Smith Spring

Smith Spring

Natural Attr
Last Updated: July 2026

Type

Limestone Spring

Features

Riparian woodland with Ponderosa Pines (orange bark), Texas Madrone (red bark, white flowers spring, red berries fall), big-toothed maple (small maple-like leaves, brilliant fall colors), limestone spring, subsurface water flow to Manzanita Spring

Overview

About This Attraction

A lush riparian oasis clings to the base of the Eastern escarpment—sustained entirely by Smith Spring's reliable flow in the midst of Chihuahuan Desert scrub. This is a karst window where limestone-filtered rainwater emerges from the mountain's subsurface plumbing system. The spring supports Ponderosa Pines with orange bark, Texas Madrones, and big-toothed maples before its water vanishes underground to reappear at Manzanita Spring.

Quick Facts

Type

Limestone Spring

Main Features

Riparian woodland with Ponderosa Pines (orange bark), Texas Madrone (red bark, white flowers spring, red berries fall), big-toothed maple (small maple-like leaves, brilliant fall colors), limestone spring, subsurface water flow to Manzanita Spring

What You'll See

Riparian woodland with Ponderosa Pines (tall, orange bark), Texas Madrone (red and green bark), big-toothed maple (small maple-like leaves, brilliant fall colors), spring-fed water, interpretive signage

What Makes It Special

One of several karst springs along Guadalupe's Eastern escarpment; illustrates hidden limestone plumbing where water from high elevations emerges in unexpected locations

Best Time to Visit

Spring (April-May) for Texas Madrone white flowers and wildflowers; fall (October-November) for big-toothed maple brilliant red and orange foliage

Safety Considerations

Wet rocks around spring create slip hazard—use caution on approach. Spring water cold and depth unknown; do not assume safe wading depth. Riparian area attracts wildlife; maintain 25-yard minimum distance from bears and other animals.

Visitor Tips

  • Look for Ponderosa Pines from below to observe distinctive orange bark
  • Texas Madrone displays white flowers in spring and red berries in fall
  • Big-toothed maple foliage turns brilliant red and orange October-November
  • Stay on designated trail; wet rocks create slip hazard
  • Spring is excellent birding location—move slowly and bring binoculars
ℹ️ Data Sources
📖 National Park Service — Smith Spring (official page) (checked 2026-07-14) 📖 National Park Service — Guadalupe Mountains National Park fees, hours & conditions (checked 2026-07-05) 📖 Climate data: Pine Springs, Tx Us, 5,590 ft (NOAA 1991-2020 normals, station USC00417044) 📝 YourNPGuide Editorial

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