WATER BACK
Jan 01, 2022
5 minutes
Photos by Kalen Goodluck
Text by Christine Trudeau and Kalen Goodluck
![f0024-01](https://article-imgs.scribdassets.com/8q2n3ukcxs9enmpp/images/fileGQ67848G.jpg)
ON A LATE NOVEMBER MORNING, Julia Bernal walked a stretch of riverbank along the Rio Grande in Sandoval County, New Mexico, between Santa Ana and Sandia Pueblo. Bernal pointed out the area between the cottonwood trees and the edge of the Rio Grande, a 30-foot stretch of dry earth covered in an ocean of tiny pebbles intermixed with periodic sandbars, tamarisk and willow shrubs.
“It never used to look like this,” Bernal said. “The reason the cottonwoods look the way that they do is because of the Cochiti Dam — that hyper-channelization of the river did cause this riparian forest to just kind of (disappear) along with it.”
Bernal grew up in the 1990s watching the
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