In this issue
FEATURES
10 SEGUIN MATADORS
Matadors prep for the season with intense o-line and d-line position battles.
18 MARION BULLDOGS
Bulldogs aim for balanced attack and defensive dominance with returning starters.
24 NAVARRO PANTHERS
Panthers enter the season with new faces but ready to prove it's not a rebuilding year.
30 TLU BULLDOGS
Texas Lutheran Bulldogs set for 2024 comeback as they rejoin SCAC and pursue championship glory.
AROUND TOWN
Vol. 11, No. 3
Seguin magazine is published twelve times a year by the Seguin Gazette.
Publisher
Elizabeth Engelhardt
Magazine Editor
Desiree Gerland
Writers
Nolan Alexander
Scot Kibbe
Bryce Hays
Photographers
Felicia Frazar
Melanie Krause
Allison Magin
Dustin Wyatt
ADVERTISING
Gay Lynn Olsovsky
Delilah Reyes
Graphic design
Melissa Taylor
TO ADVERTISE IN SEGUIN Magazine Call 830-463-0766
Have Story Ideas? Let us know! seguinmagazine@seguingazette.com
To view the digital version visit issuu.com/seguingazette
Summer break has ended and the lights at football stadiums are illuminating the lines on the fields, signaling the start of Texas high school football for Seguin, Navarro and Marion ISDs and Texas Lutheran University.
Here at The Seguin Gazette, we are eager to hear those fight songs when your teams score touchdowns, or when bands play their go-to third down songs to fire up defenses for critical stops.
We are also ready to see all the fans in the stands waving towels, holding up signs or simply just cheering when a highlight play happens or when teams go up with seconds left on the clock.
We bring you Game Day 2024, an in-depth, inside look at all the parts that make these area football teams great on the gridiron.
Inside you can see previews from me for the Seguin Matadors and Marion Bulldogs, Scot Kibbe’s preview for the Navarro Panthers and Bryce Hayes with your behind-the-scenes look at Texas Lutheran University as they gear up for another gauntlet of opponents.
We hope to capture those spectacular catches and gritty defensive stops and tell those stories for you and other fans to read.
But, most of all, we at the Gazette are ready for the start of football season.
Nolan
Alexander
Sports Writer nolan.alexander@seguingazette.com
As the destination school district of Guadalupe County, Seguin ISD offers quality educational programs and experiences for more than 7,200 students while Seguin High School proudly serves as the flagship high school of the Seguin area. Come and show your support at Matador Stadium where the Spirit of Seguin lives forever. It’s a great day to be a Matador!
MATADORS Seguin High School
MATADORS
2024 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
CC Miller
7 p.m., September 6
Buccaneer Stadium
Brazoswood
7 p.m., September 12 Katy ISD Legacy Stadium
Victoria East
7 p.m., September 20
Matador Stadium Boerne Champion
7 p.m., September 27 Boerne HS Pieper
7 p.m., October 11 Matador Stadium
Smithson Valley
7 p.m., October 18
Smithson Valley HS SA
7 p.m., October 25
Matador Stadium
New Braunfels
7 p.m., November 1 Matador Stadium MacArthur
2 p.m., November 9 Heroes Stadium
Filling up the Trenches
With a large senior class graduating in the spring, Seguin is left with holes in the offensive and defensive lines that need to be filled, head coach Craig Dailey said.
While some positions across the lines are already locked in, others have two or three guys competing for just one spot, so going out and competing every day is crucial, the head coach said.
“Yeah, that’s what we are trying to figure out, the O-line/D-line matchups right now,” he said. “We got David Barron and Chance Hollub leading the offensive line at tackles… We probably got four guys buying for the middle three offensive lineman spots.”
On the dark side defense, the Matadors return their nose tackle for his junior season, but it’s all about the right set of players to put around him, Dailey said.
“Defensively, we got our nose back, (Hunter) Mica, who has been hard to block, just trying to find out the right combination of ends right now,” he said. “(Jared) Rogers is moving some at end or linebacker, depends on who we are playing that week. They have given us some versatility there.”
Preseason and district foes
After Seguin’s peanut butter bowl game against Alamo Heights in Matador Stadium, the team eyes its last two preseason road matchups with CC Miller and Brazoswood.
The Matadors then kick off district competition at home when they invite Victoria East to Matador Stadium. The journey continues with a road trip to Boerne-Champion, back at home versus Pieper and then back on the bus to play Smithson Valley. Wagner (Oct. 25) and Guadalupe River Bowl rival New Braunfels (Nov. 1) conclude the final two home matches, while a road matchup with MacArthur closes out the regular season.
The Flash Nik Henry
Wide receiver
They say you can teach a lot of things on the football field like fundamentals, how to run a route and where to release the ball on a throw, but what you can’t teach are athleticism and raw speed.
Senior Matador wideout Nik Henry has those unteachable assets and that is what will hopefully set him apart from the other high school wideouts in his final season as a Matador, Seguin football head coach Craig Dailey said.
He was part of the Seguin track and field 4x100 relay team that took home bronze during the 2024 UIL Conference 5A state meet with a time of 40.78 seconds. The plan is to use that raw speed and get Henry out in open space where there will not be a ton of athletes that can catch up, Dailey said.
“Nik is our most electric player. He’s had a really good offseason, track season and had a really good fall camp,” he said. “He will be a guy that touches the ball every play. He might play a little defense for us but, of course, he will be our returner.”
In Henry’s junior season, he recorded 35 receptions for 766 yards, averaged 95.8 yards per game and concluded the season with eight touchdowns. He led all receivers in every category in eight of 10 games. Henry caught 25.5% of the passes quarterback Corey Dailey threw, hauled in 43.5% of the total passing yards and his receiving yards ranked third in Conference 5A-District 12
During the 2022 season, Craig Dailey challenged Devin Matthews to step up his game in his senior year and he did. Same goes for 2023 with John Jackson, who set the new Matador singleseason rushing record. And now, the expectations and responsibilities fall on Henry, Craig said.
“That’s the role we have challenged him with this year and he had a really good scrimmage,” the head coach said. “He did some things that were very similar to Devin with the screens in the scrimmage. We are going to find every way to get him the ball: hand it to him, throw it to him, line up at different places. He will be our go-to guy.”
Conference 5A realignment
This year’s UIL realignment shook up District 12 with the removal of three teams — Lehman, Hays and Canyon. But, they added New Braunfels, Pieper and Victoria East with Seguin, Boerne-Champion, MacArthur, Smithson Valley and Wagner.
With only four teams making the playoffs, it’s going to come down to playing your best brand of football week in and week out. Starting district competition hot out the gate will be key because falling behind could mean missing a playoff berth.
New Braunfels Unicorns
The Unicorns are not a new opponent to Seguin. They have one of the oldest rivalries in the state, and now the stakes of those games get raised from sausages and pecans to wins and losses in district standings.
New Braunfels concluded the 2023-24 season 6-5 overall and made the Conference 6A playoffs as the two seed out of District 27 — 4-1 — just behind undefeated Steele.
They lost to Johnson in the Bi-District round of the playoffs, 36-31, so expect a team to easily start competing for the top district spot alongside Conference 5A state qualifier Smithson Valley. New Bruanfels leads the alltime series record versus Seguin at 70-38-3 and the last time a Matador team beat the Unicorns was during the 2013-14 season.
Pieper Warriors
Pieper is not a new opponent for Seguin, all of its fall sports have them in their district, but this will be the first time their football teams square off on the gridiron.
This is the fourth season the Warriors have a UIL football schedule and they straight dominated last season in Conference 5A-II. Pieper went 12-2 overall and swept its district competitors for a 6-0 record and the one seed entering the playoffs.
They beat Alamo heights during a high-scoring affair in the Bi-District round, 53-46, but they fell in the Area to Liberty Hill, 28-14 — a district opponent they beat 33-23 in the regular season.
It may have only been 5A Division II competition, but going undefeated in district standings and making it two rounds deep into the playoffs gives the Warriors a leg up against the tougher Division I opponents.
This Pieper team is not to be overlooked and has a chance to make waves in a newly aligned District 13.
Victoria East Titans
Victoria East is a Conference 5A-Division I team from another district, but, after a rough start to last season, a lateyear push solidified this team into the playoffs.
The Titans dropped three of their first five games to begin the year, but ripped off six consecutive wins and entered the playoffs as the two seed. They defeated Medina Valley in the first round, 35-13, but Pharr-San-Juan-Alamo routed them, 42-7, in the area round, which closed the book on their season. Victoria East went 8-4 and 6-1.
Victoria East scheduled really tough non-district games against Georgetown and Gregory Portland in hopes to prepare for a gauntlet of a district schedule.
If the Titans come out of preseason with only a single loss, look for another competitive team fighting to get into the playoff picture.
“Touchdown
Trends: From Southern Good to The Mercantile”
Discover the latest game day trends from Southern Good and The Mercantile, ensuring you’re stylish from kickoff to celebration.
BULLDOGS Marion High School
Changing schemes
In previous seasons, the Bulldogs stuck with a hardnose ground game, but could also hurt teams in their passing game with run, pass option (RPO) plays, Miller said. This season will see a lot of that same run game, but also an improved passing game that helps support the quarterback, he said.
“There is going to be a little change, but you always try to shoot for 50/50 in the run game/pass game,” he said. “A lot more inside zone and outside zone, not as much RPO as we did in the past. We try to suit our offense to our quarterbacks and running backs and we feel this offense best suits us to have a successful year.”
On the defensive side of the ball, the Bulldogs have eight returning starters and a defensive coordinator that knows how to squeeze every ounce of talent out of the boys, Miller said.
“Coach (Tim) Tesch will have eight returning starters, but we got about 12 that have played a lot,” he said about his team’s defense. “All of our linebackers are returning and it’s probably the best linebacking core since I’ve been here. We lost some key parts from last year like (Chase) Hallmark and those guys, but we feel good where we are at and defensively, right now, is ahead of the game.”
Preseason and district schedule
Not only did the Bulldogs decide to step it up a notch with their preseason schedule with multiple 4A schools, they also made sure it was stiff competition in preparation for the district gauntlet, Miller said.
“We scheduled a bunch of 4A schools because we just want that level of competition,” the head coach said. “We feel good about it, it’s going to be tough competition, it’s going to let us put our guys into position to train and be competitive, but also get the reps we need to get for district.”
The Bulldogs open their preseason schedule with home games against New Braunfels Long Creek, Gonzales and Lago Vista, then Marion hits the road for the final preseason game against Poteet.
Marion plays Luling to open the district season, then the team comes back home the next week versus Randolph and then they go on bye. The Bulldogs play back-to-back road district games against Ingram Moore and Llano and then come back home for senior night when they play Florence.
Iron Mann
Garrett Mann
Two-way lineman
(guard on offense and nose tackle on defense)
Football is a physical sport and no one understands that physicality better than offensive and defensive linemen.
They push and pull the biggest athletes on the field for 48 minutes, and, in the Marion Bulldogs program, senior Garrett Mann sets that hard-nose tone in the trenches on both sides of the ball.
“He is a two-way starter for us this year and did an excellent job for us last season,” Ryne Miller, Marion’s head football coach, said about Mann. “He is just one of those guys who is just a grinder. He loves every part of practice, he loves every part of the game, you know. He is just your hardest worker, never wants to come off the field and he just loves the overall grind of it. As a high school football player, that’s awesome to hear and awesome to have.”
Mann has the stats and accolades to back up the hype the coaching staff gives the senior athlete. He was named a unanimous first-team all-district lineman during his junior season and helped lead the offense to 2,223 rushing yards and 30 touchdowns, while the team’s passing game gathered 1,222 yards and seven touchdowns.
On top of being an unstoppable force between the lines, Mann is also a hard worker off the field in everything he does, Miller said.
“He is a great leader, a part of a lot of different things like student council and is a big time FFA officer for us,” he said. “He is a big part in a lot of our extracurriculars and is very successful. He is extremely smart in the class, too, has high academic focus and does a great job for us.”
Mann does not shy away from the physical side of football, which helps set an example for younger linemen to follow, Miller said. He loves to be a part of the action and will stick his head wherever the football is, he said.
“He loves the physical part. If we are not doing physical things in practice, he is going to come up and say ‘hey coach, we need to start hitting or something,’” the head coach said. “He is that type of kid. He truly is an ironman type football player who loves to be on the field and doesn’t seem to get tired.”
District 13-3A realignment
Marion has some familiar faces that stayed with them in the newly aligned district. Two schools left while only one new one joined the district.
The University Interscholastic League (UIL) placed Florence with Marion, Ingram Moore, Llano, Luling and Randolph. San Antonio Cole — third in 2023 district standings — and Blanco — second in 2023 district standings — left for new districts.
Florence Buffaloes
With the addition of new students to the district, Florence has been upgraded from Conference 3A-Division II to the big guns in Conference 3A-Division I.
Last season did not treat the Buffaloes very nicely as they failed to secure a win all season — 0-10 — and fell dead last in district standings. Their offense scored a total of 73 points in 10 games, while the defense surrendered 449 points.
During the 2022-23 season, Florence accumulated a 1-8 total record and lost all five district games. Their only win that season came over Bruceville-Eddy, 26-14.
Expect this team to see its fair share of struggles out the gate against district competition, but there is a chance the Buffaloes could end the preseason with three or four wins.
PANTHERSNavarro High School
Antonian
7 p.m., September 6
Antonian HS
Canyon Lake
7:30 p.m., September 13
Erwin-Lee Field
La Vernia
7:30 p.m., September 20
La Vernia HS
Wimberly
7:30 p.m., September 27
Erwin-Lee Field
Salado
7:30 p.m., October 4
Salado HS
Jarrell
7:30 p.m., October 11
Erwin-Lee Field
PANTHERS
Gonzales
7:30 p.m., October 18
Gonzales HS
Smithville
7:30 p.m., October 25
Erwin-Lee Field
Lago Vista
7:30 p.m., November 1
Lago Vista HS
ROSTER REFRESH
Navarro Panthers fans would be well-advised to keep a roster handy when they watch their team play this year. That is because it’s likely to include few names from prior seasons.
The Panthers return just two regular starters from last year—both on the offensive line. Head coach Rod Blount says this is the youngest team he has led since taking over the program in 2018.
But Blount sees no reason to write off 2024 as a rebuilding year.
“This is one of the deepest teams we have had recently,” he said. “We started practice with 41 juniors and seniors. Last year, we had to scramble to get 30 players ready for varsity.
“We feel like we’re three deep at some positions. That should allow us to rotate more so we have players rested for district.”
The offensive line appears to be the most settled position for Navarro heading into the season. They return starters Kade Pugh and Craig Heiman, both seniors who made the second-team all-district roster last season. Blount said there has been strong competition for starting positions and this will be the biggest line the Panthers have fielded in a few years.
SEASON CHALLENGES
For the third straight year, the Panthers will have a new starter at quarterback. Sophomore Payton Helford, junior Evan Rodriguez and junior Hudson Jenner all played sub-varsity last year with Helford getting limited playing time on varsity in the post season. Blount praises the athleticism of all three.
At running back, Kohen Blount (242 yards, one TD), Mason Harvey (171 yards, one TD), Dylan Trotti (75 yards, one TD) and Jesse James Waz (13 yards, one TD) all saw varsity playing time in 2023. Kohen Blount is a 245pound fullback who would have put up better numbers but for an injury that kept him out for several games. Trotti provides outside speed at tailback.
With no returning starters, the Panthers’ defense will have its work cut out for it. Defensive end Braddock Gallini and lineman Harvey did get playing time last year, with Gallini racking up 43 tackles and Harvey getting 30. Blount will look to them to help bring along their young teammates.
DISTRICT 13-4A REALIGNMENT
The district for the Panthers will also present new challenges. Gone are the two charter schools they rolled over for easy district wins in previous years. They will still have to face powerhouse Wimberley, which has won the region in the last two years and should contend for a state title again this year. Lago Vista and Jarrell also remain in the district while Smithville, Gonzales and Salado all come over to a district Blount believes will be quite competitive.
The Panthers will try to get through that schedule and continue the strong tradition that has been built in Geronimo. Navarro has finished no worse than second in theidistrict since 2008 and has reached at least the third round of the playoffs in each of the past nine seasons.
Despite their youth, Blount believes they can get there.
“There is such a big gap between junior varsity and varsity when it comes to what our kids need to know on both sides of the ball,” he said. “But this is a good group that mixes well. If they can all get on the same page, play smart and stay healthy, then we can make another playoff run this year.”
This will be Navarro’s 54th season on the football field. They need just five wins to reach the program’s 300th all-time.
BULLDOGSTexas Lutheran University
2024 FOOTBALL SCHEDULE
Trinity
7 p.m., September 7
Trinity Stadium, Tx Centenary
6 p.m., September 14
Bulldog Stadium, TX
McMurry
6 p.m., September 21
Wilford Moore Stadium, TX
Lyon
2 p.m., September 28
Pioneer stadium, AR
Austin College
1 p.m., October 5
Bulldog Stadium, TX
Austin College
1 p.m., October 19
Apple Stadium, Tx
McMurry
4 p.m., October 26
Bulldog Stadium, TX
Lyon
1 p.m., November 2
Bulldog Stadium, TX
Centenary
1 p.m., November 9
Mayo Field, LA
Southwestern Univ.
1 p.m., November 16
Bulldog Stadium, TX
Season Preview
After a disappointing season that saw the Texas Lutheran Bulldogs finish 2-8 in 2023, the 2024 season stands to be a season of change. As the American Southwest Conference (ASC) joins the Pac-12 in conference realignment purgatory, Texas Lutheran decided to jump ship back to a conference in which they found success as a Division-III institution – the Southern Collegiate Athletic Conference (SCAC). After seven seasons as an affiliate member of the ASC, TLU returns to the SCAC – a conference in which they won three championships in a four-year span - for the first time since 2016. Texas Lutheran, who was previously slated to rejoin the SCAC in 2025 in football, will now be a core member in helping the conference relaunch their sponsorship of the sport for the first time since 2016 along with Austin College, Centenary College, Lyon College and McMurry University. The 2024 season will act as the 50th anniversary season of the then-Texas Lutheran College 1974 NAIA Division-III National Championship and in the third season of the Neal Lahue era, the Bulldogs will look to win a championship of their own. With the minimal membership of this initial iteration of the SCAC football conference before Hendrix College and Schreiner University join in 2025 and 2026, respectively, the Bulldogs conference schedule will host a double round robin format with TLU playing each conference member twice.
The Bulldogs return 10 all-conference players from a season ago in 2024 while bringing in more than 170 players into fall camp as they look to fill major holes left by a 20-player senior class and the transfer portal. The Texas Lutheran coaching staff maintained some levels of continuity with no major losses - a rarity in college football especially at the Division-III level - but there was some restructuring as Tommy Holmes and Julius Scott take over the Bulldogs defense as co-defensive coordinators in 2024. Neal LaHue also added former TLU wide receiver Bryce Samuels '22 to work with the wide receivers as well as Quincy Williams to work with tight ends.
The Bulldogs will open on Saturday, Sept. 7, with their toughest game of the season against the rival Trinity Tigers, who were ranked number 13 in the country in the 2024 D3football.com preseason poll. The Bulldogs will open up their home and conference schedule on Sept. 14 with a firsttime-ever matchup against the Centenary College Gentswho will be playing their first varsity football season since the 1940s in 2024. The home opener will have a crowd theme of a "Gold Rush" with all fans asked to wear gold/ yellow. The Bulldogs will welcome McMurry to Seguin for homecoming Oct. 26 in a weekend that will see TLU honor the 50th anniversary of the 1974 NAIA Division-II National Championship team as well as induct the newest
members of the TLU Athletics Hall of Fame and Wall of Honor. Saturday, Nov. 16 will act as Senior Day as the Bulldogs take on former conference foe Southwestern. Other home games include Austin College on Oct. 5 and Lyon College travels to Seguin on Nov. 2 for the first time ever.
Defense Preview
Texas Lutheran’s defense allowed an average of 413.8 yards and 29.4 points per game - ranking amongst the bottom 50 in yards allowed in Division-III. This season promises improvement with the infusion of fresh talent, synergy between the returners and strategic changes.
Key to their defense will be a loaded secondary featuring ASC Newcomer of the Year Troy Tomaselli and All-ASC defensive backs senior Mason Hardy and junior Jermario Thomas. New Braunfels native and all-conference linebacker Tristan Smith and fifth-year senior all-conference defensive lineman Christian Monroe will sure up the Bulldogs front. While co-defensive coordinators Tommy Holmes and Julius Scott inherit a Bulldogs defense littered with all-conference players from a season ago, only time will tell if their scheme will be able to raise the performance of a Bulldogs defense that’s a year older with eight starters returning.
Offense Preview
After taking over for an injured Seth Cosme early in the 2023 season, junior quarterback Caden Bosanko is the anticipated incumbent starting quarterback for TLU in 2024 after compiling more than 1,500 yards and 16 touchdowns through the air and on the ground last season. Even with Bosanko gathering valuable experience over the final six games last season, the TLU offense will have a number of questions entering the 2024 season as it looks to replace their dynamic all-conference backfield of Jacob Forton and DaKory Willis as well as Bosanko’s favorite target Jacob Wallace. The Bulldogs will also look to replace two starters up front, including all-conference left tackle Andrew Gormly.
While LaHue and running backs coach Matt Gustafson tend to deploy a stable of backs in the backfield, Bulldogs fans can expect Weston Guzman to play a bigger role in the Bulldogs offense in 2024. Guzman, a 2023 4x100m relay All-American for the TLU track and field team, will be a favorite to start in the backfield after being a contributor as the third running back the last two years behind Forton and Willis.
Senior tight end Cole Andrus is the only returning all-conference offensive skill player on the Bulldog offense and will be joined by seniors Caleb Camarillo and Chase Patek in the Bulldogs passing attack. Guard Jaxon Eskridge, who earned Second Team All-ASC honors last season, will anchor a TLU offensive line that grew and developed under coach Johnny Garcia as one of the best rushing offenses in the American Southwest Conference last season.
Specialists Preview
Texas Lutheran is home to one of, if not the, best punters in NCAA Division-III in New Braunfels native Cameron Welch, who ranked sixth in NCAA Division-III in punting average (42.38) last season just missing the TLU single-season record in the process. The All-ASC First Team punter will look to continue his success in his senior season and cement himself as one of the best punters in program history as he pursues the career punting average record held by Dillon Koop (39.7 yards).
Kicker Joaquin Rodriguez, who earned All-ASC Second Team honors in 2023, converted 9-of-15 field goal attempts this season to finish in a tie for second in successful field goals and made field goals per game. Rodriguez averaged 5.0 points per game for the Bulldogs, which is sixth most in the American Southwest Conference and second amongst kickers in the conference.
One of the most successful returners in TLU’s Division-III
history, Eugene Robinson IV, returns for one final season to return kicks for the Bulldogs after earning All-ASC Third Team honors in 2023. Robinson IV led the Bulldogs with 530 yards as the Bulldogs primary kick returner. Robinson finished second in the ASC in total kick return yards and fourth with a 21.2 yard kick return average. Robinson enters his final season in second place on TLU's Division-III leaderboard with 1,404 kick return yards in his career, only trailing leader Anthony Smith, who finished his career with 1,942 yards.
Gone are the loaded schedules with numerous top 25 matchups that the ASC presented for the Bulldogs and with that ease in strength of schedule comes one vision: a championship. While the SCAC will not have an automatic qualifying bid for the NCAA Tournament in 2024, an SCAC Championship could catapult TLU back into the prominence it once held during its last stint in the SCAC. The 2023 season provided a mix of youth and veteran experience with 2024 seemingly providing much of the same - especially on offense - but after a motivated offseason and a volume-filled recruiting class LaHue and the Bulldogs have moved past the ghosts of last season with all eyes toward the future and the goals of success in Seguin.
EVENT CALENDAR
2024 Annual Chamber Banquet: Eighteenth – 5:30 - 8:30 pm
The evening will include a social time, dinner, a presentation from our guest speaker TBD, an awards presentation, and ending with the passing of the gavel from William VanderWaal, 2023-2024 chair of the board, to 2024-2025 chair of the board, Elizabeth Engelhardt. This is an RSVP only event and no tickets will be sold at the door.
Location: Seguin Events Complex, 950 S. Austin St.
Third Thursday: nineteenth – 4 - 8 pm
Businesses and shops in downtown Seguin are open with sales, events, snacks and fun! Each month features a different, exciting theme. Shop Seguin. Shop Local. Shop Small. Help support local businesses as they change to meet the ever-changing environment. Shop online or in store.
Location: Central Park, 201 S. Austin St.
Fall meeting - Wildlife Management: twentieth – 6 pm
Guadalupe County Wildlife Management Association hosts guest speakers Olivia Kost, new Wildlife Biologist, and Calan Coleman from The Nature Conservancy on prescribed burns. Be sure to check out the Region IV Wildlife Newsletter for Kost's article on page 5. Please RSVP to guadcountywma@gmail.com or 830-660-3296 to reserve $15 dinner plate(s) by Next Door Catering.
Location: The Big Red Barn, 390 Cordova Road.
Fall Clean-Up Day: twenty-eighth – 8 am - 12 pm
Seguin residents are encouraged to bring discarded items from around the home for free disposal at the Seguin Events Complex (Coliseum) parking lot. Participants are required to provide proof of residency in the city limits by showing a photo ID or utility bill. City employees will be available to assist residents with unloading items from vehicles and trailers.
Location: Seguin Events Complex, 950 S. Austin St.
Annual Pumpkin Patch: sept. Twenty-eighth – oct. Thirty-first
Monday - Saturday | 10 a.m. - 7 p.m., Sunday | 12 p.m. - 7 p.m.
Discover autumn fun for the whole family at the First Methodist Church pumpkin patch, where vibrant pumpkins, festive activities and seasonal delights await.
Location: First Methodist Church, 710 N. Austin St.
Live2Lead Seguin: October fourth – 9 am - 4 pm
Live2Lead is an annual leadership gathering developed by Maxwell Leadership and the Dream Big Facility. Attendees learn from renowned leadership experts in various industries, gain new perspectives on relevant topics, and leave prepared with practical tools to maximize their leadership abilities and trajectories.
Location: Living Water Church, 3325 Texas 46.
THE ANSWER IS YES
You’ll receive skilled, compassionate, individualized care.