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Rio Grande Crossing, TX
General Information

The Rio Grande

Your guides:  Your guides are trained professionals who are bi-lingual, CPR and emergency first aid certified, and have years of local experience.  They are there to share their knowledge of the plants, geology, and history of the area while keeping you safe and comfortable.  Well...as comfortable as you can be after all day in the saddle!

Long Eared OwlThe Horses:  There is a fair amount of Criollo and Spanish Berb in their background, which lends itself to toughness and athletic ability. Keep in mind that there are no groomed trails were you will be going

We will provide:  Transfer from El Paso or Odessa at extra charge. Qualified guides, horses, tack, camping equipment, vehicle support, tents, all meals, Bed and Breakfast accommodations, and any necessary transportation while in Mexico.  Sleeping bags and pads can be rented from us at a cost of $10.00 per night with advance notice - numbers are limited.

You will need:  Sleeping bag and pad, rain gear, personal clothing (adequate and appropriate for the time of the year), two pairs of shoes (riding and hiking), sunscreen, wide brimmed hat with tie on, flashlight, and valid driver's license or passport.  Suggested is a small amount of cash and an inexpensive camera.

The B&B in Terlingua:

LA POSADA MILAGRO, located atop the Ghostown hill in Historic Terlingua, Texas features rustic luxury accommodations. Guests enjoy sun decks, fire pits and an extraordinary view of old Terlingua, the Chisos Mountain range and Big Bend National Park.
A spectacular restoration of original Terlingua architecture, La Posada Milagro offers guests a lodging experience like no other. Minutes from all the area's outdoor outfitters, shops and restaurants, and only minutes from both Big Bend National Park and Big Bend Ranch State Park, you'll want for nothing as you experience the beauty and majesty of Texas' Big Bend and retire to one of our 4 sumptuous rooms.

 

Big Bend Area Average Temperatures and Precipitation

Month

Average Maximum
Temperature (°F)

Average Minimum
Temperature (°F)

Monthly Precipitation
Average (inches)

Year-to-date Precip.
Average (inches)

January

65

35.0

.46

.46

February

68

37.8

.34

.80

March

77

45.3

.31

1.11

April

84

52.3

.70

1.81

May

90

59.3

1.50

3.31

June

97

65.5

1.93

5.24

July

94

68.3

2.09

7.33

August

92

66.4

2.35

9.68

September

86

61.9

2.12

11.80

October

82

52.7

2.27

14.07

November

72

42.3

.70

14.77

December

68

36.4

.57

15.34

Big Bend Area Natural History

Coming south out of Alpine, Marathon, Marfa, you can't help but think about geology. Even the name Big Bend is a geologic description; the great southern curve that the Rio Grande has carved over countless millennia.  Visitors (and we're all just visiting) wonder "how'd it get this way".  Its not easy to imagine the immensity of time involved, but we can try to understand the forces, and the sequence of events that led to the current Big Bend landscape.  Most of these forces are gradual, largely unnoticed during a human lifespan. The geologic record also indicates signs of rapid cataclysmic change: volcanic eruptions, floods, tidal waves.

Big Bend is shaped by a variety of planetary processes. The oldest exposed rocks in the area were formed by ocean sediments 500 millions years ago. Crustaceans lived and died in warm, relatively shallow ocean waters. The steady rain of shell fragments over millions of years slowly sunk into the spreading ocean floor, and were converted by great pressures into dense limestones.

250 million years ago, give or take a few millennia, the South American tectonic plate crashed into the North American plate. The smoothly bedded horizontal limestones under the Paleozoic sea were placed under immense stress in the collision: uplifted, twisted, metamorphosed. These events formed the Appalachian and Ouachita mountains of the eastern US.  Rocks from this period are exposed in the Marathon Basin in an easily identifiably formation know as los Caballos (the horses). Look for them driving south on US 385 from Marathon towards Big Bend National Park. Traces of this ancient formation are also exposed in the remote Solitario in Big Bend Ranch State Park, and in an obscure road cut on US 118, about 40 miles south of Alpine.

Conveniently for our brief overview, rocks formed during the ensuing 150 million years are not present in Big Bend. Possibly, a period of tectonic inactivity was accompanied by years of erosion and valley fill. Many years. Whatever late Paleozoic/ Early Mesozoic mountains that existed were probably converted into gravel and deposited into the most convenient ocean.

During the Cretaceous period, from 140-70 million years ago, Big Bend was covered by a shallow inland sea that stretched from what is now the gulf of Mexico, all the way to Alaska. During this period, the area was intermittently inundated with deep ocean, resulting in the
massive limestones of the Boquillas, Glen Rose, Santa Elena and Del Carmen formations; and then interspersed with relatively shallow, tidal influenced waters and estuaries. Geological strata from certain periods contain fossils of large marine reptiles: mosasaurs, turtles, crocodiles, etc. Deposits from the late Cretacious deposits, when seas were in recession, produce abundant dinosaur fossils, including Pterosaurians, Hadrosaurians and Ceratopsians.

This brings us almost up to modern time, only 65 million years ago. The pace speeds up. A large asteroid strikes the earth in what is now the bay of Campeche. The dinosaurs, along with many other plant and animal species, become extinct. The Pacific plate collides with North America. The shock of this forms mountains and valleys all over the continent, most notably the Rocky Mountain Range. Add 35 million years of erosion, and what you see is what you get.

In Big Bend a number of important events took place during this period. Hot magma from deep in the earth, under high pressure, worked its way into the cracks and fissures of the local sedimentary rock, and is now exposed as the horizontal red "sills" visible downstream of Lajitas. In some places : Sierra Quemada, Sierra Rica, Pine Canyon, molten magma found its way to the surface; volcanic eruptions of the most violent nature occurred. Cubic kilometers of incandescent magma raced from eruption sites, hugging the valleys.  This glowing material slowed and settled to form the welded tuffs common in the Big Bend Ranch State Park and adjacent areas. Some magma was instantaneously atomized and blown higher into the atmosphere, cooling as individual particles, settling out as a volcanic ash, called tuff, which is apparent just north of Castolon in Big Bend National Park, and west of Lajitas on Highway 170, El Camino del Rio.

To further complicate matters, all the twisting, pushing and pulling going on not only lifted the massive limestones of Mesa de Anguila and the Sierra del Carmen, but also dropped a large slab of the same rock down almost 2000' feet, in between the two. This "Sunken Block" , was later breached by volcanic activity, forming the Chisos Mountains.

Since humans happened on the scene, Big Bend has been quiet, but not still . Erosional forces, including mankind, topple the mountains, and fill the valleys. Torrential rains carry valley fill down the arroyos, to the Rio Grande, and on to the Gulf of Mexico. The towering limestones  are still being uplifted at 3 inches per century. The Rio Grande is taking away at least that much. The Big Bend area is geology 101, writ large.   We may only pause for a moment's contemplation, and some may find a life's compulsion in learning about Big Bend's geologic past. Geology can't be ignored in Big Bend, and getting right in the middle of a bunch of it is reason number one to visit Big Bend. Come for the view, and stay for the hospitality.
 

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