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San Antonio Missions National Historical ParkFlooding the fields
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San Antonio Missions National Historical Park
Farming
Mission Indians learn to farm using acequias, or irrigation ditches.
Mission Indians learn to farm successfully using acequias, or irrigation ditches.

Each day the mission overseers (missionaries, lay helpers, headmen from the resident Indian bands, or members of the soldiers' families) would lead work groups of mission Indians out of the walls to the labores, or farm lands. Farming was the main occupation of the communities in their quest to become self-sufficient. Crops included maize (corn), beans, chile, squash, melons, cotton, and sugar cane. Orchards produced apples, peaches, grapes and other fruits.

Each mission had an acequia. This system of gravity-fed irrigation ditches brought water diverted from the river by means of a dam to the fields and orchards. A portion was brought through the compound. The grist mill at Mission San José was powered by this water.

 
The Yanaguana Trail at Mission San Juan  

Did You Know?
The Yanaguana Trail at Mission San Juan takes visitors to a small section of the San Antonio River that has not been channelized over the years. The trail is 1/3 of a mile in length and is accessible.

Last Updated: September 01, 2006 at 16:33 EST