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You are here: Home : Destination Guide : North America : South West Usa : New Mexico

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New Mexico State Guide

 

Santa Fe

The oldest city in the United States, Santa Fe was founded in 1610, but the culture of its Native American inhabitants predates the coming of the Spanish settlers by at least 12,000 years. Despite early struggles between the original inhabitants and later waves of settlers, the city is remarkable now for its apparently seamless amalgam of cultures. Its incredible location 7,000 feet high is complemented by the town's architecture - rigorous planning restrictions ensure that all structures are in the traditional adobe style, with rounded, terracotta coloured mud-plaster walls - warm pinks and browns that glow in the light of the high-desert sunsets. This planning mandate also means that few buildings are constructed to be more than about 2 storeys high, so the views of the surrounding mountains are never obscured.

The central plaza is a 400-year old square, on the north side of which can be found the Palace of the Governors. The oldest public building in the US, the building is now an historical museum, the sheltered veranda outside the site of a daily outdoor market for American Indians selling arts and crafts. Santa Fe is home to a thriving art community and boasts over 250 art galleries, mainly concentrated around and spanning out from the central Plaza - gallery-hopping at its best can be enjoyed along Canyon Road. The Loreto Chapel is worth a look, if only for its grand spiral staircase and the rather sweet story of the carpenter who miraculously appeared to build it without using any visible nails or means of support, and then vanished before the nuns could repay him. Other sites of religious significance, such as St Francis Cathedral and numerous museums will keep culture-vultures occupied. Perched above the city like a blessing is the white Cross of the Matyrs, a memorial to the monks killed in the Pueblo Rebellion of 1680, which can be reached via a winding path for peaceful views over the town. Santa Fe is also a prime destination for those in search of action - surrounded by 1.5 million acres of National Forest and public land, outdoor enthusiasts will find plenty of adventure and in winter, snowsports can be enjoyed at the Santa Fe Ski Basin. For the more gastronomically-inclined, Santa Fe is host to a mind-boggling array of restaurants and a dazzling banquet of irresistible tastes and flavours.

White Sands National Monument

White Sands National Monument occupies a major slice of the world's largest gypsum sand dune field. Signs indicating that missile tests are carried out nearby may be slightly off-putting, but the overall experience is one not to be missed. Walking through the dunes is wildly disorienting - look behind you to see that your footprints have disappeared, blown away by the strong southwest wind, and that you are surrounded by endless folds of blindingly white sand, looking the same in every direction. Yet for all this sameness, the dunes are in a constant state of flux - like ocean waves, they swell, crest and then diminish as the wind moves them endlessly forwards. Little can survive these harsh conditions, but a few plants have adapted to grow quickly enough to escape burial by the advancing dunes and some animal life, such as the bleached earless lizard, has developed a white coloration as camouflage. Sunset on the dunes is spectacular, colouring the pure white surroundings in deepening shades of pink, with the lengthening shadows making the surface ripple-patterns on the sand more sharply defined. Camping on one of the few primitive campsites here is wonderful and eerie at any time, but especially at the time of a full moon, when the dunes are illuminated brilliantly white against the night sky.

Carlsbad Caverns National Park

Carlsbad Caverns National Park, Southern New Mexico, was created to conserve Carlsbad Cavern and numerous other cave systems in the area. Carlsbad Cavern is easily accessible and offers the explorer many different tours and routes through its subterranean world of weirdly-sculpted formations and massive chambers. The slightly spooky sensation of being detached from the outside world of bright desert sky and sun is heightened by the names of various features in the caves - Devils Den, Witches Finger, The Boneyard, The Bottomless Pit to name a few. For even more of scare-factor, some routes in the cave require the explorer to wriggle through tight, claustrophobic spaces and crawl for long distances. For above-ground action, an outdoor amphitheatre provides views from May to October of a nightly mass exodus of bats from the caves, swirling shapes silhouetted against the red desert sky. Pre-dawn risers can also observe the return flight of the bats, swooping and dive-bombing from all directions to re-enter the mouth of the cave.

Bisti Badlands

In the remote, windswept northwestern corner of New Mexico is a desolate expanse known as the Bisti Badlands. Little touristed, there are no signposts directing visitors to the Badlands from any of the nearby towns, adding to the lunar-like quality of the experience. Layers of earthy substances have mixed with sandstone and then eroded into an expanse of bizarrely sculpted rock formations, hunched mounds and small ravines, the surroundings coloured in various shades of terracotta, red, orange and brown in every direction. Petrified wood litters the area and fossils, including dinosaur remains, can sometimes be spotted. A clustered group of abandoned buildings nearby are the remains of the derelict Bisti Trading post; this proof of vanished human presence here somehow adding to the spooky sensation of being caught in a different world or time. There are no marked trails for hikers - the norm is to follow the ravine edges - and dirt roads in the Badlands lead to the even more isolated De-na-zin Wilderness area.

Taos

Legendary skiing awaits the novice and extremist alike at Taos. One of the few remaining ski areas in the US where snowboarding is prohibited, a commitment to the "two boards" style of snow sports is welcomed here by ski purists. Over half of the mountain is designated "expert" territory. The combination of relentless high desert sunshine, plus varied and challenging terrain covered in dry powder is sensational, and a sense of family is maintained by the presence of many of the staff from the resort's beginnings in the 1950s. Taos itself is home to one of the longest-established Native American populations in the United States - a visit to Taos Pueblo is a must, no matter how great the snow is - although added to these beginnings have been, in turn, the presence of Spanish colonials, bohemian artists and alternative healers. With museums, galleries, restaurants and stores to rival Santa Fe, the town offers a more relaxed charm, even in during the winter season, as the enduring popularity of nearby Colorado ensures that the town and slopes alike remain relatively uncrowded and unspoilt.

Guide by Sarah Rodrigues

   
 
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