Submit Story

Homepage
All CNHINS News
    Crime
    Disasters
    Education
    Environment
    General news
    Latino
    Military
    Government
    Politics
    Weather
Lifestyle
    Arts
    Automotive
    Books
    Entertainment
    Faith
    Family
    Fashion
    Fitness
    Food
    Garden
    Health
    Homes
    How-to
    Local history
    Medicine
    Science
    Seniors
    Technology
    Travel
Opinion
    Columns
    Editorials
Sports
    Sports, college
    Sports, high school
    Sports, local
    Sports Opinion
    Outdoors
    Sports, pro
Business
    Agriculture
    Energy / Oil and Gas
    Finance
    Real estate
CNHIns Originals
Talkers

News & reporting
Page design
Photography
On the Web
Ethics and Standards
Management and culture

Tom Lindley
national editor
812-282-1012 tlindley@cnhi.com

J.B. Blosser Bittner
deputy national editor
405-255-2985
jbittner@cnhi.com

Bill Ketter
CNHI vice president for editorial
978-946-2233
wketter@cnhi.com

April 17, 2008 10:31 am

South Texas definitely for the birds

Even those that don’t especially appreciate birding would have little to complain about at the Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge.
Located 12 miles southeast of McAllen, Texas, the 2,088 acre tract that abuts neighboring Mexico gives visitors a glimpse of the natural world that has vanished from 95 percent of the Lower Rio Grande.

By Dave Zuchowski
CNHI News Service

NEW CASTLE, Pa.“I hope you love birds, too. It is economical. It saves going to heaven.” — Emily Dickinson, American poet.

Even those that don’t especially appreciate birding would have little to complain about at the Santa Ana National Wildlife Refuge.
Located 12 miles southeast of McAllen, Texas, the 2,088 acre tract that abuts neighboring Mexico gives visitors a glimpse of the natural world that has vanished from 95 percent of the Lower Rio Grande.
Located near the junction of four distinct climate zones (temperate, desert, coastal and subtropical), the refuge established in 1943 for the protection of migratory birds is both one of the smallest and most diverse in the U.S. It’s also a birding hot spot where 397 avian species have been seen at one time or another.
Located along two major flyways — the Central and Mississippi – the refuge has seen visitation grow from 11,000 visitors in 1970 to 201,000 in 2000. Of those, park ranger Mike Carlo estimates that 40 percent are avid bird watchers, 40 percent are winter Texans from northern climes and 20 percent are local residents.
To date visitors have come from all 50 states and numerous countries to take advantage of the refuge’s bird and nature walks, tram rides, canoe excursions and 14 miles of hiking trails. The refuge is also a butterfly mecca with as many as 65 documented species recorded on a single October day and 250 species spotted overall, including Zebra longwings, Julias, and Mexican bluewings
“If Santa Ana were a state all by itself, we’d rank fourth in the nation in diversity of butterfly species,” Carlo said.
Hopping on a tram for a drive around the refuge, I managed to see a interesting array of flora and fauna. Volunteer guide Robert Schmall pointed out ubiquitous Spanish moss growing on the branches of trees. We also spotted several pintail and cottontail resacas, (crescent-shaped lakes created by periodic flooding) as well as an armadillo and a rare indigo snake.
One stop took us to a trail that led to the Rio Grande Overlook. (The refuge offers 4 mile canoe trips on the river Wednesdays through Sundays for a fee of $20 per person). A second stop gave us a look at a 150-year-old cemetery. Many of the tombstones were so old the inscriptions had eroded, but others — like the one for Thomas Walter Jones, dated 1853, — sit next to one for the stepson of the area’s original land grant recipient, Christoval Leal.
A 44-passenger, 1-1/2 hour long, interpretive tram ride is offered from the visitor center three times a day from November to April. The cost is $3 for adults, $1 for children.
For those who might want a taste of a Mexican border town, Nuevo Progresso has plenty of atmosphere as well as a string of dentist offices, pedicure and manicure parlors, barber and beautician enterprises, drug stores, gift shops and duty free shopping. Simply pay the 25 cent toll, cross the international bridge into Mexico by foot and take advantage of the low prices. U.S. nationals are allowed to stay for up to 72 hours in the border area without a permit, but proof of citizenship is required for reentry into the U.S.
Garcia’s is a really great place to have dinner in Nuevo Progresso. Located on the second floor with big windows overlooking the bustling town, the restaurant serves a wide range of steak and seafood, Mexican dishes as well as specialties like goat, frog legs and quail. Don’t overlook the flaming desserts like crepes Suzette, bananas Foster and cherries jubilee, prepared at your table.
Back in McAllen, you might want to drop in at the Creative Incubator, a beehive of 12 working artist studios at 1001 S. 16th St. I managed to spend a fun evening there at the opening of a digital art exhibit and installation where the bohemian crowd would have felt quite at home in either Soho or Haight-Asbury.

Dave Zuchowski writes for the New Castle, Pa., News.

X X X



IF YOU’RE GOING ...

McAllen, Texas

•For more information on McAllen and the area, call (877) 622-5536 or visit www.mcallen.org.
•For a place to dine, the Santa Fe Steakhouse, 1918 S. 10th St. in McAllen, serves great food in a romantic atmosphere. The wine list has won a Wine Spectator Award of Excellence four years in a row, and the adjacent bar offers live music by local bands every night of the week. (956) 630-2331.
•Birders and discriminating travelers should feel quite at home at the Alamo Inn, 801 Main St. in McAllen. The inn, centrally located to birding and butterfly hot spots, has a small store stocked with bird books and birder supplies, equipment and wearables. Resident artist Grover Terry Beaman has numerous wildlife works mounted on the walls as well as bins full of his wildlife and bird prints for sale. (956) 782-9912 or www.alamoinnsuites.com.
•For more information on the tram ride at the Rio Grande Overlook, call (956) 784-7500.
•For more information on the Creative Incubator, visit www.mcallenart.com.

Story Title

Story Body

Pick your state

© 2008 Community Newspaper Holdings, Inc.CNHI News Service
3500 Colonnade Parkway, Suite 600, Birmingham, AL 35243; (205) 298-7100