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Working the Line: 5 Journalists | 2,000 Miles | 21 Days

Day 19 - Texas sized terrain (with video)

08/05/2006 11:35 PM
Brady McCombs

Danger wears a different suit here in the east Texas borderlands.

The dry, hot desert terrain that has taken the lives of hundreds of migrants in the Tucson Sector isn’t the only brutal landscape along the 2,000-mile U.S.-Mexico border.

In the Rio Grande Valley – where we went on a ride along Saturday with Border Patrol agent Roland Ogg – a migrant faces numerous physical obstacles before making it to the nearest city or highway.

First, he or she must cross a Rio Grande river that doesn’t look fast but has currents that can pull people under. Green cane, a bamboo-like vegetation that grows 10-12 feet high, lines the banks of the river. Green hydrillas, a submersed plant that can tangle somebody up, clog up the banks in some parts of the Rio Grande.



Green Cane lines the banks of the Rio Grande river outside of Weslaco, Texas, as a group of fishermen try their luck on the Mexican side. Photo by James Gregg.

Cotton, onion, wheat and sugar cane fields fill the landscape north of the river in many parts of east Texas. Sugar cane fields butt up against the river near Weslaco, a city between McAllen and Brownsville. The cane can cut arms and legs, especially when somebody is running through them.

Thick and prickly shrubs and trees stand as the next obstacle between the river and the highway. From the outside of the refuge, you can only see about 5-10 feet due to the thickness. Some of the thorns through here on the trees can go through a tennis shoe, Ogg said. Trying to run through here can leave somebody badly cut and bruised.

This all serves to slow down migrants crossing through these areas. But, it’s only helpful if Border Patrol agents are there to apprehend them.

“I can’t catch what I can’t see,” said Ogg, referring to the need for more agents in the sector.

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About 'Working the Line'

In July, a team of Arizona Daily Star journalists traveled from San Diego to Brownsville for a close-up look at what it would take to secure the border. They used this blog to chronicle their experiences and will present a 4-day series of their findings beginning Sunday, Sept. 24.




Current Location:The journey is over. Stay tuned for our special report on the border beginning September 24.

Meet the Team

James Gregg recently joined the staff of the Arizona Daily Star as a photojournalist after beginning his career in Colorado. James has lived abroad in Ecuador and Costa Rica, and holds a degree in Spanish and Latin American Studies from the University of Kansas.

Stephanie Innes is the faith and values reporter for the Star. She has worked at the newspaper since 1999 and previously covered crime. She has also been a reporter for the Tucson Citizen and for the Arizona Daily Sun in Flagstaff.

Border and Immigration reporter Brady McCombs has been with the Star since February. He recently co-authored the Star's four-part investigative series, "Illegal Labor Fix Falls Short." McCombs, who is bilingual, spent three years working in Costa Rica.

Photographer Lindsay Miller joined the Arizona Daily Star in April 2005, relocating toTucson after working at the Napa Valley Register. She has worked on several documentary projects as well as a variety of local news and features..

Online producer Andrew Satter has been with the Star for more than two years. He oversees online news content relating to the border and politics/elections, has produced dozens of videos and audio slide shows and is a co-creator of the award-winning Border Death Database.


Reader Polls

Week 3 Results

Question: Which border state has the most out-of-control border?
- California - 9%
- Arizona - 53%
- New Mexico - 10%
- Texas - 7%
- Minnesota - 21%

Total number of votes - 68

Week 2 Results

Question: What is the top reason the U.S. needs to secure its borders?
- Stop illegal immigrants from coming into the country - 48%
- Crack down on drug smuggling - 14%
- Stop terrorists from being able to get in - 28%
- An open border poses no immediate threat - 9%
- Protect against human sex slave trafficking - 1%

Total number of votes - 79

Week 1 Results

Question: What should be the first priority in solving the illegal immigration problem?
- Secure the border - 48%
- Workplace enforcement - 21%
- Visa enforcement - 3%
- Institute a guest worker program - 17%
- Take care of non-border-related issues first - 11%

Total number of votes - 150

Border gallery


What does the word 'border' mean to you? Be it the U.S./Mexico border, the Brazilian/Argentinian border or the border between you and your neighbor's house, we want to see your images of this ill-defined concept in our gallery. In the Photo Caption field please tell us the subject of the photo.
Submit your photo »»