During our most
recent trip to the Big Bend to do research for our river guide,
The Great Unknown of the Rio Grande,
we explored more of the area along the Rio Grande near Terlingua Abaja
and the Molinar Community, a settlement located about two miles
upstream on Terlingua Creek. Each time we visit these remote spots, we
notice new and interesting structures, artifacts and features. This
time was no exception. Note the tiny structures in these photographs.
What do you think they are? If

you guessed "kid houses" or chiquiteros, you would be right.
1
These very primitive structures, generally made of
two or three flat stones standing upright and a piece of corrugated
metal, a board or another flat stone laid across the top

as a roof
served as shelters for baby goats while the rest of the herd was
grazing during the day. The ranchers generally used any materials that
were available. These three styles are pictured here.
According to W.D. Smithers, a writer and
photographer who documented life in the Big Bend from 1916 until the
area became a National Park in 1944, virtually every Mexican family in
the Big Bend raised goats and every member of the family over the age
of six was involved in caring for the herd. The younger children of
herders made pets of the baby goats, calling them
sanchos,2 a te

rm derived from
Sancho Panza, Don Quixote's long suffering sidekick.
3
Herders and dogs guarded the goat herd which needed
constant protection from predators including coyotes, eagles, bobcats
and even rattlesnakes. Baby goats were the most susceptible to these
predators as well as to the brutal sun. Thus the kid houses were a
necessity of life for goat herders on the border. The baby goats
would spend the heat of the day napping inside the relative shade and
comfort of their cosy little kid houses. When the rest of the herd came
in for the evening, the kids would be returned to their mothers for
suckling.
There were literally hundreds of these structures
scattered throughout the Big Bend, remnants of a time when the area
along the Rio Grande was richly agricultural. Although the settlements
are now abandoned, the kid houses can still be seen in various villages
along the Rio Grande including Terlingua Abaja, El Ojito and Black
Dike, among others. The most well preserved ones we have seen are at
the Molinar Community, where these photos were taken.
The large scale goat raising operation at Molinar is
evident in the well organized rows of kid houses. A double row of about
thirty kid houses lies on the gravel terrace about 50 yards southwest
of the main house of the Molinar Community.
_________________________
1 Pearson, John, editor. Road guide to backcountry dirt roads of Big
Bend National Park. Big Bend National Park: Big Bend Natural History
Association, 1980. p. 29
2 Smithers, W. D. Chronicles of the Big Bend, A Photographic Memoir of
Life on the Border. Austin: Texas State Historical Society, 1999. p. 96
3 "Sancho Panza."
Wikipedia.<"http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sancho_Panza>.
Photo credits: Top three small photos - Linda Gorski. Large photo -
Louis F. Aulbach.