VLA

Driving from Socorro, New Mexico to Arizona

Today’s breakfast was, of course, enjoyed again at the El Camino Restaurant & Lounge in Socorro, New Mexico, before striking off on the scenic route through Magdalena on our way back to Arizona.

Driving from Socorro, New Mexico to Arizona

The drive out here on the western side of the middle of New Mexico is lots of endless beauty.

Very Large Array in Datil, New Mexico

Along the way, we passed the Very Large Array pictured above.

Driving from Socorro, New Mexico to Arizona

A lone pronghorn sheep acts as a cattle guard near the intersection of Datil. We’ll keep on driving toward Pie Town, and for the umpteenth time, we’ll yet again strike having yet to taste the pie in Pie Town.

Caroline Wise and John Wise on the Arizona border with New Mexico

Back in Arizona, the clouds will give way to blue skies and the cold became a distant memory as the baking Phoenix desert welcomed us back with hazy smoke-filled horizons due to a fire 40 miles away.

The Trinity Obelisk

Trinity Site in New Mexico

Cold, windy, grey, and dismal are the conditions awaiting us at the Trinity Site. A record cold snap across the midwest snagged this part of New Mexico near Socorro. This land that experienced the world’s first nuclear explosion is made miserable by today’s weather. I think all 2,886 other visitors would agree from the grumbling we heard.

Trinity Site in New Mexico

Our previous visit was in April 2001, when blue skies and warm weather made the place downright nice. If you find yourself in the area on the first Saturday of April or October between 8:00 a.m. and 12:00 p.m., stop by; it’s free, and you will be one of the approximately 6,000 visitors per year who will visit the obelisk marking ground zero of this historic event.

Rio Grande River near Socorro, New Mexico

After our visit to the Trinity Site, we took a nap as the songbirds, wind, and water nudged us to sleep at Bosque Del Apache National Wildlife Refuge.

Socorro, New Mexico

For lunch, we returned to Socorro and our favorite New Mexico eatery, known as the El Camino Family Restaurant.

Abandoned House near Socorro, New Mexico

The day continued with a short road trip to Carrizozo…

…Claunch…

Socorro, New Mexico

…and Mountainair.

Happy New Year

Jutta Engelhardt and John Wise freezing at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Happy New Year from the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge just south of Socorro, New Mexico. The first day of the new year began for us at 4:30 a.m. on a very cold 22-degree (-7c) windy morning for some bird watching and shivering.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

It was five years ago that we made our first visit to these lands next to the Rio Grande River, but it was March, and we’d learned that we missed the prime viewing season, so later that year, in the closing days of 2002, we returned and witnessed a phenomenon that struck at our heart and tear ducts.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Now, here we are, sharing this experience with my mother-in-law, who was incredulous that we had to wake up so early to arrive at the refuge while it was still dark and oh-so-cold. But as the snow geese flew in from surrounding areas to congregate at this large frozen pond, she began to understand why the timing of being here was key.

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

While her face is obscured in her scarf, I can assure you that she’s as thrilled as her daughter. Her exclamations and gasps let me know that this was one of the greatest starts to a new year she’d ever experienced.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

And then sunrise happened and things just got better and better.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

Just the day before, this was a rippling pond, but overnight, a layer of ice formed, leaving the entire surface a slippery, frosty skating rink. This sure-footed sandhill crane made its way back and forth between small flocks of fellow cranes; maybe it was determining the warmer of the two groups.

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

How are we so fortunate to be offered so much beauty in such a short amount of time in the first hours of the new year?

Sunrise at Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge in New Mexico

This canal channels water from the nearby Rio Grande River into the wetlands of the wildlife refuge to maintain a healthy habitat for the wintering birds who have migrated to these southerly environs. For us lucky visitors, they reflect the beautiful light of the New Mexican early morning. The steam that arises here forms delicate ice patterns on plants, and little waterfalls spill from locks while birds float along their waters amongst the overhanging grass. All this works to enchant those who brave the cold to visit this refuge on an early winter morning.

Rio Grande River near Bosque del Apache in New Mexico

The aforementioned Rio Grande is the lifeline of these lands and the signal that we are leaving the area.

Somewhere in Western New Mexico

Never content to leave perfect alone, we have other plans further down the road as we point the car towards Arizona.

Off Highway 12 in Western New Mexico

The further west we go, the closer to home we get.

Catwalk Recreation Area in Glenwood, New Mexico

We are in the Gila Wilderness Area and are already on a trail along Whitewater Creek. Of course, we need to stop and smell the flowers or plants, whatever presents itself for inspection.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise at Catwalk Recreation Area in Glenwood, New Mexico

Can we really ever have too many reminders of those we’ve shared great adventures with? Ten years ago, I would have said my mother-in-law was offering up a half-hearted fake smile; today, I believe it is coming from genuine enthusiasm and the knowledge that she knows she is going to explore the extraordinary with us.

Catwalk Recreation Area in Glenwood, New Mexico

This is the attraction we are visiting in this small corner of New Mexico, the Catwalk Recreation Area, which allows us to walk right over Whitewater Creek, running just below our feet. From here, we’ll focus on our return to Phoenix but what a great way of closing out one year and bringing on another.

Last Day of the Year

Cafe Pasqual's in Santa Fe, New Mexico

Cafe Pasqual’s here in Santa Fe, New Mexico, was where we were supposed to have dinner last night, but the weather had other plans for us, so it goes. With so much ice and cold in town and not wanting to encounter more snow before the day is out, we’ll be leaving far earlier than planned. As for Pasqual’s, breakfast can be breakfast, but it’s their exquisite New Mexican cuisine at dinner that draws us in, maybe another time.

Interstate 25 heading south in New Mexico

Snow mushrooms dot the highway as we make our way south.

Interstate 25 heading south in New Mexico

I wonder if people who experience this snow thing every season are as enchanted by it as Caroline and I are. I can admit that New Mexico is right on with its state motto, The Land of Enchantment.

22 Degree Sun Halo near Albuquerque, New Mexico

Approaching Albuquerque, we entered a heavy patch of fog, but as we emerged, we were greeted by this spectacular 22-degree sun halo. Not wanting to stop on the freeway to take a proper picture, Caroline grabbed the wheel, and I threw the camera out of the window into the freezing air to snap a couple of shots. This is the one that turned out okay.

Interstate 25 heading south in New Mexico

With the sun being blotted out you can bet my nerves grew brittle at the thought I might have to drive while it’s snowing. In Phoenix, most of us do poorly when it starts raining.

El Camino Family Restaurant in Socorro, New Mexico

I’ve probably said it a thousand times before, but one can never grow tired of El Camino Family Restaurant. Normally, there are colorful spheres on the center spire in the top middle of the sign; I wonder why they are gone.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

Good fortune remains on our side as the weather cooperates for this earlier-than-expected visit to the refuge; we weren’t supposed to arrive until tomorrow morning.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

That’s a Northern Shoveler duck. This aquatic cutey with the spoon-shaped bill has a great scientific name, the Spatula clypeata.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

If we were real birders, we might be able to tell you what kind of sparrow this was, but I can’t find precisely what type it is, so it’s just a sparrow for now.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

The Northern Pintail duck just doesn’t give a …

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

This nearly lone leaf, still clinging to its branch, shivers in the cold air here at the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge, where we are spending the last day of the year and the first day of the New Year.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

The idea of drinking ourselves into a stupor, ending a year in a haze, and beginning the next feeling as though the past year smacked you upside the head is peculiar to me, to say the least. My New Year resolutions are simple: every day is a holiday, see something beautiful at least once a day (besides my wife), and help as many people as I can in whatever little way that might make their day, an hour, or minute just a bit better.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

We must be doing something right by the universe as we are yet to have a bird poop on us. Karma.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise at the Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

Here we are on the last day of the year, ending on a beautiful note with the hope that tomorrow begins in beauty, too.

Bosque del Apache near Socorro, New Mexico

Tomorrow morning, we’ll be standing right about here for some aviary fireworks.

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise, and John Wise at El Camino Family Restaurant in Socorro, New Mexico

We could have eaten elsewhere, especially considering we’d eaten lunch here earlier, but I’m not fooling anyone. If we’re in Socorro, we’re eating at El Camino Family Restaurant. Of course, I had the steak Tampico and Caroline the chile relleno plate. I have no recollection of what Jutta had as once at El Camino; I’m blind to the world. This is how we closed out 2006.

The Snow Almost Stopped Us

Uh oh, whose dumb idea was it to tune in to the Weather Channel here in our concrete teepee? Now, instead of driving into ignorance, we see that New Mexico was hammered by a powerful snowstorm overnight.

Our destination was/is Santa Fe, New Mexico, but Interstate 40, east of Grants at mile marker 85, is closed all the way to the Texas border. In addition, the I-25 north and south of Albuquerque are closed due to nearly 15 inches (38cm) of snowfall. With plenty of time ahead of us and doubtful that we’ll get far today, we stopped for a leisurely visit at Petrified Forest National Park.

Sure, I caught Caroline with her eyes closed, but the smiles shared between mother and daughter were so nice I had to share the photo.

Into the Petrified Forest with a light dusting of snow to decorate an already beautiful environment.

You’d think it was cold out here the way my mother-in-law is bundled up.

Yep, petrified forest implies we’d be seeing petrified trees, and that’s just what this is, but is a forest still a forest if it has all fallen down?

I don’t think I can ever tire of seeing minerals where wood used to be and bark frozen in time as though the tree was just standing yesterday.

If I’ve not written this in a previous post, I’ll surely be writing it again at some point in the future, but trying to imagine this somewhat barren part of the high desert covered in a heavy forest is truly difficult.

One wonders if early humans moving through this area thought this would make some good kindling for their fire before realizing they were looking at stones.

Leaving the National Park, we enquired about road conditions, traveling east with the idea that we might at least reach somewhere to position ourselves to visit the Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge for New Year’s Eve. We were given the great news that the road to Albuquerque was once again open.

We really should have made a u-turn there in the Petrified Forest and returned to the I-40 as this long detour down the 180 through St. Johns and up the 191, taking us 90 miles to reconnect with the freeway, was substantially longer than driving the 22 miles back through the park, but then we would have missed this amazing sight of Witch Well, Arizona, at the intersection of the 191 and highway 61.

A quick stop in Lupton, Arizona near the New Mexico Stateline for a couple of photos before we continued our drive into that state east of us.

In Gallup, we learned that the I-25 was cleared with a narrow path cut for those of us heading to Santa Fe, but from there to Colorado, the road would remain closed through the following day.

We wanted to visit Acoma Pueblo today, but the poor weather only offered us views of this Native American village off the highway.

There is a lot of snow off the road, but sure enough, our way is clear. All the same, I’m a nervous driver when it comes to snow and ice, as Phoenix sees neither. Now we just have to hope it doesn’t start snowing again because the way it looks right now, we won’t be getting into Santa Fe until it’s good and dark.

Sure enough, it’s late, and the roads into old town are icy, which kiboshes our plans for a gourmet New Mexican dinner and leaves us with lukewarm pizza delivery here at Days Inn – well, it beats sitting at home in Phoenix watching TV, not that we have one.

Icicles, snow, and a frozen-over pool are sights unfamiliar to us desert dwellers. Hopefully, tomorrow, the clearing trend will continue as we move south.

On The Way Home

Leaving Texas

Our big adventure to the panhandle of Texas to celebrate the holiday is coming to an end. The only thing left to do is point the car west and go home. We were up early in order to leave Arrington Ranch as soon as we could after sunrise, but not too early as we wanted to head into town for a stop at the Bucket for some coffee and breakfast, togo. We recommend the cinnamon rolls and breakfast burgers; the sourdough sure lends a great touch.

Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ in Groom, Texas

Our road south on Highway 83 took us to Shamrock, Texas, where we caught Interstate 40. Typically, we avoid freeways, but with 897 miles (1,450 km) ahead of us, we wanted to get home today, preferably before midnight. Fifty miles west of Shamrock we reached Groom, Texas, and the home of this giant Cross of our Lord Jesus Christ. While passing through two time zones and gaining two hours, I have to pull over twice, allowing Caroline to drive while I try to get some rest. She swears later that I slept well based on my loud snoring.

Entering New Mexico

In Albuquerque, we stop at Sadie’s for great New Mexican food, some of the hottest cooking around. Sadie’s was another discovery from the road trip I took with my mom, except that Caroline sent us there when we phoned her to ask for a restaurant recommendation in the area. We move in and out of the rain, at times so heavy it is difficult to see more than half a dozen car lengths ahead of us, and Route 66 beckons us to leave the Interstate for a few miles to revisit the Mother Road.

On Interstate 40 travelling west in New Mexico within 100 miles of Arizona

The photo above is on Interstate 40, somewhere west of Acoma Pueblo and east of the Continental Divide.

Flagstaff, Arizona ahead

Fifteen and a half hours after leaving Canadian we reached home in Phoenix, Arizona. These long drives are getting harder the older I get.