I have a friend who loves a road trip and a good hike - she drove the entire 12 hours to BBNP and back! I was the navigation and co pilot. We went on a few nice hikes!
Here is the Wiki link: Big Bend National Park - Wikipedia
We stayed about 70 miles away (this area of Texas is spread out and pretty isolated and the places in closer Terlingua, TX were booked up!) in a cute little Western Texas town called Alpine - we did a walking tour when we got there Friday afternoon.
The next day we went to the park and the Ranger Station and got some maps and visited the Eastern most corner of the park, the Rio Grande Valley. On the way there, we saw a fossil display area - really cool. Describing how millions of years ago, this area that is now a desert was a shallow ocean. The archeologist who discovered T Rex (unsure where) came here and found more T Rex and there was a dinosaur discovered here called Alamosaurus. The display said (I think) in 1940 it took 6 men and a horse drawn wagon several days just to get the head removed and preserved!
This picture shows an TRex head (replica) a Deinosaucous (I think closest head) and a flying dinosaur replica - I almost think that flying one would scare me the most!
We drove past the Boquillas crossing (into Mexico) and saw the Rio Grande for the first time from the overlook near Boquillas, Mexico. Then we hiked the Boquillas Canyon trail. It was pretty!
We spent the entire first day seeing the desert portion of the park. We went to lunch area and had our car lunch on a picnic table under the large cottonwood trees. Then we started the 3.5 mile (one way) hike along the southwest trail, which was already pretty warm. We hiked all the way to the overlook about 1.5 miles and enjoyed that pretty view and walked back. Then we drove to the shorter 1.4 hike near the hot springs.
The hot springs are a popular spot, we felt like we would rather sit in the 100 degree spring early in the morning or late in the day!
I was lucky enough to spot a road runner on our way driving to the closer hike to the springs. I did not catch him with a photo though. On our way driving to the park we also saw coyote, a wild boar and antelope. The next day we would see mule deer, javelina and couple more road runners.
After the hot springs, we drove by the centrally located Chisos Mountains station to plan our 2nd and last day, on our way to catch the sunrise at Santa Elena Canyon, which is closer to the west side and also along the Rio Grande.
This is a pretty popular spot to see pictures taken in this park. The taller cliffs on the left are Mexico and the cliff on the right is USA. There is a hike that runs along the canyon on the right with steps and railings for a pretty overlook hike, but it was getting late in the day and although we both had lights, i was not really up for trying to walk more in the dark!
So we drove back along the very pretty scenic Ross Maxwell drive along the Nail and Wilson ranch sites, the Mule Ears mountain, the Tuff Canyon, etc to a really pretty vista called Sotol Vista Overlook where we finished up seeing the sunset and stayed until 9pm to see the dark sky light up with the stars, plants and part of the Milky Way Galaxy - next time I will take a good camera for that!
The 2nd to the last photo in these 4, the split in the canyon in the middle level of the horizon showing the cliffs is where Santa Elena Canyon is. Just amazing to see! This park is a designated "dark sky" area, where this is almost zero light polution, allowing one to see the stars all around, almost like a snow globe effect!
Hope you enjoy. I will post more next week about our hike in the Chisos Mountains!
Beautiful. So glad you got to go and explore/relax/enjoy!
ReplyDeleteThis area was not even on my radar! I am so glad I went and saw it, very beautiful. Thank you!
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