Thursday, March 29, 2012

Big Bend National Park - Chisos Mountains

The Rio Grande starts in Colorado, travels through New Mexico, then forms much of the southern border of the U.S. along the states of Chihuahua and Coahuila in Mexico.  The environmental habitat formed by river, desert and mountains means that Big Bend contains a unique blend of flora and fauna not found anywhere else.
The River
From it's headwaters in Colorado the Rio Grande is a working river dammed for irrigation and manufacturing and it then loses much of it's water to riparian agriculture and evaporation.  In times of good water, the river still flows mightily through New Mexico and is significant when it gets to Mexico, but in times of drought, like now, the river is a bare trickle by the time it reaches this far south.  Still, enhanced by creeks and streams in Mexico, the river feeds a green oasis of Cottonwoods and grasses as it passes through the park.
The desert.  
The Chihuahuan Desert reaches it's northernmost boundary here in the park where it will give way to the wetter Sonoran and Mojave deserts to the north.  Many of the plants and animals of the Chihuahuan Desert only U.S. habitat is here in Big Bend.  Rabbits, Lizards, Snakes and Javelinas (Collared Peccary - Picture to follow as soon as we can get one) live in the desert.
The Mountains.  
The Chisos Mountains , volcanic in nature, rise starkly out of the desert, suck in the majority of the rain that falls here and provide a habitat for the rare Carmen Mountains White Tailed Deer as well as Ringtails, Foxes, Black Bear, and Mountain Lions. 

It is very unusual to see cactus (including prickly pear, letchuguilla, sotol, agave, and many others), junipers, pine and fir trees, and yuccas in proximity.  Of all the parks we have visited this park has the most unusual variety of plant life we have ever seen.
Big Bend is a CCC (Civilian Conservation Corp) park and much of it's infrastructure was built by the CCC in the 1930s.  This culvert is an example of the type of stone work you will often see in CCC parks.
We were camped up here in the Chisos Mountains so we hiked the lost mine trail to view Lost Mine Peak.  Lost Mine Peak is the site of a supposed silver mine that was sealed up when native slaves overthrew and killed their Spanish captors.  True?  maybe. 
Lost Mine Trails End.  Looking at Elephant Tusk, the south rim of the Chisos Basin, and off into Mexico.

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