instarr.in
Log In

Pecos River Corridor Recreation Area (BLM)

$ 20.50

4.5 (304) In stock

The Pecos River Corridor Recreation Area includes 6,000 acres of land with access to the Pecos River and areas surrounding the Red Bluff Reservoir. The Pecos River Corridor Recreation Area stretches along the Pecos River, north of Loving, NM, to the NM-TX state line. This Recreation Area is managed by the BLM. This area provides opportunity for water-based recreation and semi-primitive motorized recreation. A public access boat ramp is on the New Mexico side of Red Bluff Reservoir. Attractions include dispersed primitive camping, fishing, hiking, boating. The public access boat ramp is located on the NM-TX state line, east of US 285 on County Road 276. Public land in the corridor is intermingled with private and state land. There are no fees at this site, and it is open year-round.
The Pecos River Corridor Recreation Area includes 6,000 acres of land with access to the Pecos River and areas surrounding the Red Bluff Reservoir.

Black River Recreation Area

basemap.nationalmap.gov/arcgis/rest/services/USGST

Cost/Benefit Considerations for Recent Saltcedar Control, Middle

Bureau of Land Management Sites in New Mexico

Black River Recreation Area - Visit Carlsbad New Mexico

Pecos River Corridor Recreation Area (BLM)

Pecos River Corridor Recreation Area (BLM)

Black River Recreation Area

basemap.nationalmap.gov/arcgis/rest/services/USGST

US Supreme Court Dismisses Texas Petition For Review In Pecos River Dispute Texas Agriculture Law

basemap.nationalmap.gov/arcgis/rest/services/USGST

basemap.nationalmap.gov/arcgis/rest/services/USGST

BLM Wild Rivers Recreation Area

BLM Wild Rivers Recreation Area

Related products

Effects of salinization on the occurrence of a long-lived vertebrate in a desert river

Pecos River Flats - Texas Ranch Sales, LLC

Surveyors Saving the Wild Pecos River from Itself - xyHt

Pecos River, springs flowing into, near Dryden Charles Kruvand – Texas Living Waters Project

New book on the Pecos River, its place in history, and its future