the entrance fee of $4 per person ($2 over age 65) and pick up a free map if you wish.

– From the registration office, stay on the main road, Reveille Way, for 1.4 miles. This will take you past the West Trailhead Parking area and past the Hiker sign where Trail B crosses the road. We will gather at the next Hiker sign where Trail A crosses the road.

– Park on the grass on either side of the road.

Members and non-members are welcome! No RSVP is required. Restrooms are available at the registration office and other locations within the park.

Dress appropriately for the weather and terrain. Due to uneven surfaces and loose gravel, we recommend a hiking stick and sturdy shoes, as well as a hat, water, sunscreen and bug spray.  

If you have questions, please contact the Field Trip Committee (contact form here).

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See photos from some of our previous field trips in our Field Trip Album.

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From December 2024’s field trip to River Ranch County Park. View from overlook trail. Photo by Gary Bowers.