The HOA Took His Trees. One Old Deed Turned the Water Against Them.-Ginny

Colt Hargrove did not buy 22 acres in the Texas Hill Country because he wanted a fight.

He bought it because his grandfather had worked cattle on neighboring land for 40 years, because his family still knew the smell of cedar after rain, and because the three-acre spring-fed lake in the middle of the parcel looked like something that had been waiting for him.

The property sat about 40 minutes outside Bernie, far enough from traffic that mornings came with birds, limestone dust, and the cold mineral smell of water hidden underground.

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Colt built a low ranch house on the eastern ridge with a wide porch and a stone chimney his father helped mortar by hand.

Every window faced Harrove Lake, though for years he only thought of it as the lake.

It filled every summer from its spring, deep and clear, as if it had a private agreement with the earth below.

The southern boundary needed shade, so Colt planted red oaks and live oaks in a long green line between his house and the lower road.

The last red oak went into the ground when his daughter was learning to walk.

She used to stand on the porch with one hand on the railing and point at the largest sapling like it was a friend arriving for breakfast.

For years, the trees did what trees do when no one bothers them.

They grew.

They thickened.

They turned a strip of land into memory.

Then the Ridgerest Harmony Association arrived next door with a new subdivision of about 90 homes.

The developer carved roads into the hillside, graded the land flat, and built rows of beige houses with two-car garages and mailboxes placed in neat HOA-approved increments.

The association’s president was Brenda Thatch, a retired mid-level insurance manager in her 50s who treated bylaws like scripture and disagreement like disorder.

She wore highlighted hair stiff enough to survive weather and a vest with enough pockets to suggest she had prepared for emergencies that never existed.

At first, Colt tried to ignore her.

He had no interest in the subdivision’s meetings, its mailbox regulations, or its habit of sending passive-aggressive notices to people whose grass offended the wrong committee.

That changed when the first certified letter arrived.

It accused Colt’s southern fence line of interfering with a planned shared water pipeline and claimed the association had a prescriptive easement because its landscaping crews had mowed near his fence for 2 years.

Colt read the letter twice at his kitchen table with a coffee mug beside it and the lake shining through the window.

He did not panic.

He documented.

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