An unincorporated community on FM 470 in western Bandera County — a store, a roadhouse, ranches, and the country around it.
Tarpley sits at the junction of Farm-to-Market Roads 470 and 462, on Williams Creek, about twelve miles southwest of Bandera. It is not incorporated, has no city government, and has never been large — the Handbook of Texas records a population of thirty in 2000. Its identity is straightforward: quiet ranch country on the road between Bandera and the Sabinal Canyon, and a destination in its own right mainly for one thing — a roadside eatery that has been on national television and draws people from San Antonio and beyond to a town with no gas station and no grocery store.
Mac & Ernie's sits at 11804 FM 470, at the junction with FM 462. It was featured on the premier episode of the Food Network's Diners, Drive-Ins and Dives with Guy Fieri — the very first restaurant on the very first episode, back in 2007 — and later on Bizarre Foods with Andrew Zimmern. It is, by any measure, the reason most visitors come to Tarpley: a gourmet roadhouse in a town this small, serving food that has no business being this far from a city.
It is open Friday and Saturday, 11am–4pm and 5pm–9pm, and Sunday 11am–2pm, and closed Monday through Thursday. Check the restaurant's website for seasonal closure dates before you drive out.
FM 470 between Bandera and Tarpley is twelve miles of two-lane road through ranch country — live oaks arching over the pavement in places, cattle guards, ranch gates, and long views across the hills. West of Tarpley the road continues toward Utopia, connecting to RM 187 and the Sabinal Canyon, which makes it a feeder route to the Twisted Sisters motorcycle corridor.
FM 470 is not one of the Twisted Sisters. It is the road that gets you to them from Bandera, or the road that brings you back. It passes through country that looks the way the Hill Country looked before development reached the eastern towns. That is its value.
The settlement traces to 1878, when a post office named Hondo Cañon opened on Williams Creek. In 1899 it was moved south and renamed Tarpley, after Tarpley Prickett, the son of postmaster John Prickett. By 1900 a store and a smithy were attached to the post office; a school followed in 1902. The community has never grown beyond a handful of families — twenty-five residents in 1925, thirty in 2000 — and the surrounding economy has always been ranching: cattle first, then goats and sheep on the rocky hillsides, and in recent decades a shift toward hunting leases and recreational ranching.
Tarpley is hill-and-ranch country, not a riverfront town. It does not sit on the Medina River the way Bandera and Medina do. The terrain is rolling limestone hills in live oak and cedar, cut by seasonal creeks — Williams Creek and Hondo Creek among them — at about 1,320 feet elevation. Ranches run to hundreds and thousands of acres, gates line the road, and traffic is light.
Tarpley is in the upper Medina watershed but is not a riverfront town. Williams Creek runs through the community and Hondo Creek drains the country to the west — both seasonal, running after rain and going dry in summer drought. There is no river access here the way Bandera or Concan offers it.
This is Flash Flood Alley. Low-water crossings on the ranch roads rise on rain that fell miles away under a clear sky overhead, and they go under early and fast. Know your high ground, and keep a weather radio. Never assume a crossing is passable, and never assume a river is safe.
Backroads Hill Country manages a place to stay in the Tarpley area — a quiet creekside option for making a weekend of it rather than driving back the same evening. Availability is surfaced through the guide; ask Brody about staying near Tarpley.
Planning a drive out FM 470? Ask Brody, the Bandera-area local guide — he covers Tarpley too. When Mac & Ernie's is open, what the drive's like, and where to stay near the creek. Ask Brody at bandera.ai →
Tarpley is a place where the road is the point. FM 470 through western Bandera County is one of the quieter, prettier drives in this part of Texas, and Tarpley is the reason to stop along it. The town does not try to be anything — it has a restaurant that belongs on television and a setting that belongs on a postcard, and it asks nothing of you except that you fill your tank before you leave Bandera.