Stone arch footbridges crossing the River Walk, the Alamo's curved parapet half-hidden behind cypress, the green water moving slow beneath the canopy. San Antonio's quiet way of holding history. Singles past 50 here often have ties to the bases, the schools, or the medical center, with three or four generations of family in town. However you arrived at this point (late divorce, decades on your own, a recent loss), there's a courteous, bilingual welcome to how new people meet.
Your profile stays out of search engines. Only signed-in members see you, and your name doesn't show up if a coworker or a parishioner Googles it. That privacy matters in a city where so many circles overlap. You can look around quietly. Free to set up, no card needed.
For a first walk, San Antonio members favor the Pearl District on Saturday morning or coffee in Southtown. The River Walk runs differently in shoulder season, quieter, more local. King William's Victorian streets suit a slow afternoon; La Villita is the standby for an evening. The McNay Art Museum's gardens give you a slower option. Brackenridge Park works year-round. The Hill Country (Fredericksburg, Boerne) earns a Saturday once you've already met.