Category Archives: New Mexico

Roadtrip 2 (Day Six) Tijeras and Albuquerque

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IMG_7373On Day five we arrived at our AirBnB in Tijeras just around sundown.  We’ve not booked with AirBnB before but had heard some good stories and some bad stories but we wanted to experiment after out up and down hotel experiences the past few days.

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Treehouse

We stayed at Brinkley House and I was blown away by how good this place was.  I know they are not all like this but we’ve set the bar pretty high!  We wanted something a little away from things which we could use as a base for exploring the area…we loved it so much we kinda abandoned some of our plans for the day and stayed hanging in the house.  It is a beautiful little house with excellent tech gadgets (Apple TV, speakers throughout the house, wifi, SEPARATE wifi in the beautiful tree house which has electricity and a bed!!  It is also only 4 mins from route 66 so was close to the area but far enough away to feel like we are in the country.  Lots of little outdoor spaces for relaxing and even a horse shoe toss area. The hosts were also very friendly and had some great little extras which really made the stay.  That coupled with their friendliness and willingness to help meant they got full marks from us!  The kids would not go down to the mysterious basement though 😉

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Sundeck at the back

We relaxed in the morning and then decided that we would explore the close area instead of venturing further afield to someplace like Santa Fe.  We had been given a tip to visit the Sandia tramway which is a cable car up to the top of Sandia Peak.  We headed there after lunch on the porch and were not disappointed.  The mountain rises up to 10,738 feet above sea level and we start below in a cable car which take us up to the top.  IMG_7395The views up there were spectacular!  We also saw snow for one of the first times since we moved to Texas!

Sophie and Ben enjoyed skelping each other (and me) with snow balls.  Sophie was particularly proud of hitting her poor brother straight in the kisser with a well-placed shot.  He puts up with so much that boy and never seems to get annoyed.  I’d have decked my brothers in the snows then kicked snow on them till they had to resurrect Scott and Amundsen to help dig them out…just saying. IMG_7402

It was our first time on a cable car too which was spectacular which we live streamed on the way up.

After this we headed down the hill.  I had noticed a Breaking Bad tour leaflet in the foyer of the Tramway so I Googled – Walter White’s address just in case.  It turns out it was only 5 minutes away from where we were!  So it would have been rude not to.

IMG_7447We drove over there but I read in places that the owners were a bit annoyed by tourists (especially since some jackasses had thought it would be a good idea to throw pizza on their roof (like the famous scene) and this had gone on for a while now.)  So we just drove by and took some pictures and stayed away from the property itself.

Followed that up with lunch at yet another place which looked poor from the outside but had great food and service!  Huge Chinese food portions in the China Garden.  Yelp has yet to steer us wrong!  We did take a ton of food home with us which I may have for breakfast…don’t judge me 😉

After this we headed back to the house and relaxed playing cards again and sitting on the porch looking out to the wilderness.

Roadtrip 2 (day Five) Roswell to Tijeras via Fort Sumner.

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Day Five – Roswell to Tijeras via Fort Sumner.

Day 5 route Roswell, Fort Sumner and TijerasAfter day four being a bit of a barnstormer in terms of fitting things in.  Day five was a little quieter but we still got a lot in.

We were a little slower in getting organized in the morning just because we could do.  After breakfast we packed up and headed on the road.  The Road from Roswell to Fort Sumner is possibly the longest straightest road I’ve been on.  We turned about 3 times in 105 miles and changed road I think once!IMG_7319

After a brief stop off to make sure Ben got a Gandalf picture in the middle of the desert we hit Fort Sumner just around lunchtime.  The town is most famous as the place where Billy the Kid was killed (similar to Sam Bass in Round Rock 😉 ).  We visited the Billy the Kid museum first.  It’s a Billy the Kid and Fort Sumner mash up but it’s pretty entertaining.  The staff were friendly and nice.  Everything from Billy’s rifle on display to old cars which were used in the town.  It’s much bigger than it looks on the inside. IMG_7345 It’s good to talk to the folks in these places as they have such a fascinating local insight into what has been going on in the town.IMG_7331

The guy behind the counter told me a fascinating story about the Kid’s grave site.  If you look at the picture you will see that there are no grave stones behind the grave.  This is not because there is no-one buried there but it is because in the 1940’s a wealthy Texan ‘bought’ the grave and though he had bought the whole cemetery and so destroyed all the grave stones behind to make sure the kid’s grave was front and centre!  The locals only found out after the fact and there was nothing they could do at that point as the other stones had been destroyed!

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Note no graves behind Billy’s

When we visited the grave later in the day it was a very empty grave site but more to come on that.

After being round the museum and getting the obligatory souvenir crushed penny which Sophie has come to love we were all starving.  We had seen a little place a little bit down the road (Rodeo Grill) which looked good so we headed there.  Unfortunately it was closed when we got there so we went on the lookout for something else.  We found a place called Fred’s restaurant which looked a little dodgy from the outside (one of the windows was taped shut) but we had little choice so we went in.  It turned out well for us again!  Food was cheap but good quality…and lots of it.  IMG_7351I could not finish my Quesadillas…which anyone who knows me means it was lots of food ;-).  We all (5) ate for under $60 including drinks.

After lunch we headed to the site of old Fort Sumner.  The house where the Kid was killed (Pete Maxwell’s house) was damaged and then destroyed in a flood in the 1930’s so there was not a lot to see there but we did visit the grave.  Billy is buried with two of his friends and fellow Regulators Charlie Bowdre and Tom O’Folliard – his ‘Pals’.  His original gravestone has been stolen a couple of times so has iron bars over it and the grave itself is also covered in an iron cage.  Carol mentioned it looked like a prison…seems ironic that he could not be caged in life but was after death.

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Older headstone showing Billy’s 21 alleged kills

There were only a few graves left in the cemetery after the destruction by the infamous ‘Texan’ mentioned earlier but they were mainly notable.  One of the graves was the ‘famous’ person in the site before Billy.  Lucien Maxwell is buried there and he is notable as the person who has owned the largest track of land in US history…a huge part of New Mexico and Colorado.  He died in the 1870’s and it was at his house (converted from the old Fort) that Billy met his end.

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Lucien Maxwell who owned vast lands including Philmot Scout ranch

The story is that Billy fell in love with Pete’s (Lucien’s son) sister and he disapproved of this love of his sister Paulita and got a message to Pat Garret in Lincoln that Billy was in Fort Sumner.  Billy was actually killed in Pete’s bedroom.  Another grave that did survive was Pete’s himself.  Pete’s bedroom had a door to the outside and Billy went in from the outside whilst Garret was inside (unbeknownst to Billy).  One of Garret’s men made a noise on the porch and as Billy turned to see who was there Garrett shot him in the doorway from behind.

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The door to Pete’s bedroom where Billy was killed.

After visiting the cemetery we headed for our trip to Tijeras (outside of Albuquerque) where we are staying for the next couple of days.  Along the way we traveled along I-40 which at times is the route of the historic Route 66 and at times veers off.  We did pop off onto the original Route for photos though.IMG_7362

We arrived at the Air BnB we had hired for a couple of days around sundown but that’s a story for tomorrow.

 

 

RoadTrip 2 (Day Four) – Roswell, Lincoln and White Oaks

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Lamposts in Roswell

Woke up to a beautiful day in Roswell with not a cloud in the sky.  We were looking to accomplish a couple of things in the day.  The kids wanted to discover the UFO stuff in Roswell and I was keen on exploring the Old West Stuff further west.  We split the day in two so we could get the most out of the day.

Morning.

International UFO museum in Roswell.

Downtown Roswell (and most of the town) has aliens littered all over the place and the economy seems like it is based solely on extraterrestrial beings coming here in the 40’s (or 50’s if you believe the government apparently).

The main centre piece is the International UFO museum which has a lot of paper cuttings and exhibits from around the time of the famous crash in 1947.  It was relatively cheap to get into ($5 for adults(2017)) and we went in for a look around.  Lots of conspiracy theories and lots of good info too on what went on.  I liked the area where they debunked famous pictures of flying saucers – one guy just threw his cowboy hat in the air and photographed it out of focus…that’s not even trying!IMG_7240

The kids liked it though and Ben picked up an X-files (I want to Believe) poster from one of the many souvenir shops along the way.

After we were there we headed out to ‘Billy the Kid Country’.  There is a whole area which has lots to see for someone who likes to explore the old west.  It was a good distance from Roswell but we got to travel across some of the most spectacular scenery we’ve ever seen. IMG_7299

Whilst travelling we encountered a little town which we had no intention of stopping at called Tinnies.  However the Preacher was one Cowboy Preacher Jack Ferguson so we had to stop for some pictures.  IMG_7256Jack Ferguson was Carol’s dad’s name and he passed away not long after we moved over to the US so it seemed fitting that we stop and take a look.  Ironically we found that in Tinnies and he and I shared more than a few tinnies in our time!

Heading back out we stopped again in a town called Hondo for fuel and ice cream.  I’ve never been concerned that we’d run out of fuel before when the gauge is saying we have more than 100 miles left but that is how far from anywhere we were at this time!!

Billy the Kid country.

First proper stop was Lincoln.  This is one of the best preserved towns from the old west due mainly to the fact it fell on hard times after the boom times of the 1880’s and never expanded like lots of other towns.Day Four

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The kids outside the Tunstall MacSween store

To understand why I was so happy when we got there I have to take you back to my childhood.  When I was young (about 14) the movie Young Guns came out and I loved it for it’s escapism and when Young Guns 2 came out a couple of years later I liked it also but did like the soundtrack probably more.  They are not Oscar material but good escapist fun.  My brothers also loved the movies and we’d spend many an afternoon watching them and insulting each other with lines from the movie or skelping each other on the head whilst shouting ‘Reap the Whirlwind!.’  So the story of Billy the kid is one which I have liked and I’ve read a fair bit on him and watched other movies and documentaries when they come on.

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The spot where ‘Bob’ was killed

I was expecting Lincoln to be built up and to have lost all of it’s old west charm and frankly so did Ben who was expecting me to do my usual by asking him to imagine something was still there ;-).  I could not have been more wrong.  The town still has all of that old charm and the building are still there including actual Bullet holes from Billy’s six shooter!

For $7 (for adults) and free for kids you can wander through the old west and the story of the Lincoln County Cattle wars with actual buildings from the time.  IMG_7287I was especially excited about the County Court house which was first used by a certain Sheriff Pat Garrett and has the room where Billy was held before his daring escape from hanging.  They even have the window where Billy kills his captor Bob Ollinger and where the movie has the famous line – ‘Best Dollar eighty I ever spent’.  It’s not exactly like the real thing but I was surprised I could see the outline of what went on from a Hollywood movie of the 80’s!

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The window and the spot on the ground

We then had lunch in the only food place in town which happened to be Jimmy Dolan’s old houseDolan was on the ‘other’ side of the wars with Murphy against Tunstall and MacSween and he fell on hard times after the wars and went broke.  His house has been changed and tweaked over the years but it was still a brilliant old home and serves as a lunch place and B&B.  Our waitress, Sage, was superb and told us so much history about the place and the town.  She was a wealth of local knowledge and even told us about her boyfriend who was apparently the great great grandson of Geronimo!!!

There was also some cool stuff you don’t find in books.  She told us about the ghost in the house that folk have seen who looked a lot like Dolan’s wife who died in childbirth at 25 and a great story which happened recently where a metal detectorist came by and found a silver dollar and an old wheel.  IMG_7310What was fascinating was there is a picture in the house of Dolan’s family outside the house and Dolans daughter is pulling an old cart…the wheel they believe was from that!  Spooky but incredibly cool.  I also had some excellent home made Chili…because well…the old west!

After that Sage gave us directions to our next destination and off we went.  We wanted to visit White Oaks which was mentioned in the movie and at that time was the second biggest town in New Mexico.  It’s a Ghost town now and we’re always up for exploring a Ghost town.  Before we hit White Oaks though we stopped into Fort Stanton which is another historic site and was used to house soldiers (especially Buffalo Soldiers) to repel Indian attacks.  It was also a base for General Pershing (commander of the US forces in WW1 and who the tank is named after).

IMG_7304White Oaks was quite a journey away (about 45 mins drive from Lincoln at least) but it was a fascinating place.  Not least of which was the fact that this used to be home to thousands and had 4 newspapers and it’d own opera house and was now some ramshackle houses and a lot of fields.  It was notorious in it’s day for being a place of ill repute with brothels and bars entertaining the local gold miners all looking to make their fortune but when the gold ran out and the locals got a little greedy with the railroads and the railroad bosses ran it away from the town it fell on hard times.

The only saloon left was the fantastically named ‘No Scum allowed Saloon’ which only opens at the weekend and sits alone on the main street which used to house countless places.

IMG_7307We explored the cemetery too which had a few famous names in there.  An ex Governor of New Mexico and Deputy Sheriff Bell who was killed also in the kid’s escape from Lincoln.  The most notable person though was Susan MacSween Barber who was the wife of Alexander MacSween of the Tunstall/MacSween group and really the winner of the Cattle Wars as she came out of it with both her life and her fortune!  (Murphy, Tunstall and Macsween were all killed and Dolan went broke).  IMG_7308She became known as the Queen of New Mexico cattle  and although she fell on harder times later in life she stayed in White Oaks till she died in the 1930’s.

The drive home was long as we had kept pushing out but still beautiful.  Tomorrow we head out for Tijeras and Santa Fe!