Hike Location: Resaca de la Palma State Park
Geographic Location: northwest of Brownsville, TX (25.99577, -97.56897)
Length: 4.7 miles
Difficulty: 3/10 (Easy/Moderate)
Date Hiked: February 2026
Overview: A loop hike passing all 5 of this park's wildlife viewing platforms.
Park Information: https://tpwd.texas.gov/state-parks/resaca-de-la-palma
Hike Route Map:
On The Go Map
Photo Highlight:
2 of the 5 wildlife viewing platforms are accessed by the short Ebony Trail, which starts near the Visitor Center. You could hike that trail either at the beginning or at the end of this hike; I chose to do it at the end. To start this hike, I headed down the asphalt tram road where it starts to the left (north) of the Visitor Center, thus heading clockwise around the tram road's loop.
At 0.3 miles, the tram road crosses the resaca on a bridge. Looking into the resaca here will give you your first hint as to how much wildlife viewing you will be doing on this hike. The water in the resaca is what attracts the wildlife, so if the resaca is dry, as it was when I came here in early February and is most of the time, your wildlife viewing will be limited. In spite of the dry resaca, I still saw an armadillo, some cardinals, a green jay, some vultures, and a hawk when I came here.
At 0.5 miles, where the road curves sharply right, get off of the road for awhile by continuing straight to start the Mesquite Trail. True to its name, the Mesquite Trail follows a wide dusty track lined with mesquite bushes and a grassy understory. Almost all of this hike is in at least partial sun, and this will be a hot and sunny hike in the summer with water available nowhere except the Visitor Center.
Hike Video: (coming January 1, 2027)
Directions to the trailhead: Northwest of Brownsville, take I-69E to FM 1732 (exit 9). Exit and go west on FM 1732. Drive FM 1732 west 2.5 miles to New Carmen Avenue and turn left on New Carmen Ave. The signed park entrance is 1.4 miles ahead on the left. Turn left to enter the park, and park in the large parking lot in front of the Visitor Center.
The hike: Located in the lower Rio Grande valley just northwest of Brownsville, Resaca de la Palma State Park is the southernmost state park in Texas. 9 parks in the lower Rio Grande valley, including all 3 of the region's state parks, combine to form an official area called the World Birding Center. Indeed, birding is one of the most popular activities throughout south Texas' lower Rio Grande valley: birds that mostly reside in Central and South America come to south Texas but to nowhere else in the United States. During my February 2026 hiking trip to the lower Rio Grande valley, I hiked in all 3 of the region's state parks, starting with this one. I enjoyed the birding and wildlife viewing all 3 of these parks have to offer.
The winding Rio Grande left many resacas, which is Spanish for oxbow lakes, as its course changed over time, and those resacas give this park its name. This parkland first opened to the public in 1977 as a Texas Wildlife Management Area, and it was converted to a state park in 2008. True to its birding and wildlife history, Resaca de la Palma State Park is heavy on nature and light on amenities. The park is open for day-use only, and it features only a Visitor Center, picnic area, and a tram road for amenities. The park does offer 5 wildlife viewing platforms that overlook the resacas, and my goal on this hike was to visit all 5 of those platforms, thus doing the best wildlife viewing this park has to offer.
The wildlife viewing platforms are reached by hiking the short bird watching trails that are connected by the 2.8 mile paved tram road loop. Private vehicles are allowed nowhere in the park except the Visitor Center parking lot. Thus, to see anything at this park, you will have to either rent or bring a bike, ride the tram, or hike. The tram was not running on the day I came here (it only runs seasonally), so I ended up hiking the tram road to get from one short birding trail to the next. Such is the design of this hike.
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| Start of the tram road |
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| Dry resaca near the tram road |
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| Start of Mesquite Trail |
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| Hiking the Mesquite Trail |
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| 1st Wildlife observation platform |
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| View from 2nd wildlife observation platform |
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| View from 3rd wildlife viewing platform |
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| Hiking the tram road |
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| View from final wildlife observation platform |













