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For the birds

New 11-acre wildlife preserve blooms in pristine Hill Country setting

Brianna Caleri
Jan 20, 2022 | 12:35 pm

Nestled in a pocket of tiny towns with cute geological names — Marble Falls, Granite Shoals — Horseshoe Bay merges luxury into some of the first real wilderness outside the Austin metropolitan area. While most Hill Country day trips bring travelers straight west, Horseshoe Bay brings them through a less traversed path, roughly 60 miles northwest, up the swerving bends of the Colorado River, eventually pooling into Lake Lyndon B. Johnson.

In this resort town, landscapes turn from open pastures to lakeside villas in the blink of an eye. Mansions line up on tendrils of land that puddle into the lake, snagging an improbable amount of waterfront property (and supported by a staggering number of stone arches). While Zillow litters its red dots along the shore ($7.1 million, $6.2 million, $3.6 million), the Horseshoe Bay Nature Park carves out an environmental haven in rebellion.

The area that now boasts a new 11-acre park had been designated as a building site for high-density condos, which community members were not shy about saying they did not want interrupting their views or quiet escape. The pushback was led by a mixed group of benefactors, including individual area residents making donations. Later, landscape designers Twistleaf and architecture firm Parkhill donated designs for an outlook deck at the highest point in the park, according to the Parkhill website, that took into account the way the sun moves in the West.

A half-mile sightseeing trail of crushed granite runs a loop around the perimeter of the elongated park, passing Chimney Swift towers (like skyscrapers for birds), wildlife watering stations, beehives, and bird blinds. In its early stages after its January 10 opening, the park is emphasizing the diversity of bird life, boasting “flourishing” populations, including “black-bellied whistling ducks, painted buntings, scissor-tailed flycatchers, Bell’s Vireos, and yellow-billed cuckoos,” per a release.

The park categorizes its land using eight distinct “ecological zones,” among them woodlands, a boulder draw (ravine), and three kinds of oak mottes. The diversity of these zones ensures a better diversity of wildlife can be seen around the park. They foster flora such as yucca and Texas wildflowers, as well as countless fauna less likely to be seen in the city, like jackrabbits.

An extensive but economically paced learning section on the park’s website provides information about nearly everything to see, and can be used to set new goals for more visits than even the most ambitious Horseshoe Bay residents could plan.

The Horseshoe Bay Nature Park is open now at 1514 Golden Nugget. For more information or to make a donation, visit hsbpark.org.

The nature park thwarted condo developers' plans, establishing a tiny thriving ecosystem with special promise for birders.

Horseshoe Bay Nature Park
Courtesy of Horseshoe Bay Nature Park
The nature park thwarted condo developers' plans, establishing a tiny thriving ecosystem with special promise for birders.
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Weekend Event Guide

Here are the top 5 things to do in Austin this weekend

Paige Turner
Oct 27, 2022 | 6:00 am
Reba McEntire
Photo courtesy of Reba McEntire
Reba McEntire in concert

Food festivals, can’t-miss concerts, and film premieres top our list of hot happenings in the days ahead. Catch a show by Blue Man Group or eat your fill of smoked meats and barbecue at Throwin’ Smoke. Check out the top five things to do in Austin this weekend.

For a full listing of events, go to our calendar.

Thursday, October 27

Austin Film Festival & Conference
Cinematic celebrations abound with the return of the Austin Film Festival. The week-long experience will screen over 33 world, North American, U.S., and Texas premieres. Highlights include opening night film The Whale, directed by Darren Aronofsky and starring Brendan Fraser, and James Gray's Armageddon Time, starring Anne Hathaway, Jeremy Strong, and Anthony Hopkins. Programming will take place at the Paramount Theatre, Galaxy Theatres, and a variety of other locations in Austin. For a full schedule of events and to get passes, check out the festival website.

Friday, October 28

Flint Field TX presents Throwin' Smoke
Prepare your tastebuds and your waistlines for a two-day event showcasing all things barbecued and smoked. Throwin’ Smoke will take over The Long Time grounds with dining experiences, live music from Austin musicians, cocktails, and more. Explore ticket options here.

Broadway In Austin: Blue Man Group
Don’t miss your chance to experience Blue Man Group during their brief stop at Bass Concert Hall as part of their North American tour. Audiences can expect their signature drumming, custom-made instruments, interactive performance style, along with new music and show elements. Tickets for all three shows are still available here. All ages are welcome.

Reba McEntire in concert
Country music songstress Reba McEntire performs live in concert at the Moody Center for one night only. She’s best known for hit songs like “Does He Love You” and “I’m a Survivor” and has released more than 25 albums throughout her career. For seating availability, go to the ticketing website.

Sunday, October 30

The Contemporary Austin presents The Very 'Rary
Attend this new family-friendly fundraiser hosted by The Contemporary Austin on the lawns, woods, and shoreline of Laguna Gloria. Activities include art stations, adventures, appearances by local artists, and live entertainment. Get more information on what to expect at the Very ‘Rary in our recent feature of the event. Proceeds from the day of fun will benefits The Contemporary's education programs. For tickets, click here.

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Movie review

The Good Nurse flatlines as a great serial killer movie despite Oscar-winning stars

Alex Bentley
Oct 26, 2022 | 4:01 pm
The Good Nurse flatlines as a great serial killer movie despite Oscar-winning stars
Photo by JoJo Whilden / Netflix

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse

It could be argued that American audiences and content makers have an uncomfortable obsession with serial killers. That fixation has only grown through years with the proliferation of true crime podcasts and streaming shows, each of which has returned to mass murderers repeatedly. A relatively recent killer with an unusual method is showcased in the new Netflix film, The Good Nurse.

But anyone expected a dark and gritty film may be disappointed, as the film shifts focus from the killer, Charlie Cullen (Eddie Redmayne), to one of his co-workers, Amy Loughren (Jessica Chastain). A nurse at Parkfield Memorial Hospital in New Jersey in 2003, she becomes quick friends with Charlie after he starts there as a night nurse.

Their bond, one which becomes tighter after Charlie helps hide the fact that Amy has a debilitating heart condition, keeps her from understanding that Charlie is killing patients, poisoning them by injecting insulin into random IV bags in the hospital’s storage room. It’s only when an internal hospital investigation triggers a police inquiry led by detectives Tim Braun (Noah Emmerich) and Danny Baldwin (Nnamdi Asomugha) that Amy starts to have her doubts.

Directed by Tobias Lindholm and written by Kristy Wilson-Cairns, the film is well done, but never achieves the gravitas that would transform it into something great. Part of this is because the filmmakers never show Charlie as having any outward signs of being evil. He has a bland niceness about him that conceals his lurid impulses; that’s an effective way of showing that you can never know what’s happening in another person’s mind, but an ineffective way of building drama in a film.

The telegraphed nature of Amy and Charlie’s friendship takes on the feel of a slightly higher-class Lifetime movie, one that doesn’t quite fit the expectations brought by two Oscar winners in the lead roles. What ends up being more compelling is the hospital administrators, led by Linda Garran (Kim Dickens), covering up Charlie’s crimes for unknown reasons, and the doggedness of the two detectives trying to discover what exactly is happening.

On another note that’s admittedly a minor quibble, the film’s title does the story no favors. Using The Good… as the start of a title is a vastly overused crutch. Recent examples on both TV and in movies have included The Good Doctor, The Good Fight, The Good Wife, The Good Place, The Good Boss, and The Good House. Sometimes a film can overcome the plainness of such a title, but The Good Nurse is hampered by it.

Chastain and Redmayne each give respectable performances, but they’re nowhere near the award-worthy ones they’ve put on in the past. The most notable actor in the film winds up being Asomugha, a former NFL player who’s been inching into the entertainment industry over the past decade. He’s flat-out great in this role and could use it as a springboard to bigger and better parts.

The Good Nurse has its fair share of interesting moments and accomplished actors to bring them to life, but it falls short of being a must-watch. It’s a serial killer movie that mostly omits the killing, taking most of its reason for being with it.

---

The Good Nurse is now streaming on Netflix.

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse

Photo by JoJo Whilden / Netflix

Eddie Redmayne and Jessica Chastain in The Good Nurse

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Palatial pampering

Austin's acclaimed destination spa unwraps exclusive $1,000 Swiss facial for 25th anniversary

Stephanie Allmon Merry
Oct 26, 2022 | 12:49 pm
Austin's acclaimed destination spa unwraps exclusive $1,000 Swiss facial for 25th anniversary
Photo courtesy of Lake Austin Spa Resort

A red light mask is part of the $1,050 Regal by Valmont facial.

When the Lake Austin Spa Resort went shopping for a 25th-anniversary gift for guests, it aimed higher than traditional silver and picked treatments that incorporated gold, diamonds, and caviar. As a result, the dreamy destination spa now offers some of the most opulent, exclusive, and — at upwards of $1,000 — most expensive facials in the world.

In anticipation of its milestone anniversary in 2022, the Lake Austin Spa Resort’s LakeHouse Spa partnered with Swiss luxury skincare brand Valmont to introduce the new facials, which are as cutting-edge as they are indulgent.

Creme de la creme among them is The Regal by Valmont, which costs a jaw-dropping $1,050. The Regal was designed in Switzerland exclusively for LakeHouse Spa, and Austin is the only place in the world to get it.

“It’s definitely a once-in-a-lifetime experience for a lot of people,” says Becky Bence, Lake Austin Spa Resort lead esthetician. “And it’s definitely worth it.”

The 135-minute facial begins with the high-tech deep cleanse of the HydroFacial and proceeds with seven masks, including four collagen masks, a papaya enzyme, and a medical-grade LED light mask. Every single product from Valmont’s ultra luxe “masterpiece collection” called l’Elixir des Glaciers is used; some products are made with an uber anti-aging essence of gold sturgeon fish. All are applied using a Valmont signature “butterfly” motion that helps to lift and sculpt the face.

What puts the Regal over the top, though, are 35 minutes of choreographed massage, including a 500-year-old technique called “kobido,'' developed for the empress of Japan. Touted as a “surgical facelift as a massage," Bence says, kobido was once reserved only for nobility and the empress, then later handed down from masters to disciples.

So rarified is the Regal facial, that just six of the 21 LakeHouse Spa estheticians are trained to perform it. They learned at a weeklong “bootcamp” conducted by two Valmont experts who flew in to Austin from Switzerland.

“It was kind of like the Navy Seal program of facials,” Bence says. “It was kind of like being handed down something from a true master.”

The $1K price tag hasn’t kept people away. Since the Regal was introduced several months ago, guests have come from all over the world — and from all corners of Texas — to experience what the spa calls “the ultimate in anti-aging perfection and cellular renewal.” (After all $1,000 is still far less than an actual facelift or even regular nick-tuck-plump-ups by a cosmetic surgeon.)

Why reach all the way to Switzerland for the palatial new treatments? After emerging from COVID shutdowns, Bence says, LakeHouse Spa personnel “auditioned” just about every single skincare line out there. The estheticians voted, and Valmont won.

“We wanted to add something really special, something luxurious but yet something out-of-this-world amazing that truly benefited the skin,” Bence says. “Something almost to replace Botox and fillers …that gave you basically a natural face-lift without being invasive but still being relaxing.”

In addition to the Regal, other new Valmont facials introduced in this 25th anniversary year include:

  • The 150-minute Gold & Diamond Trifecta Facial that involves three massages, four masks, infra-red LED, and a hydrogel mask with micronized gold and diamonds, which costs $990.
  • The Golden Aura Rose & Caviar Facial, a 100-minute treatment that incorporates marine products containing caviar extract and Diamond Collagen, costing $790.
  • Energy of the Glaciers, a 90-minute facial that features rare ingredients from Switzerland and deep, structural massage of the face, stimulating muscles to tone and lift; $750.
  • Luminosity of Ice Facial, a 90-minute treatment described as a “toxin-flushing, facial reflexology-inspired facial” that uses a cocktail of seven plants organically cultivated at high altitudes; $650.

The spa also has a complete menu of non-Valmont facials and dozens of other signature treatments.

Luxe but laid back
Lake Austin Spa Resort’s Dallas-based co-owner, Mike McAdams, says the new facials are indicative of how high the spa wanted to aim for its 25th anniversary.

“Our guest demands a luxurious, more refined experience, and Valmont helps us deliver on that objective,” he says.

And yet, Lake Austin Spa Resort remains a place where robed guests can emerge from a $1,000 facial and step over geckos skittering along the sidewalk while a speedboat whizzes by pumping Beyonce through the speakers. It’s upscale but unpretentious, luxurious but laid-back — almost like “spa camp.”

“We never wanted to create the ‘zen’ spa with stark lines and absence of color – we aimed to create just the opposite,” McAdams says. “Your surroundings absolutely have an impact on how your wellness journey can unfold and influence your daily life. The colors and textures that surround you mimic the vibe of the Texas Hill Country and pay homage to nature.”

The top-rated spa and resort is a far cry now from the place McAdams purchased on January 1, 1997. Located along the shores of scenic Lake Austin in the Texas Hill Country, the property had lived previous lives as a fishing camp, nudist enclave, rodeo ranch, and diet camp.

McAdams — at the time a commercial real estate developer for Dallas-based Trammell Crow — experienced a personal work-life-balance crisis that's wholly relatable in today's post-pandemic, "great-resignation" world two-and-a-half decades later.

“I was living on a plane, traveling a lot. It was high stress, and high energy and I loved it,” he says. “In 1984, I found a place that changed my life — the Ashram in Calabasas, California. It was a true bootcamp, with physical activities and dietary restrictions that were very intense… This experience forced me to come down from my hectic lifestyle of traveling, eating, drinking, and not exercising."

After adopting healthier habits in his own life, he and an LSU fraternity brother, Billy Rucks, seized an opportunity to buy and transform the Lake Austin Spa Resort; they still co-own it today. “It was a diamond in the rough," McAdams says.

More 25th anniversary offerings
One of the biggest challenges running the spa the last 25 years (besides navigating a global pandemic), McAdams says, has been continually evolving in an industry dominated by fleeting fads and headline-grabbing gimmicks.

“The changes in the last 25 years in the spa industry have been monumental,” McAdams says. “The global wellness industry is now a $4.5 trillion economy, with ‘spa’ being one small part of the bubble. We are all seekers looking for ways to look and feel our best, and I think the growth is due to a demand in wanting to take our health into our own hands.”

One of the resort’s newest touts (proudly stated on their home page) is that they’re Texas’ only destination spa on a lake. Recently they’ve introduced a full range of water activities, including a water taxi that transports guests to the spa and back.

“When we bought Lake Austin Spa Resort in 1997, our guests would put a toe in the water — but we’ve also evolved and now understand the power of being near a moving body of water and how it affects your health, happiness, and even alleviates depression,” McAdams says.

Along with the new fancy facials and lake programming, the resort has also added new classes and activities and upgraded amenities for its 25th anniversary. Befitting its location in the “live music capital of the world,” Austin-area musicians now entertain guests nightly around s’mores pits. There’s new artwork around the campus, too.

“My favorite part of celebrating our 25th anniversary this year has been to watch a very special piece of commissioned art be installed in the first few months of the year,” McAdams says. “A local Austin artist created a 64-foot long, 400-square foot abstract mural of stone, glass, and tile designed to honor our magnificent natural location on Lake Austin.

"Within the creation, I wanted to honor all of the amazing past and present people who helped get to where we are today. Their names are included in this mural, discreetly placed within this homage to nature. Because of these special people, Lake Austin Spa Resort has enjoyed many wonderful accolades through the years.”

---

To mark its 25th anniversary, Lake Austin Spa Resort is offering 25 percent off stays of at least two nights or more, through January 31, 2023. Reservations must be booked by October 31. Some packages include generous spa credits, but sadly, the $1,050 Regal facial is not 25 percent off. Find more information at www.lakeaustin.com.

Red light mask, facial

Photo courtesy of Lake Austin Spa Resort

A red light mask is part of the $1,050 Regal by Valmont facial.

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