Could Other Texas Towns Run Dry Like Spicewood Beach?
- The Highland Lakes have come dangerously close to reaching historic lows during the drought.
- Thousands of gallons of water are trucked in each day to keep the taps flowing in Spicewood Beach
- Although Spicewood Beach sits on Lake Travis, falling lake levels have led the community to run dry.
- Longtime resident L.J. Honeycutt says TK.
- Receding waters have ravaged communities in the Highland Lakes.
- A volunteer âsecurity guardâ goes on patrol in Spicewood Beach
- Dr. Jack Sharp studies hydrology at UTâs Jackson School.
- Will Silver Creek Village be the next town to run dry during the Texas drought?
- Nelson Brock works for the community water system in Silver Creek Texas, Heâs watched wells dry up as nearby lake Buchanan recedes.
- Residents in Silver Creek Village worry their wells, which depend on Lake Buchanan, will soon run dry.
After a year of record-breaking heat and drought, it began to seem inevitable that a town in Texas would run dry. What might have come as a surprise is that the town would have a name like âSpicewood Beach.â
Perched on the shores of Central Texasâ largest reservoir, the small lakeside community doesnât seem like the kind of place where wells suddenly fail and water needs to be shipped in by tanker truck. Yet one of the persistent complaints from people in Spicewood Beach is that the Lower Colordo River Authority (LCRA), the Agency that owns the Spicewood Beach well, didnât see the danger signs sooner.
âWe didnât get any warning!â said Robert Salinas on a recent afternoon.
Itâs an example of the way the Texas drought is throwing into question the usefulness of old distinctions between surface water from Texas lakes and rivers, and groundwater from Texas wells.
If it happened at Spicewood Beach, could it happen to another Highland Lake well?
Taking a lunch break from a construction job right next to the site where the LCRA now brings water in by truck, Salinas and his friend Martin Peterson said the three weeks between the time the LCRA stopped selling Spicewood Beachâs water and when the well failed doesnât seem like a warning at all. Peterson says the Agency should have known the well was in trouble just by casting a glance to the water level in Lake Travis right next door. He says well water and lake water are one in the same.
âThey do tie in, yes [the water] bleeds through the ground into the well,â said Peterson.
While neither Peterson nor Salinas are hydrologists, theyâre right about how the well worked says Dr. Jack Sharp, a water expert with University of Texas at Austinâs Jackson School of Geosciences.

Mose Buchele for StateImpact Texas
Dr. Jack Sharp studies hydrology at UT's Jackson School of Geosciences.
âThatâs a very shallow well in the alluvium up there. Interesting,â confirmed Sharp after a quick search of online records.
An alluvial well is a well that gets its water from a nearby surface water source, in this case Lake Travis. With lake levels dropping and the LCRA and the community pumping water out of the well, Sharp says itâs no surprise the Spicewood Beach system failed.
So are other wells in the region likely to go dry?
LCRAâs Water Operations Manager Ryan Rowney says he doesnât think itâs likely in the near future. But the drought means that anything is possible.
âWeâre all in uncharted territory here. Weâre not really sure whatâs going to happen in the ground water in our area. This is new for all of us,â Rowney told StateImpact Texas.
As Texas Lakes Recede, Wells Go Dry

Photo by Jeff Heimsath for StateImpact Texas
Receding waters have ravaged communities in the Highland Lakes.
While he says there arenât many other alluvial wells in the Highland Lakes system, Rowney agrees that wells they are affected by dropping lake levels. When the lake level goes down, the water in the wells does, too.
âThere are other parts of the state where thatâs the case as well, where thereâs an identified connection between a surface water source and groundwater source,â Hydrologist Barney Austin told StateImpact Texas.
Austin works with Intera, an environmental consulting group. He says groundwater from wells is traditionally tested for surface water to gauge water quality. Surface water is more likely to contain contaminants and requires more extensive treatment. But in a drought thereâs another reason to test for surface water.
âItâs also important to identify when thereâs a connection because obviously if your lake level is dropping then you want to know about that in your groundwater levels,â said Austin.
Thatâs where some say the state hasnât been paying enough attention.
Wells Go Untested

Photo by Jeff Heimsath/StateImpact Texas
Although Spicewood Beach sits on Lake Travis, falling lake levels have led the community to run dry.
The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) tests groundwater wells to see if they are fed by surface water. But those tests have been called unreliable. For example, Spicewood Beachâs well tested positive for surface water contamination once and negative another time, according to Interaâs Barney Austin. The TCEQ says it tests 10 to 15 wells a year, yet the commission concedes that there are drinking water wells in the state that have never been tested.
Some water planners, like LCRAâs Ryan Rowney, say a clearer understanding of what wells are influenced by surface water would help during the drought.
âI think at this point in time yes, because every drop of water counts,â Rowney told StateImpact Texas.
And UTâs Jack Sharp envisions a day when the entire distinction between surface water and groundwater is thrown out the window, and the stateâs water supply is viewed as one interconnected whole.
Waiting, With an Eye to the Lake
In the meantime, communities near Texas reservoirs wait to see what lower water levels will mean for their wells. One of them is a place called Silver Creek, about 30 miles north of Spicewood Beach.
Silver Creek sits on what used to be the edge of Lake Buchanan. But in the drought, freshwater clam shells crunch underfoot where water once flowed. The lake is 21 feet below its average water level, and the exposed ground is littered with shells and dead fish. The town went into stage three water restrictions last October.

Photo by Jeff Heimsath for StatImpact Texas.
Nelson Brock works for the community water system in Silver Creek Texas, He's watched wells dry up as nearby lake Buchanan recedes.
âOur main well went dry so we had to go to our secondary well and thatâs what were using now,â Nelson Brock, who handles the books for the local public water system, told StateImpact Texas.
âYou know if the well did go dry weâd have to truck in water, like Spicewood Beach is doing,â Brock said.
He and the 200 people served by the water system hope it wonât come to that. The community has dug a new well. But getting it permitted and running could take five or six months. Until then, Brock says, heâll be keeping one eye on the sky watching for rain, and one eye on the lake.