Canyon Lake is known for three things: the lake itself (boating, swimming, scuba diving in the clear Hill Country water), the tailwater trout fishery below the dam (cold releases from the bottom of the reservoir sustain rainbow trout year-round in a stretch of the Guadalupe that would otherwise be too warm), and Canyon Lake Gorge — a 64-acre geological scar carved in a matter of days during the 2002 flood, exposing 110-million-year-old Cretaceous limestone, dinosaur tracks, and fault lines that had been buried since the Mesozoic.
The Guadalupe River carved this valley long before anyone dammed it. German settlers arrived in the 1840s and 1850s, establishing the communities of Sattler (1853), Fischer (1853), and what would become Startzville (1935) along the river and its tributaries. The valley was productive farmland — cotton, corn, cattle — but it flooded catastrophically and repeatedly. The September 1952 flood killed five people and caused millions in damage downstream.
Congress authorized Canyon Dam in 1954 as part of the Guadalupe River Basin flood-control plan. Construction began in 1958 under the Fort Worth District of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The dam is an earth-fill embankment 6,830 feet long and 224 feet high (measured from streambed to crest), with a concrete spillway on the south abutment. The reservoir began impounding water on June 16, 1964. Hidden Valley — more than 1,000 acres of farmland on the west bank of a Guadalupe River bend near Sattler — went under permanently. The lake was formally dedicated in 1966.
The 2002 flood remains the defining event in Canyon Lake's modern history. Nearly three feet of rain fell in one week across the upper Guadalupe watershed. On July 4, 2002, water crested the emergency spillway for the first time since the dam's construction, reaching a record elevation of 950.32 feet — more than 41 feet above conservation pool. The overflow scoured the ground below the spillway, carving Canyon Lake Gorge in a matter of days and exposing geological formations that had been buried for over 100 million years. The flood killed nine people downstream.
Canyon Lake sits in the Balcones Canyonlands, where Edwards Plateau limestone meets the Blackland Prairie. The water is clear — clearer than most Texas reservoirs — because the watershed is largely undeveloped ranchland and the lake is deep enough (125 feet at the dam) to stratify. The bottom layer stays cold year-round, which matters for the trout fishery below.
The lake fluctuates. Conservation pool is 909 feet. The all-time low was 887.14 feet on January 21, 2024. At low levels, the lake loses surface area rapidly — shallow coves dry up, ramps stop reaching water, and the shoreline retreats hundreds of feet from docks and boat lifts. The Corps of Engineers maintains four parks with boat ramps, but not all ramps function at all levels. Cranes Mill, on the south side, has the deepest approach and holds water longest. Potters Creek, on the north shore, goes dry earlier. The practical rule: check USGS gauge 08167700 before you trailer. The number tells you whether your ramp reaches water today.
Swimming happens at the Corps parks (Potters Creek has a designated swim beach for campers) and at numerous private access points along the shoreline. Scuba diving is popular at North Park, a primitive camping area north of the dam that's open April through September. The clear water and submerged structure (old road beds, fence lines, the remains of Hidden Valley) draw divers from across Texas.
When the 2002 flood overtopped the spillway, the water carved a mile-long, 64-acre gorge through what had been a grassy field below the dam. The exposed rock revealed Cretaceous limestone layers, perfectly preserved fossils, dinosaur tracks (believed to be from Acrocanthosaurus and an iguanodontid), and a visible fault line — all previously buried and unknown.
The Gorge is operated by GBRA and open to the public. Self-guided hiking trails along the upper rim run Monday through Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 4:00 p.m., with last entry at 3:00 p.m. Cost is $5 (confirm current pricing) per person (12 and over; under 12 free). No reservation required. To enter the Gorge floor itself, you need a guided tour — available Tuesday through Saturday, approximately two hours, $20 (confirm current pricing) per person, up to 10 participants, ages 7 and up. Reservations through canyongorgetours.com. The entrance is off the driveway to Tye Preston Memorial Library on the South Access Road below the dam (16029 S Access Rd, Canyon Lake, TX 78133).
The Gorge Preservation Society partners with GBRA on conservation and education. School groups pay $5 (confirm current pricing) per student for educational tours that align with Texas science standards.
Water released from the bottom of Canyon Dam enters the Guadalupe River at roughly 58-62 degrees Fahrenheit year-round — cold enough to sustain trout in a river that would otherwise reach the mid-80s in summer. Texas Parks and Wildlife stocks rainbow trout from November through March at five locations along the tailwater stretch: Guadalupe Park, Whitewater Camp, 4th Crossing, 3rd Crossing, and Camp Huaco Springs. Some trout hold over through summer in the coldest water nearest the dam.
The tailwater section operates under special regulations: 18-inch minimum size limit, one trout daily bag, artificial lures and flies only. Guadalupe River Trout Unlimited (GRTU) is the conservation organization that works this water, funding habitat improvement and monitoring holdover populations.
The fishery is commonly described as the southernmost year-round trout fishery in the United States. Whether that claim is precisely accurate depends on how you define "year-round" and "fishery," but the cold-water releases do sustain trout through Texas summers in a way that no other stream in the state can match.
Flow in the tailwater depends entirely on what GBRA releases from the dam — not on local rainfall. Low releases mean shallow water and dragging bottoms for tubers. High releases mean fast current and outfitter closures. Check USGS gauge 08167800 (Guadalupe River at Sattler) for current flow before planning a float or a fishing trip.
Below the dam, the Guadalupe River runs through the Sattler corridor along River Road, where multiple outfitters operate tubing, rafting, and kayaking services. The Horseshoe Loop is the most popular float — a shorter, calmer section that takes 2-3 hours. Longer floats continue downstream toward New Braunfels (where Marcus picks up the story). Outfitters in the Canyon Lake area include Tube Haus, Shanty Tubes, and River Sports Tubes.
The connection between Canyon Lake and New Braunfels is literal and hydraulic: what GBRA releases from Canyon Dam is what flows through Sattler, past the tubing outfitters, through Gruene, and into the Comal confluence at New Braunfels. Every tube floating the Guadalupe in New Braunfels is riding Canyon Lake water.
| Name | Address | Description | Season |
|---|---|---|---|
| Canyon Lake Gorge | 16029 S Access Rd, Canyon Lake TX 78133 | 64-acre geological formation with dinosaur tracks. Self-guided rim trails ($5) or guided gorge tours ($20). | Mon-Sat year-round |
| Cranes Mill Park (USACE) | South shore, off FM 2722 | 30 RV sites, 34 tent sites, 2-lane boat ramp, fishing pier. Deepest ramp approach on the lake. | Year-round (some sites closed Oct-Mar) |
| Potters Creek Park (USACE) | North shore | 93 RV sites, screened shelters, swim beach, 2-lane boat ramp. Largest Corps park on the lake. | Year-round (some sites closed Oct-Mar) |
| North Park (USACE) | North of dam | Primitive camping, 20 non-electric sites. Popular scuba diving access. | April-September |
| Canyon Park Marina | FM 306 at lake | Full-service marina, boat rentals, fuel dock, restaurant. | Year-round |
| Guadalupe River tailwater | River Road, Sattler | Trout fishing (Nov-Mar stocking, holdovers year-round). Special regs: 18" min, 1/day, artificial only. | Year-round |
| Devil's Backbone Tavern | 4041 FM 32, Fischer TX 78133 | 1890s stagecoach stop turned honky-tonk. Oldest shuffleboard in Texas. Live music. | Year-round |
| Event | When | Where | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| TPWD Trout Stocking | November-March (multiple dates) | Tailwater: Guadalupe Park, Whitewater Camp, 3rd/4th Crossing, Camp Huaco | Check tpwd.texas.gov for exact dates each season |
| Canyon Lake Fireworks | July 4 | Over the lake (multiple viewing points) | Community-organized, not Corps-sponsored |
| Comal County Fair | September | Fairgrounds, New Braunfels | Livestock, carnival, live music. Regional event. |
| Gorge Preservation Society events | Varies | Canyon Lake Gorge | Volunteer days, educational programs. Check gorgepreservationsociety.org |
| Startzville VFD Fish Fry | Spring (varies) | Startzville | Volunteer fire department fundraiser |
| Name | Location | What It Is |
|---|---|---|
| Gristmill River Restaurant | Gruene (downstream) | Historic cotton-gin structure overlooking Guadalupe. 20-minute drive from dam. |
| The Tap Room | FM 306, Startzville corridor | Bar and grill on the road to the lake |
| Canyon Lake Brewing | Canyon Lake area | Local craft brewery |
| Rebecca Creek Distillery | 26605 Bulverde Rd (Spring Branch/Bulverde area) | Texas whiskey, tours available, open 6 days/week |
The Canyon Lake area has no major hotels. Lodging is almost entirely vacation rentals (Airbnb/VRBO houses on or near the lake), RV camping at the Corps parks, or the private campgrounds and resorts along River Road and FM 306. During summer weekends and holidays, rentals book weeks in advance. The Corps parks take reservations through Recreation.gov — Potters Creek fills fastest because of the swim beach and screened shelters.
Canyon Lake is 15 miles northwest of New Braunfels via FM 306, or 45 miles from Austin via I-35 south to FM 306 west. The nearest full-service grocery is H-E-B in New Braunfels (FM 306 at I-35). Gas stations cluster along FM 306 in the Startzville corridor. Cell service is adequate on the main roads but spotty in the coves and on the water. The USACE office is at 601 C.O.E. Road, Canyon Lake, TX 78133 (Mon-Fri 8am-4:30pm).
There is no city government. Comal County Sheriff provides law enforcement. EMS is volunteer fire departments (Startzville VFD, Canyon Lake VFD). The nearest hospital is Resolute Health in New Braunfels (15 miles).
Canyon Lake exists because the Guadalupe flooded and people died. The dam solved that problem and created a new ecosystem — a deep, clear reservoir that stratifies cold water to the bottom, sustains trout in a subtropical climate, and fluctuates enough to remind everyone that this is still a flood-control structure first and a recreation lake second. The Gorge is the proof: when the system was overwhelmed in 2002, it carved a geological classroom in days. The lake gives and the lake takes. Check the gauge before you go.
Canyon Lake is part of the canyonlake.ai network. Guide: Gus.