Thursday, February 1 - We headed West this morning with a convoy of friends. Ten of us headed to the western reaches of the Rio Grande Valley. First stop Falcon Dam and Power Plant. Falcon Dam is the major multipurpose international dam. The function is to control and regulate the flow of international waters and to provide a means of contributing to the mutual welfare of Mexico and the United States, in compliance with various existing treaties. (Not our words but the International Water Boundary Commission's.) Additional purposes of the dam are flood control, conservation, and hydroelectric power.
This is one of three dams on the Rio Grande River.
We saw several vehicles driving to Mexico and back to the U.S. We were told not to go into this part of Mexico. As the story goes, the drug cartels own it all. Don't have to tell us twice.
Were the Mexican flag flies is the center of the dam and the international boundary. We have no idea where the U.S. flag is.
Here are some statistic about the dam.
Length:
- U.S. - 10,133 feet
- Mexico - 16,161 feet
- Total - 26,294 feet
- Height - 150 feet above river bed.
- Crest elevation - 323.0 feet above mean sea level.
- Maximum width at base – 1,000 feet
- Width at top – 35 feet
Flood gates…looking towards the U.S.
Storage capacity-1972 survey
- Superstorage - 801,000 acre feet
- Flood Control - 509,000 acre feet
- Conservation & Silt - 2,668,000 acre feet
- Total - 3,978,000 acre feet – WOW
The damn created a huge lake near Roma, TX, covering nearly 100,000 acres. Of course with the recent drought in Texas, the water level is down.
Spillway to River.You can see from the photo below how low the Rio Grande River is in this area.
Here is a very interesting story about the dam.
- In June 2010, U.S. authorities revealed that the Los Zetas drug cartel had planned to destroy the Falcon Dam in order to terrorize the rival Gulf Cartel which smuggles drugs in the area. Small amounts of dynamite discovered near the dam and a copy of a warning helped alert authorities. A larger U.S. and Mexican security presence in the area may have thwarted the attack that Los Zetas had reportedly warned civilians about on the Mexican-side of the border. (Houston Chronicle)
In July, 2010, the damn release water because heavy rains attributed to Hurricane Alex.Tremendous damage was suffered down-river. If you're familiar with the National Birding Centers in South Texas, it was this event that caused significant damage to these parks.
The wind was blowing like crazy! Gusts of nearly 60 mph and strong sustained winds. It created a cold environment and making walking on the dam very difficult. Brrrrrrrr!
If visiting the dam, you need your passport. You pass through U.S. Customs when you walk back to the U.S.side of the dam.
Part II of Making Memories to come tomorrow.
We leave you with the craziest saying we have ever seen on a trash receptacle. We like the message.
Thanks for stopping by. Hope to see y'all back real soon. Have a great day!
Great info on the dam:)
ReplyDeleteThese little daily excursions are fun. They are what keep the day to day living from becoming boring.
ReplyDeleteWe saw some of the damage done at the Santa Ana NWR today that was caused by those floods.
ReplyDeleteNoticed that road going to Mexico sure doesn't have a lot a traffic. Guess we know why.
Nice post, glad you didn't get blown down river.
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing your adventure with us. You always do a great review and the photos are fun to see. You and Paul better be careful...you know what usually follows wind...rain! And cold!! Don't get that whole "bad weather mojo" thing started again! Your friends will make you pass out umbrellas and rain gear everywhere you go! LOL
ReplyDeleteThanks for the tour and history about the dam - I felt very safe out here in Palm Springs reading all about it. No high winds or stray bullets from drug shootouts.
ReplyDeleteI think you made a wise decision by not going into the part of Mexico.
You need a kite in your sight seeing supplies! Great info. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteThe dam information was really interesting. Sounds like you need to stay off the water, too. Wasn't the young man from Colorado riding with his wife on a Skidoo killed in that area a while back? Sounds like a fun day with friends!
ReplyDeleteGreat way to spend the day... Mexico is a little crazy these days it seems...
ReplyDelete