Though the Lobatos Bridge is rated for 8 tons, it carries with it the weight of 10,000 years of human history. 

The iron bridge spans a migration corridor that seemingly echoes with the ghosts of stories on the canyon walls archiving the stay of generations of humans as they followed the Rio Grande from the South all the way to and from the Gulf of Mexico. 

Ancient petroglyphs are found in pockets all along the canyon walls from here to Taos, like graffiti of the ancients. 

Chokecherry orchards and fish fed them and rattlesnakes kept them alert. 

Man in a hat and vest stands in a natural area talking and gesturing with his hand.
Ken Salazar talks about the history of the Lobatos Bridge area with a small group of hikers on the morning of September 26, 2025. Credit: Owen Woods

If you ask Ken Salazar, heโ€™ll tell you all about it. On a morning hike through the willows and into the tall grass along a still Rio Grande, Salazar led a long group to the site of where a chokecherry orchard once stood Friday morning. 

The chokecherry trees were torn out sometime in the early 1970s, he said. โ€œTheyโ€™d been cut down to the floor, piled up and burned.โ€ It was a time before land management and were perhaps cut down to help grazing. 

When he and his brothers, LeRoy and John, were young they carried chokecherries by the bucketfull. Just as they suspected those before them had. 

โ€œYou kinda reminisce about what it used to be.โ€ 

Man in a hat and vest stands in a natural area listening to a presentation.
Doug Vilsack is amongst the small group of hikers listening to a talk by Ken Salazar. Credit: Owen Woods

He spoke to a small group of hikers that included the state director for the Bureau of Land Management Doug Vilsack about the importance of the Lobatos Bridge area. And why celebrating and its newly added recreational enhancements was important to the cultural history  of the San Luis Valley. 

Not only is its history important to the area, but its access to outdoor recreation like hiking, fishing, hunting, floating, or simply for its access alone is key to the whole project behind the Lobatos Bridge Outdoor Classroom and Recreation Enhancement Project. 

With the addition of quality and accessible outdoor recreation amenities to the area, it aims to preserve but open the area to new people and outdoor recreation opportunities. 

Group of people walk through tall grass in a single file line
A small group of hikers is lead by Ken Salazar on the morning of September 26, 2025. Credit: Owen Woods

Fridayโ€™s hike of history with Salazar and his family was just the preamble for a gathering of Valley, State and Federal officials and locals to celebrate an outdoor enhancement project that, truly, has been in the making for 40 years. 

Over the past three years, the Great Outdoors Fund, along with Great Outdoors Colorado and a host of other sponsors and collaborators, have raised funds to improve the area for outdoor recreation. Lobatos Bridge connects Costilla and Conejos Counties and the improvements and additions are looking to boost outdoor recreation tourism to both counties. 

Man at a podium talks into a mic while others sit on stage around him.
SLV GO!’s Mick Daniel addresses the crowd. Credit: Owen Woods

San Luis Valley Great Outdoors Executive Director Mick Daniel talked about how this project fits into the greater goal of improving access to the Rio Grande. โ€œWe want to ensure that people have access to get to the river. I think it’s just an incredible piece that sometimes we forget about: our attachment to water as people.โ€

Benches sit under trees in nice shade, right along the river and a concrete boat ramp leads right to the waterโ€™s edge. 

โ€œThe ability to put your feet in the water and play is just an amazing thing,โ€ he said.

Aerial view of benches and signs
An aerial view of the Lobatos enhanced area. Credit: Steve Pair | Great Outdoors Fund

The viewing area near the parking lot is lined with small bronze sculptures and interpretive signs designed by local designer Kelly Ortiz. These signs tell the history of the Valley in an almost 360-degree fashion. Looking all around you are given a piece of the Valleyโ€™s vast history and its role in many significant events in history. The bronze sculptures present many of the local animals and they were all sculpted by local art students.

โ€œPlease understand that many years have passed since this beautiful land was inhabited by our ancestors and our stories will help to shape the future,โ€ said Lawrence Pacheco, Open Space and Youth Programs Coordinator for Costilla County. 

It was important for there to be places that pass along history so those who donโ€™t know can understand how the Valleyโ€™s peoples, past and present, have โ€œsurvived and even thrived in this harsh yet beautiful environment.โ€ 

He went on, โ€œIโ€™d like to have all of you reach out to people in order to learn the oral history thatโ€™s been passed on for generations. This will encourage all of us to learn more and ask questions about our own heritage, be proud of it and share it with our families, friends and visitors so that the story never dies.โ€ 

Audience members sit and listen
Lobatos Bridge Outdoor Classroom and Recreation Enhancement Project grand opening. Credit: Owen Woods

The general sense was that the 50 or so people who were gathered to celebrate this opening was one of the largest gatherings of people here in a long, long time. 

โ€œThis location has a particularly rich and complicated history that spans thousands of years,โ€ saidโ€ฏDale Culver, manager of BLMโ€™s SLV Field Office in a release. โ€œThis is a spectacular achievement for the public, our community partners, and the BLM.โ€

View of a bridge
Lobatos Bridge September 26, 2025. Credit: Owen Woods

One of the Valleyโ€™s largest sections of BLM land is right in this corridor and the agency has also wanted to see the bridge area enhanced for some time, Vilsack said. 

Vilsack observed the projectโ€™s emphasis on younger people and its involvement for kids. โ€œItโ€™s amazing to picture what this will look like in the coming years as we have more of an opportunity for young people to get out here, explore the canyons, and really just enjoy this amazing landscape we’re all privileged to be in.โ€ 


Owen Woods

Owen Woods reports on all parts of Valley life, covering stories from the outdoors to the courthouse. He also photographs, shoots video, records audio, and produces podcasts for the Citizen. More by Owen Woods