Visits to Rio Bravo consist primarily of researchers and university students, though educational outreach programs to the local community also attract visitors.
La Milpa Field Station La Milpa Field Station is situated in the northeastern portion of the reserve, only three miles from La Milpa Archaeological Site, the third largest Mayan ruin in Belize. The field station offers a "green" dormitory and four double-unit cabanas, accommodating 30 visitors. All are constructed of local hardwoods and palm thatch. Activities include: birding, forest walks, community visits, and Mayan ruin exploration.
Hill Bank Field Station Hill Bank Field Station is situated along the south shore of the New River Lagoon, along Ramgoat Creek. Originally, the site was used as a logging camp established by British buccaneers and African slaves in the 18th century to harvest mahogany. Records show that 400 trees were extracted per year in the early days, rising to 7,000 per year in the late 1970s. Mahogany supplies dwindled quickly at that rate, and the camp was abandoned in 1982. Like La Milpa, Hill Bank has both a dormitory and a cabana, sleeping 30 visitors. Activities include forest walks, water-based activities (night crocodile spotting, river trips), frog watches, rain forest research and forestry research, the Hill Bank Reforestation Project, ranger patrols and community visits.
Lamanai is about 2 hours to the north by boat.
Income Rio Bravo receives funding from donations as well as a number of income-generating projects, including carbon credit-generating sequestration plots.
Ongoing research Hill Bank Field Station serves as a study site for Las Golondrinas de las Americas. Nest boxes in the shallows of the lagoon house a study population of the
mangrove swallow, and a vacuum insect sample sits behind the cafeteria. ==References==