Showing posts with label Las Cruces. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Las Cruces. Show all posts

Monday, March 30, 2009

Las Cruces Cont. - Fort Selden State Monument

Just down the road from the Leasburg Dam State Park is the Fort Selden State Monument. The monument is

Excerpted from http://www.nmmonuments.org/inst.php?inst=10
"Fort Selden was established in 1865 in an effort to bring peace to the south central region of present day New Mexico. Built on the banks of the Rio Grande, this adobe fort housed units of the U.S. Infantry and Cavalry. Their intent was to protect settlers and travelers in the Mesilla Valley from desperados and Apache Indians. Several of the units stationed at the fort were black troopers, referred to as Buffalo Soldiers. A young Douglas Mac Arthur called the fort home while his father was post commander in the late 1880s."

Not much is left of the old fort, the roof, windows & doors having been removed years ago, the adobe walls are slowly dissolving away. What is there reminds one of the starkness that the soldiers stationed there had to deal with on a daily basis. While the setting is lovely now, I'm sure 150 years ago was a completely different picture.

The Monument has a small museum that outlines daily activities at Fort Selden and other frontier forts; along with personal artifacts that were used on the frontier forts. It is worth a quick stop.
Fort Selden Map
Parade Grounds at Fort Selden
Looking toward the Barracks
Old walls at Fort Selden
Dad showing how thick the walls are
at the fort
Fireplace at the old hospital
Looking inside the barracks
Old wall of the fort hospital

Thursday, March 26, 2009

New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum, Las Cruces

We spent a few days with Raymona's parents in Las Cruces, NM last week (Mar 18-22). Actually we were about 16 miles north of LC at Leasburg Dam State Park near Radium Springs. What a great little park - terrific views, good campsites, clean bathrooms & shower house, nice 'hiking' trails throughout the park. Bryan & I spent one night there on our way back from Texas a few weeks ago.

While in the area we took in a few sites - the weather got pretty warm and we both had our dogs with us so we were limited on site-seeing to the early mornings before it got too hot to leave the dogs in the vehicles... but we did see a fantastic museum and the farmers market.

I think one of the highlights of the trip was the New Mexico Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum (http://www.nmfarmandranchmuseum.org/). What a fantastic place to visit. It detailed out 3000 years of the farming & ranching in the New Mexico from the Mogollon First Nation to present day cotton, pecan, etc farmers. Lots of detail about how the early Indians and pioneers farmed the land from the arid high-desert near Chaco Canyon to the Rio Grande river valley.

New Mexico Farm and Ranch
Heritage Museum

Mogollon Pit House
Sign explaining the Mogollon Pit House
There are also lots of antique (& new) farming equipment on display, it was neat to walk through and have my Dad point out implements that they either used or still have lying around their ranch. Being on a ranch, they had to scavenge parts from one piece of equipment to another so sometimes he'd say - "we have part of that, had to take the wheels, cogs, insert part here, off to fix that machine over there".

Old Farm Equipment (Dad told me what it was
but I can't remember now)

A great exhibit inside the museum is the "Farm Life in New Mexico: Then and Now" this beautiful new exhibit features four major sections: “Moving Around,” “On the Farm,” “Home Sweet Home,” and “Going to Town.” This exhibit had antique carts & wagons as well as modern harvesting equipment on display. There were excellent storyboards outlining the history of farming/ranching in NM from Chaco Canyon to present day. There was also a nostalgic look at home life on a farm - display farm house rooms and a recreated country store & post office. I really enjoyed it but my parents really liked it, pointing out items from their childhood & early adulthood. It was great to share that with them.

Milk separator

Recreation of an old country store

Old timey post office

Surrey and buckboard

Stagecoach
While we didn't go out to the milk barn and animal corrals, there are extensive live animal displays on the premises. There are picnic areas and great visitas from the museum. The back courtyard is outlined with paver stones with New Mexico brands embedded in there - my brand (my grandpa's old one) wasn't there of course, as it was/is a fundraiser for the museum and costs $250 to have one set for you.

Back courtyard of Museum

View of Organ Mtns from museum courtyard
Sample of brands in courtyard
My favorite brand (other than my own)
The "Two Lazy Two P"
The museum also has part of the old Green Bridge, the oldest steel highway bridge in NM. This bridge spanned the Pecos River east of Roswell, NM.

Check out the website listed above for current & upcoming events - the museum hosts a variety of "seminars", such as dowsing (witching) for water (or whatever, there's a whole listof things you can witch for). Anyway, this is really a great museum and if you are ever in the Las Cruces area, I suggest you check it out. (Cost is $5 per person, $3 for seniors)

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

Cactus Sampler

Here are some photos of cacti we saw in the Las Cruces area - some can be found in "the wild" but all of these were in gardens. And unfortunately, I don't know the names of all of them.

Pin cushion cactus about to bloom

Beavertail Prickly Pear cactus
Close-up of Beavertail cactus

Teddy Bear Cholla, was told this was a
wicked cactus you did not want in your
cactus garden

Interesting cactus at the Farm & Ranch
Heritage Museum

Mom in front of a giant Agave (which seems to be
the only way they grow down here)

This prickly pear was HUGE, I wish I could show you
just how big it was. Each round section was about
the size of my head.

Another huge Agave at Fort Selden

Cactus garden at the Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum
Las Cruces, NM

Agaves in the cactus garden at the FRHM

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Mar 1 - Leasburg Dam State Park

Today we headed south then west to El Paso, TX and on to Las Cruces, NM. Today was much better than yesterday - NO WIND!!! Yea!!! I drove quite a bit as Bryan wasn't feeling too great and he drove all of yesterday. We left Monahans around 10:50 AM and arrived at Leasburg Dam State Park, NM at 4 PM.

The drive was uneventful and boring the first little bit, then we hit I-10 and at least got a little change of scenery... for a little while at least. I had never been to/thru El Paso and neither of us had been to Las Cruces. Our plan was to tour around Las Cruces in case we can't get jobs in Albuquerque and need to look there. Unfortunately Bryan was getting really sick by evening so we cut our trip short and will just have to make a trip back down there.

Route from Monahans to Leasburg Dam
(Remember you can click on any image to enlarge)
Leasburg Dam State Park is just west of Las Cruces on I-25 and what a delightful park it is. We got the last campsite there that evening so I recommend making reservations before you head out. The sites are nicely spaced apart, ours had electric & water hookups and terrific views, although I think all the sites would have the great views. There are nice demonstrations gardens throughout the park, showing off the terrific desert plants. Trails criss-cross the park and down on the river you can canoe or fish.

Leasburg Dam was built in 1908 to channel water from the Rio Grande to irrigation canals in the Mesilla Valley and is one of the oldest diversion dams in the state.
Campsite #24
View out the back door
View from our campsite
Leasburg Dam
View of part of the day use area at the park