Tag Archives: New Mexico

Staybridge Suites – Las Cruces, New Mexico

Too Short a Stay

logo-staybridgeThis was our first visit at a Staybridge Suites, designed primarily for extended stays. Although we stayed only one night at the Las Cruces Staybridge I see thoughtful details that would be fully appreciated during a longer stay. For instance, the clothes basket in the closet great for collecting dirty clothes as well as trips back and forth to the laundry room.

The laundry room is larger, better equipped and brighter than the typical motel facility. Too often they are tucked under the stairs or in a closet-sized space, poorly ventilated and just a bit spooky.

In Las Cruces the registration area is small but other common areas seemed well proportioned and maintained. The Great Room with gas fireplace, comfortable furniture and televisions opens to an appealing landscaped living area. We also find an outdoor pool, hot tub, putting green and grill. The well-equipped fitness center stays open 24-hours a day, there’s no excuse for neglecting the workout routine.

The business center offers several computers, printer/scanners and plenty of work space. In case you have a bit of free time and didn’t bring anything to read there’s a small library, also a few games. Internet access in the business center and guest rooms is free and high-speed – and it worked!

Special features at the Las Cruces Staybridge Suites are a Home Theater on the 2nd floor, Internet Cafe on the 3rd floor and a public/private meeting space on the 4thfloor. The Home Theater is furnished with recliners with drink holders, extra large digital HD screen, surround sound, DVD and Blue Ray players  – and a popcorn machine.

las-cruces-staybridge-suitesAlthough we reserved a one-bedroom suite we were given a two bedroom/two bath. Being able to set up the laptop in the extra bedroom and work early in the morning while Bob still slept was an nice bonus. Quality bedding and linens contributed to a much needed night’s rest.  The equipped kitchen included a stove top, microwave oven, full refrigerator and dishwasher. My only negative comment is that there is no ice machine in the hotel. They expect you to use the ice maker in your frig; however, if it’s not turned on when you check in it can’t keep up with demand – even for two people.

The morning breakfast buffet served a number of hot items and more selections than we’re used to at Holiday Inn Expresses. I immediately noted the fact that we were eating on pottery dishes with real silverware  – a welcome up-grade. The layout of the buffet and separate drink corridor was also appreciated.

Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday evenings the hotel hosts Evening Sundowner Receptions with food, drinks and a chance to socialize from 5:30 – 7:30pm.

We’ve stayed in hotels, motels, historic inn and B&B in Las Cruces. By far the Staybridge Suites gets my vote for the place to return to. Next time we’ll plan more than one night.

Find It!

Las Cruces, New Mexico
Las Cruces, New Mexico

When You Go: The Staybridge Suites – Las Cruses is located near I-25 exit 6 at 2651 Northrise Drive on the north side of Las Cruces.

*Deal* – New Mexico CulturePass

Ticket to Treasures

sculpture-at-museum-of-indian-arts-and-culturePlanning a trip to the Land of Enchantment this year? Interested in art, Indian culture, history, ranching, space or science? Check into the New Mexico CulturePass – one ticket to 14 state museums, cultural centers and state monuments.

The $25 pass allows one visit to each of 14 sites during a 12-month period. The ticket can be purchased online or at any of the museums or monuments and is activated the day of your first visit. CulturePass includes admission to:

Explore and discover treasures in New Mexico.

Centennial – Salinas Pueblo Missions Nt. Monument – NM

National Monument Celebrates 100 Years

spmnm-gran-quivira-church2Gran Quivira received designation as a National Monument by President William Howard Taft in 1909. Abo and Quarai, previously under the stewardship of the Museum of New Mexico, were added in 1980 and the entirety renamed Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument.

Special events are scheduled every month of the 100th anniversary year, check the website events calender or call 505-847-2585, ext. 0. Events in May include a flint-knapping workshop at Gran Quivira and the 2nd annual International Migratory Bird Day at Quarai, May 9th.

Every Saturday and Sunday, May 2 – September 5, 2009, park ranger Craig Morgan will lead guided 1pm tours titled Voices in the Wind at Gran Quivira.

Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument – New Mexico

Windows to an Ancient World

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We stand in the afternoon light peering through window after window into the remains of an ancient world at Abo Ruins. The walls stand silent today but we can imagine the sounds reverberating through the village as women ground corn, masons shaped stones and children chased wild turkeys through the courtyard.

In today’s sparsely populated Estancia Basin of central New Mexico evidence of great pueblos recall a time when thousands lived in the valley. Clovis people hunted here 10,000 years ago. As prehistoric populations learned to grow corn they began to stay in one location longer, living in pithouses.

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Mission walls and kiva at Abo Ruins reflect the blending of Indian and Spanish missionary cultures.

Mesa Verde in southern Colorado was once the center of Anasazi culture. After abandonment of Mesa Verde circa 1300 some groups from that culture moved south along the Rio Grande and into the Estancia Basin. Stone villages and towns were built, fields farmed, trade flourished. Salt was collected from nearby lake beds, the commodity used for trade with plains Indians and other pueblos, such as Zuni 200-miles to the west.

In 1598 Spanish explorers entered the area, within the next 20 years missions were established in most of the Rio Grande pueblos. Fransican priests directed the building of churches and conventos, each larger and grander than the previous one. Cultural conflict, Apache raids, disease, drought and famine ensued. The entire Salinas district was deserted by both Indian and Spanish populations by 1677.

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View from Abo Ruins

Three missions and portions of their villages comprise the Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument. We’d passed through Mountainair, New Mexico on several previous trips only slightly aware of the missions. This time we stopped at the small in-town visitors center. A video and museum displays gave background information, piquing our interest in visiting the three sites: Quarai, Abo and Gran Quivira (Las Humanas).

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Interior of Quarai Mission

Quarai

Stepping through the entryway to the old stone mission church at Quarai I’m struck by the walls towering nearly 40-feet  high centuries after the last villager departed. Imagine the effort and engineering required to construct this grand church, the largest church of the Salinas Province as the Spanish called the region. The stones beneath our feet are believed to be from the original flagstone floor, an unusual feature since most mission church floors were packed earth at that time.

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Quarai Mission

 

The mission at Quarai was built in the shape of a cross with side altars and a choir loft. Rows of empty sockets once held vigas, or roof beams; today we look up to open blue sky. We can imagine how imposing this structure seemed to the pueblo people use to living in small, low rooms.

Along a half-mile trail we see mounds signifying unexcavated house blocks, evidence of the 400-600 people living here before the Spaniards. After winding through the mission ruins the trail leads to the spring and stream that provided water essential for the community and fields. Giant cottonwoods shade the stream banks.

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Abo Ruins

Abo

We arrive at Abo in the late afternoon, the low angle of the sun warming the red sandstone walls. The stone found at Abo broke easily into horizontal pieces. There’s more symmetry here than we see at the other two sites; row upon row, mortar of clay and water holds the tabular blocks together.

What strikes me at Abo is the sense of the convento – dining room, kitchen, storerooms, residence cells where the friars lived, porteria, stables and corral. This is where much of the business of the mission occurred. We don’t view these rooms from afar – the interpretive trail leads us along convento passageways and through waist-high doorways.

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Mesa top ruins at Gran Quivira

Gran Quivira (Las Humanas)

We were so inspired by our stops at Quarai and Abo the next morning we decided to put Gran Quivira on the agenda. Called Las Humanas by Spanish explorers, Gran Quivira was the largest of the Salinas pueblos. Once home to as many as 2,000 people, today it is the most remote. From Mountainair we travel 25 miles southeast. Unlike the other two pueblos, Gran Quivira sits atop a mesa with no immediate water source. Runoff from sporadic rains was trapped in shallow pits to supplemented the limited water from wells and roof-fed cisterns.

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Gran Quivira Mound 7 and Church

As we approach the ruins we realize they are much larger than those we’ve seen at Abo and Quarai. Yet, Mound 7 is only excavated one of 20 house blocks that once stood at Las Humanas. The square-room ruins we walk through were constructed between 1550-1670, stones held together with an ashy-colored mortar. Beneath these walls archaeologists uncovered 200 wedge-shaped rooms arranged in five to six concentric circles built around a grand kiva. Yellow caliche mortar was used to construct this pueblo in the 14th century. We can stand atop the later pueblo and peer down a shaft into the lower rooms.

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Unfinished second church at Gran Quivira

Construction on the first Las Humanas mission church began in 1630. The pueblo did not always have a resident priest, instead it was a circuit parish served by clergy from Abo. A second church was begun around 1659, the ambitious cross-shaped sanctuary never saw completion.

The museum at Gran Quivira exhibits examples of the various pottery styles used in the pueblos through the centuries.

Reflecting on our Salinas Pueblo Missions tour we realize that these churches were built, used for worship and totally deserted nearly a century before the first of the famed California missions was established. We’ve had the opportunity to see into an ancient world.

spmnm-grinding-stoneWhen You Go: Salinas Pueblo Missions National Monument is open daily except Thanksgiving, Christmas and New Years. The monument visitor center is in Mountainair, New Mexico. From Mountainair Abo is 9 miles southwest, Quarai is 8 miles northwest and Gran Quivira 25 miles southeast. Each of the three sites have a small visitor center and picnic areas. Camping is not allowed; campgrounds can be found in the nearby Cibola National Forest.

Stahmann’s Pecans – Las Cruces, New Mexico

Going Nuts

Perfectly spaced rows of pruned pecan trees border the rural road on our way to Stahmann’s Country Store. I have one purpose in mind – PECANS. Located a few miles south of Las Cruces, New Mexico, Stahmann’s estate grown pecans is in its 77th year as a family stahmanns-orchardowned business. “Estate grown” means Stahmann’s grow all of their own pecans, never buying from other sources. Acres and acres of orchards receive irrigation from the Rio Grande. From tree to packaging each step is carefully controlled. For instance, Stahmann Farms stopped using chemical insecticides in the late 1980s. Instead, thousands of ladybugs, lacewing flies and natural predators control the harmful green and black aphids.

stahmanns-storeOn our last trip through Las Cruces I discovered the Stahmann store on the historic plaza of Old Mesilla. A couple of tins of cinnamon spice pecans went home with us. Bob swears he doesn’t remember any of this, he’s sure I devoured them all myself? This time we purchase a half-dozen tins, roasted & salted, cinnamon spice and mild chile dusted. We resist the temptation of pralines, pecan brittle, white chocolate pecans and a dozen more tantalizing treats. I do make sure we tuck a catalog into the bag, making a mental note of their gift packages and assortments the next time I need special presents.

stahmanns-pecansBefore leaving we treat ourselves to the richest, creamiest pecan praline ice cream cone I’ve ever enjoyed. And, I’ve tried quite a few in my years. There’s something totally decadent with indulging in such a treat at 10:15 in the morning.

I want to go back sometime from May through August when tours are conducted every Wednesday morning and green leaves shade the orchard floor.

When You Go: Stahmann’s Country Store, on Hwy 28 south of Las Cruces, and Stahmann’s on the Plaze in Mesilla are open seven days a week. Stahmann’s accepts phone and online orders.

Sad Note: When our car was broken into in Phoenix one of the things that came up missing was our sack of Stahmann’s pecans. Bob moaned, “We hadn’t even gotten into them yet.” I tried to explain to everyone that these weren’t ordinary pecans, these were gourmet pecans. Next time we’ll eat our way out of the Stahmann’s parking lot.

Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge – New Mexico

Name that Bird

bda-snow-geese1Armed with bird books and binoculars we approach Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge wondering what we’ll see on this visit. A few years ago we stopped in February, amazed at the quantity and variety of birds and waterfowl. Known internationally for the quality of wildlife observation the refuge is located off I-25 midway between Albuquerque and Las Cruces, New Mexico. Socorro is the nearest town, 20 miles to the north.

Along the banks of the Rio Grande the refuge encompasses over 57,000 acres. Mountain ranges rise to the east and west. Located on the northern edge of the Chihuahuan desert, the terrain varies from wetlands, farmlands and riparian forests to arid foothills and mesas. Bosque del Apache provides habitat and protection for migratory birds and endangered species while offering the public educational wildlife experiences.

bda-sandhill-craneWe start our visit with a picnic lunch in the pavilion near the visitor center. Before heading out for the driving tour we purchase a CD ($2.50) of interpretive information coordinated with numbered signs along the route. The Bosque Nature Store carries a large selection of birding and nature books plus gift items.

The Wildlife Drive is a 12-mile, one-way gravel road; a short two-way road bisects the route into the Marsh Loop and the Farm Loop. Depending on time and interest it’s easy to do either loop or the entire drive. What one sees changes with each visit, several pull-offs give access to trails, boardwalks and observation decks. You’re allowed to stop along the drive as long as you pull to the side to allow traffic to pass. We’re reminded that when wildlife is spotted near the road if we remain in the vehicle it can serve as a blind – wildlife may remain closer while being viewed.bda-ducks

Tens of thousands of ducks, geese, sandhill cranes and wading birds find ideal winter habitat in the water impoundments created by low dikes and fields cultivated for a winter food source. Migratory landbirds stopover in spring and fall. Since 1940, 377 species from been observed. Pick up a bird checklist for the Bosque at the visitor center.

bda-snow-geese-in-flightThe prominent sighting on this trip was hundreds and hundreds of snow geese. They’re quite a sight when they all decide to go airborne. I always wish we had more time here and vow next time we’ll sit and bask in the winter sun much like the turtle on the log watching the ducks drift pass.bda-viewing-deck

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When You Go: The Bosque del Apache Wildlife Drive is open for driving, walking or biking from one hour before sunrise until one hour after sunset daily, year round. Store and visitor center open Monday – Friday 7:30am – 4pm, Saturday & Sunday 8am – 4:30pm. A $3 / private vehicle fee is required for access to the Wildlife Drive; Golden Age, Golden Eagle, Golden Access or current Federal Duck Stamp honored. Five of  seven observation decks are handicap accessible.

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Taos, New Mexico

Taos – Through the Windshield

We were on our last leg of a three week road trip. The route took us through Taos, New Mexico – a place we like to visit and know fairly well. Other than a stop at the Visitors Center to use the restrooms and pick up the requisite five pounds of current travel literature we stop only for traffic and stoplights.

blue-doors-of-ranchos-de-taos1As I’m sitting in the passenger seat thinking how strange this seems Bob says, “Feels funny not to be doing anything here, to just drive through.” We point out new street lights, a reopened restaurant, a road project completed since last summer, new gallery locations but keep driving. Today we’re focused on getting home. The draw of Taos is strong, we already have plans for a week this summer when we’ll see Taos up close and personal not through the windshield.

When You Go: Don’t just drive through plan a Taos visit.

Las Cruces, New Mexico

New Mexico Home Cooking

With cousins in Las Cruces we like to make that an overnight destination on our way to Arizona. We offered to take the family to dinner, instead we had the perfect evening in their home. Dinner was homemade enchiladas the-twinsmade with the local chiles. I had never had enchiladas served with a fried egg on top – there’s always something to learn. The meal was perfect with the bonus of plenty of uninterrupted time for conversation and catching up. The twins entertained after dinner playing their solos from a recent competition and introducing us to Guitar Hero.

I’m sorry I can’t give everyone the address and phone number to make reservations. I know you would enjoy the evening as much as we did.

Pete’s Restaurant – Belen, New Mexico

Real New Mexican Food

During an Internet search I found multiple references to Pete’s restaurant in Belen; reviewers recommending the real New Mexican cuisine. No Tex-Mex here.petes-exterior

Pete’s stands across the street from the historic Harvey House next to the busy Belen railyard.

Founded by Pete  Torres in 1949, the restaurant follows his philosophy sixty years later. Pete believed chile was basic to New Mexico. He valued authenticity – his recipes are followed closely using fresh ingredients, and consistency of what the his customers receive.

Having skipped lunch we’re eager to dig into the crunchy tortilla chips and spicy salsa – highly recommended by Bob. The chile relleno plate entices Bob and fulfills expectations with perfect crisp rellenos, rice, beans, dinner salad and sopapillas.

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Pete's Chile Rellenos

The staff willingly met my request to make a substitution on the stuffed sopapilla entree. I wanted to try both the chicken and beef instead of two of the same. They came smothered with green chile and accompanied with a choice of rice or beans. Flavors were exactly what I’d looked forward to. The spiced ground beef impacts intense but well balanced flavors. I’m certain it would make a great taco. Just planning ahead to my next visit.

I evesdrop on a table of locals discussing the high quality of Pete’s burgers. No doubt they’re good but I’m sticking with traditional New Mexican.

Too full for dessert but interested in the pineapple cream pie we ordered one slice to go. The yummy bedtime snack makes us wonder why we’ve never before heard of pineapple cream pie.

We agree with Pete’s motto, “We’re not the best because we’re the oldest; we’re the oldest because we’re the best.”

When You Go: Pete’s Restaurant, 105 North 1st Street, Belen, NM, 505-864-4811.

Las Vegas National Wildlife Refuge – New Mexico

Stopover

The National Wildlife Refuge east of Las Vegas, New Mexico hosts flocks, bevies and coveys each year. The lakes and fields between plains and mountains is a natural stopover on the Central Flyway.

las-vegas-nwr-signWe’re too early for spring migration, however several species winter at the refuge. From an observation deck overlooking Crane Lake we focus on the  white “island” across the lake – hundreds and hundreds of snow geese. Sandhill cranes stalk the far shoreline. Canada geese flap and strut near the lake’s edge. Numerous species of ducks bob directly in front of us. Unfortunately my knowledge of species stops at mallard and teal. I need our Sibley’s to identify all that I observe. Wind whipped and chilled we opt for viewing along the eight-mile auto loop passing ponds, lakes, marshes, grasslands and cottonwood groves.

mcalister-lake-lvnwrThe brochure says 20-50 eagles winter at this refuge but we see none on this visit. We do see a northern harrier hawk drift low over the dry gama grass, stalking its prey – probably a vole.

While stopped near Brown’s Marsh I spot movement in a brush thicket. I get the binoculars focused in time to see the head of what I’m assuming will be a coyote. The brain quickly processes this is not a coyote face looking back at me but a bobcat. Speaking with a ranger later in the day, from my description he confirms that is probably exactly what I saw.

When You Go : Las Vegas National Wildlife Refuge  is 5.5 miles from I-25, exit 345. The Gallinas Nature Trail, open weekdays only, requires a permit from the refuge office.