Kayakers to protest fence with river event
By Christopher Sherman / Associated Press
Article Launched: 07/13/2008 12:00:00 AM MDT


MISSION, Texas -- For months the federal government's border fence plans in South Texas have been attacked by land -- property owners, wildlife advocates, land conservationists -- but the next wave of opponents could come from the water. And they're carrying paddles.
Kayakers and canoeists will descend on the lower Rio Grande this fall for events aimed at raising the river's profile as a recreation hub and drawing attention to the impact the border fence could have on river access.

But before promoters can establish the Rio Grande -- especially the lower sections near large border cities -- as another option on Texas' long list of rivers, they must fight a decades-old stigma.

Paddlers share the river with Border Patrol agents patrolling in bulletproof vests and smugglers of drugs and people. But on the water, they're hardly noticeable as the river twists and turns through farm fields and wildlife preserves, but it is the violent perception that persists.

Even though it forms Texas' 1,255-mile border with Mexico from El Paso to the Gulf of Mexico, most of the Rio Grande -- with the notable exception of Big Bend National Park -- is a forgotten river in the minds of tens of thousands of recreational paddlers in the state.

In a recent letter to Roma Mayor Rogelio Ybarra, Texas Rivers Protection Association President Tom Goynes expressed his support for the planned river festival and his concern about the border fence. But perhaps most telling was the clear illustration of
how novel the idea of using the lower Rio Grande was even for people dedicated to the state's rivers.
"It has come to our attention recently that the Lower Rio Grande is indeed a safe and legal place to paddle, and that rights for all U.S. citizens to do so are guaranteed by the 1848 Treaty of Guadalupe Hidalgo," Goynes wrote. "It's ironic that we only learned that the resource was available to us as a result of the government's plans to take it away."

Los Caminos del Rio, a nonprofit based in McAllen, recognizes that its Healthy Living Festival planned for Nov. 1 -- to capitalize on any attention the border could receive before the national election three days later -- is unlikely to affect the 85 miles of border fence slated for completion in Texas this year.

While not backing off its fence plans, the Border Patrol supports Los Caminos's efforts to get more people on the river.

Dan Doty, spokesman for the local Border Patrol sector, said "the more eyes we have out there the better job we can do."

Doty said he's thinking of buying himself a canoe to explore the river. "It's a great place for recreation; it's a beautiful, beautiful river."

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