Mission, Texas
Although citrus is still a major industry in the area, other agriculture and commerce have grown in recent years. Mission has also become a favorite destination for bird and butterfly watchers, golfers, and northerners looking to escape the cold. They do not call them Snowbirds here but rather Winter Texans. Lots of cars and trucks sporting their Winter Texan decals.
Bentsen Palm Village
The town is very welcoming with "Welcome Winter Texans" banners all over
We came for the abundance of Square Dancing this time of year and the warm weather. The weather did not cooperate with us. This is the coldest / rainiest winter they have had in many years. Luckily for us Square dancing is done indoors. Most days you could dance 3 times a day. We met a lot of nice people and were able to become better acquainted with the ones we had met before.
We did find some dry days and time to do as the locals
Riverside Club
Live music with lots of dancing
We even found Pork Tenderloin Sandwiches
Grapefruit Pie at Lone Star BBQ
We were introduced to Canadian Cheezies. They're the bomb. Cruncher and Cheesier.
It's probably a good thing they don't sell them in the US
La Ropa
a 70,000 square foot warehouse that sells used clothing by the POUND.
The pile was approximately 40ft x 30ft x 6ft tall. They would never see the bottom of this pile.
Bales waiting to be brought out.
Very nice accommodations

The RV park is located next door to the Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park and just down the road from the National Butterfly Center.
New Years Eve
Party at the Park
Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley
One of top birding destinations in the country, Bentsen-Rio Grande Valley State Park in deep, South Texas well deserves its status as headquarters of the World Birding Center. Birders across the nation know Bentsen as a treasure trove of "Valley specialties", tropical birds found nowhere else in the United States with more than 325 species of birds and over 250 species of butterflies. The 760-acre Bentsen - Rio Grande Valley State Park, together with over 1,700 acres of adjoining U.S. Fish and Wildlife refuge tracts, promises a year-round nature adventure in the richest birding area north of the Mexican border.
The Green Jay, a colorful tropical bird found primarily in Mexico and South America, just makes its way into the United States in southern Texas.
The Plain Chachalaca typically occurs in small groups in tall, thorny thickets, scrubland, and second-growth forest edge along the Gulf-Caribbean slope from the Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas and Nuevo Leon, Mexico south to Honduras and Costa Rica. This native, non-migratory gamebird is similar in size and form to a female Ring-necked Pheasant. Unlike most other galliform birds, the brownish-olive Chachalaca prefers to spend much of its time in the trees, earning it the nickname of Mexican Tree Pheasant and allowing it to thrive in tangled brushland resulting from logging or other mechanical habitat manipulation. Chachalaca prefer to run along larger limbs through the treetops or scurry through interior branches. They tend to select the ripest fruits available, therefore they are often observed feeding in precarious positions, including upside-down.








































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