No one is certain we鈥檒l actually make it to see Monty, a 900-year-old Montezuma bald cypress tree that鈥檚 been rooted in the Rio Grande听basin since before the Aztecs rose to power, or what will happen once we get there.
Ernest Herrera, a wildlife biologist听in south Texas, is one of two scientists taking me to see the tree. University of Texas biology researcher Flor Martinez and Jackie Trevi帽o, Herrera鈥檚 former supervisor and an environmental organizer, are with us, too. All three of them were born and raised along the U.S.-Mexico border, in the Rio Grande Valley.
While we were sitting at the gas station that morning, they joked that it was good they had me, 鈥渁 white girl,鈥 with them this time. They鈥檇 all been told, via friends and the valley鈥檚 environmentalist network, that people had been recently detained by Border Patrol for visiting Monty. They鈥檇 been told not to return.
鈥淓ven folks from the region who are documented are approached, questioned, and even detained,鈥 Trevi帽o says. 鈥淲ithout question, if you go to some of these wild spaces, you are surveilled and viewed as suspect simply for being there.鈥
Monty stands a few miles east of McAllen, Texas, and a few miles north of Reynosa, Mexico, the border鈥檚 busiest sector. The tree is just 200 yards south of the earthen levee that runs parallel to the Rio Grande,听about a mile from its bank on the edge of the river鈥檚 floodplain.
Montezuma bald cypresses require a lot of water, so much so that the Aztecs named the species ahuehue, 鈥渙ld man on the water鈥; its seeds will only germinate in water or wet soil. As time and human intervention have moved the river鈥檚 flow about a mile away, it鈥檚 near impossible to get the tree enough nutrients.
With the wall, the federal government is taking control of the Rio Grande Valley鈥檚 final听surviving tracts of native ground听and turning it into a no-man鈥檚-land. For the people who call this place home, Monty, the abuelo of the Rio Grande, represents what鈥檚 at stake in the fight over the president鈥檚 鈥渂ig, beautiful鈥 barrier.

The Department of Homeland Security is building the wall on the levee in accordance with the 1970 U.S.-Mexico treaty, which听prohibits physical barriers within the floodplain. The existing segments, authorized by the 2006 Secure Fence Act, provide a good example of what is to come鈥攊n March 2018, Congress approved $600 million for 33 more miles of border wall here.
The slope on the southern side of the levee has been shaved down to make a dead-vertical rise as tall as a single-story house and plastered with cement. Eighteen-foot rust-colored metal slats stand on top, framing the road that runs up and over the levee.
Less than 5听percent of the Rio Grande Valley鈥檚 native ecosystem remains unchanged or undeveloped since the 1500s.
In addition to providing habitat for the endangered ocelot, a wild cat native to the area, and the star cactus, more than 500 different bird species can be found here. It鈥檚 the confluence of two migratory paths that extend north toward Canada and south toward Mexico. The World Birding Center鈥檚 headquarters are located in the valley, in Bentsen-Rio Grande State Park, and thousands of people flock here each year to see red-crowned parrots, highlighter orange Altamira orioles, silky green jays, white-tipped doves, and more.
The Rio Grande Valley also supports one of the highest concentrations of butterflies in the country听and is home to the National Butterfly Center. Nearly 150 U.S. butterfly species have no habitat left other than what鈥檚 here. According to the center, many won鈥檛 fly over a wall. Unfortunately, for both the wildlife and the people dependent on the millions of ecotourism dollars it supports each year, the earthen levee bisects both the National Butterfly Center and Bentsen-Rio Grande State Park.
An impenetrable physical barrier cutting across the river basin will be nothing short of environmentally devastating.
About 70 percent or more of both sanctuaries will be sequestered on the south side of the wall if the president鈥檚 national emergency supersedes the congressional package. 鈥淲hat will happen to the animals then?鈥 Max Munoz, the National Butterfly Center鈥檚 grounds manager, asked me.
Environmental experts have been clear: an impenetrable physical barrier cutting across the river basin will be nothing short of devastating, kick-starting the death of the remaining native ecosystem. Nevertheless, the administration has waived 23 environmental laws under the 2005 Real ID Act听in order to expedite construction.
Multiple lawsuits have been filed on behalf of environmental and civil rights groups since construction equipment and surveyors were spotted here in early February. In response, the congressional package signed on February听14 includes provisions that will prohibit the construction of border-wall segments within two other wildlife sanctuaries and one historic landmark, but it still grants $1.375 billion for 55 miles of new border wall in these wildlife refuges and the area where Monty sits.

Herrera,听Martinez, Trevi帽o, and I drove up and over the levee and through the metal slats to reach Monty. When I stopped the car in a shallow patch of dirt on the other side of the wall, Trevi帽o jumped out and skipped straight to the tree.
Herrera walked up to Monty and placed his palm at the base of a beach-ball-sized knot growing from its trunk. 鈥淪tress,鈥 he says. Herrera points out that one of Monty鈥檚 three main branches is听dying听or dead.
Within five minutes, a Border Patrol helicopter听begins circling overhead.
鈥淛ust ignore it,鈥 Herrera says.
The southernmost听150 miles of the river basin known as the Rio Grande Valley is not actually a valley鈥攊t鈥檚 a delta. In the early 1900s, Anglo landowners rebranded the fertile river basin as a valley听to attract ranchers and investors; their campaign transferred landownership from a Latino majority to an Anglo majority within a matter of years, even though almost听the entire population remained Hispanic. Today,听more than a third of Rio Grande Valley residents听are living听in poverty,听nearly three times the national average.
鈥淚t鈥檚 easy to target these communities,鈥 Martinez says. 鈥淸Proponents of the border wall don鈥檛] care听that they don鈥檛 have access to nature.听It doesn鈥檛 matter, because it鈥檚 so easy to take it from them. It鈥檚 so easy for them to not have a voice.鈥
Trevi帽o proudly calls herself a 鈥渧alley kid.鈥 She was born and raised in the river delta. So were her mom and dad, though on opposite sides of the river.
She sees the increased militarization of the Rio Grande basin and the wall cutting through it as part of a larger pattern of culture erasure, depriving future generations of valley kids of the opportunity to see the parallels between the land and themselves.
鈥淚 could see myself reflected in the thornscrub and in the native birds and in the native butterflies,鈥 Trevi帽o said. 鈥淭he idea of my children not being able to access that is very heartbreaking.鈥
Monty has become a symbol for that feeling, rooted in the deep well of resilience that also supplies the Hispanic community the river delta. Last month, dozens of people affiliated with the No Border Wall Movement carried 50 jugs of water to the base of Monty鈥檚 trunk and soaked it.

After the helicopter pulls up from circling over us, I suggest we walk down the dirt road to the top of the levee.
All of a sudden, a Border Patrol suburban is raising dust at our feet. A woman leans out of the window. 鈥淲hat are you doing here?鈥
Trevi帽o puts on her sweetest smile. 鈥淲e鈥檙e just here visiting the tree, just enjoying nature!鈥
The woman eyes us all. 鈥淥K,鈥 she says. 鈥淏e careful.鈥 She repeats: 鈥淏e careful.鈥
It鈥檚 not just Monty, the green jays, or the ocelot that people like Trevi帽o, Herrera, and Martinez are working to defend. It鈥檚 the health of their own roots, too; their nativity is threatened by the administration鈥檚 rhetoric and relentless pursuit of a border wall.
鈥淭hese are things we can reverse, these are things we can fix. It鈥檚 a matter of speaking up and going out and doing what we can,鈥 Herrera says.
Before we leave Monty, Herrera puts his hand on its trunk once more. I ask if it鈥檚 going to die because of the knot and the dead branch. 鈥淥h, no,鈥 he says. 鈥淚t won鈥檛 completely die. It鈥檚 old and strong, but it could use some help.鈥