How to disappear completely, bosque edition

The thicket of green quickly engulfed us.

Eerie squeals nearby filled the air. At first I thought a family with toddlers was on the trail nearby. Nope. Coyotes.

We’d entered the thicket on the hunt for a lightly-trod trail hugging the west bank of the Rio Grande, about half a mile north of the Montano bridge.

Two weeks ago, we’d walked that trail as it glowed with yellow Russian olive blooms, sparkling against the reflection off the river.

Today we started on a doubletrack baking in the sun. One faint path headed toward the river – and straight into the thicket. We were mere yards from the river, but as we went deeper into the growth, the path faded and the brush closed in, becoming impassable without seriously trampling vegetation (a bad idea anywhere, but especially in the desert.)

IMG_0697

It was incredible to realize you could be swallowed up by nature, until your entire vision was blue and green, so very close to one of the most high-traffic roads in town. It was a thing worth celebrating.

IMG_0707

But the sun was already beating down at 9:30 a.m., and I wanted to see more than the thicket before the heat became unbearable.

IMG_0708

And we did. A cottontail bounded away from us. We heard dozens of lizards skittering in the leaves lining the trail. We saw at least 10 lizards, several striped or spotted, one at the edge of an irrigation ditch, so brown and gray he was barely visible.

We saw a hawk sitting on a cottonwood limb that bent all the way to the ground, then watched it fly away.

We watched a water bird flap over the river.

IMG_0718

We saw two turtles basking in the detritus at a spillway, soaking up the sun.

I’ve heard the Rio Grande is likely to run dry through Albuquerque this summer. I’ve also heard water managers are likely to release just enough water that it won’t, in order to keep residents from wigging out at the sight of a dry riverbed.

I wonder how long there will be vegetation in which someone could disappear completely, if the river is allowed to go where nature seems to be taking it this year.

IMG_0723

Hike length: 3.5 miles

Difficulty: easy

Trail traffic: light

Wildlife spotted/heard: rabbit, coyotes, dragonflies, grasshoppers, butterflies, hummingbirds, lizards, water bird (heron?), hawk, black phoebe

 

 

2 Replies to “How to disappear completely, bosque edition”

Leave a comment