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In
the Visitor Center you will find exhibits describing the bosque and
its plants, geology and animals. The Discovery Room offers hands-on
exhibits for children, including footprints in a sandbox and a rubbing
table. The Observation Room which overlooks the pond, contains a library
with publications on birds, herbs, trees, and other aspects of natural
history that can be used on the premises.
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Located
in the bosque,
or cottonwood forest, and by the wetland bordering the Rio
Grande, the Nature Center is the focus of the Rio Grande Nature
Center State Park. A refuge from the city life of Albuquerque, the
park offers opportunities to experience 270 acres of woods,
meadows and farmland flourishing with native grasses, wildflowers,
willows and cottonwoods.
Outside, the Nature
Center has interpretive nature trails and demonstration gardens to
explore; Inside are exhibits on the area's riparian environment.
The Riverwalk Trail is an easy one-mile loop through the bosque and
along the river, passing through open meadows and heavily wooded areas.
The Bosque Loop Trail, about 0.8 mile, is an easy walk through the bosque
with a spur to the river.
Also at the Nature Center are park trail guides, binoculars and field
guides that can be borrowed. Numerous birds make their homes in the park. Among birds likely to be
observed in winter are waterfowl, such as ring-necked ducks and American
wigeons, Northern harriers, ruby-crowned kinglets, hermit thrushes,
chipping sparrows, dark-eyed juncos, western meadowlarks, sandhill cranes
and balk eagles. Summer migrants include warblers, western meadowlarks,
black-chinned hummingbirds, black phoebes and western kingbirds.
A three
acre pond surrounds the glass walls of the Visitor Center
Observation Room, offering a virtual encounter with ducks, geese,
turtles and dragonflies in sight and sound.
Reserved for education and
research, the south side Discovery Pond invites visiting school children
to sample aquatic life in hand and under the microscope.
A
complex of specialized demonstration gardens offer a wide variety of
native plants for display and for the education of local gardeners.
Seasonal and year-round residents of the Nature Center include Cooper's
hawks, great-horned owls, American coots, Canada geese, ring-necked
pheasants, mallards, wood ducks, black-capped chickadees, great blue
herons, northern flickers and both downy and hairy woodpeckers.
Other inhabitants of the park include turtles, toads, lizards, bull
snakes,
dragonflies, beavers, muskrats, cottontail rabbits, pocket gophers,
rock squirrels
and coyotes.

Candelaria Wetland
Opened in 2001, the Candelaria Wetland is an important new
outdoor arena for Albuquerque, the Nature Center, and the Rio Grande valley.
This nine-acre amphitheater of land and water is attracting performers
from near and far.
Located east of the Nature Center and north of the parking lot, this stretch
of valley land used to be an uncultivated section of Candelaria Farms,
a dry, overgrown, scraggly meadow of tough grasses rooted in thick, fine
sand below a thin surface of clay. Reborn as Candelaria Wetland, the area
now includes two ponds offering five surface acres of water and four more
acres of meadow for visiting waterfowl and shorebirds; some, like snow
geese and ibis, would be first-time visitors to the Nature Center. Immigrant
mammals, amphibians, reptiles, and arthropods, all current residents of
the Middle Rio Grande Valley, are moving in, too. Planted with 98 species of native aquatic and riparian vegetation, Candelaria
Wetland restores habitat once common in the Albuquerque reach of the Rio
Grande, wetland rich in plants and animals that has been reduced since
l935 by development and agriculture to less than 20% of its former self.
This $155,000 project is a cooperative, continuing effort by the city's
Open Space Division, Hydra Aquatics, Inc., New Mexico State Parks, the
U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the Bureau of Reclamation, General Electric
Co., and the Friends of the Rio Grande Nature Center.
One important dimension of the project is data collection about the
plants and animals that are moving, and will move, into and through the
area. Getting underway, this research will continue through all seasons
for many years to come. What plants and animals have colonized the
wetland? How do they interact? How will their status and interactions
change over time?
REMEMBER!!!
The
value of the Rio Grande Nature Center is in its living occupants
from dragonfly to toad to crane to cottonwood. Listen, look, feel and
touch, but be careful to respect the vegetation by staying on the trails.
Feel free to take photos but leave behind the rocks, the flowers, the
toads.
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