|
||
![]() Mount Capulin, an extinct volcanic cinder cone. A part of the National Park system with a road to the top. This is the north central limit of the Canadian River Valley.
Last Update: 8-Jan-2008 Navigation links
|
Above: the Canadian River from the Canadian River Gorge overlook An explanation of why I created this websiteThe purpose of this website is to collect links, pictures, and information about places in the Canadian River Valley. While there are a lot of apparently "empty" spaces in NE New Mexico, I see those as just spaces filled with history and geology between interesting locales. Many of those are totally off the beaten path. I hope to intrigue you into visiting some of them if you happen to pass this way. Photo collections of the places I have visited will be on Tabblo displays. Detailed descriptions of the places will be on those displays. One example is Wind Farms largely photographed south of San Jon on the Canadian River Caprock. The history of the isolated towns and villages of NE NM is a history of the development of transportation in the USA. First came horses and wagons which traveled at the same [average] pace as a brisk walk. Towns arose at about 12 mile intervals (due to the stagecoach stations along the way) or where water created farmland. Then came trains followed by the automobile. Things haven't been the same since! The following are a lot of the places I will be sharing with you. New Mexico locales:Sabinoso/Ancon
More on Ancon and Sabinoso here.
Springer
RosebudBlack HillsRoy
Mills and Mills CanyonMosqueroThe name means "a swarm of mosquitoes or flies" in Spanish, named for a nearby creek. The county seat of Harding County. Interestingly, it is right on the county line next to San Miguel County.
Looking along main Street from the west end of Mosquero Black LakeA large, flat playa with black dirt and no water in it I've ever seen. This one is really off the beaten path, NE of Mosquero. From the north end of the playa, I could see six or so houses in the 30 square miles of the basin.![]() This is Black Lake. The entire area from here to the far horizon is the playa. Trigg Ranch RoadThe really back way from Logan to Mosquero. And a wonderful drive, mostly along the old Dawson RR ROW. Watch for washouts!
This was the epitome of the "Wild West" in the frontier days. One nickname after the railroad came in in 1901 was "Six Shooter Siding" due to the lawlessness. All the "big names" of western history lived here for a time: Billy The Kid, Wyatt Earp, and Black Jack Ketchum (see Clayton) who hung out around Mesa Redondo a few miles south of town. Tucumcari's primary significant was as a "jumping off place" to further travel to the west. Between the Pecos and Canadian valleys is Sunshine Mesa. For early automobiles with their 20 horsepower engines and for other travelers, it was formidable. Both Santa Rosa and Tucumcari benefited from the increased maintenance this strain on early automobiles and horses created. Not to mention the strain on the people traveling. The Dawson railroad line passed through Tucumcari from north to south while the freight trains came in from the NE via Logan across a spectacular trestle over the Canadian (see Logan) from Kansas City. Route 66, running east and west paralleled the tracks over Sunshine Mesa. The mountains and mesas dominate life in Tucumcari. A Tabblo of this area is here. LoganThree blocks wide and eight blocks long. Located on a bluff above the Canadian River. With trains and trucks passing through almost continuously.One of my regular stopping places on my travels as the Express Inn has both high speed internet and reasonable rates. Except during bass fishing contests when all the motels are full.
This is also the most southwestern location in the Valley. Over Sunshine Mesa to the west lies Santa Rosa and the Pecos Valley; the Caprock is to the south. If you look at the background of the picture of the large Cuervo building, the escarpments of the High Plains outlyers on which Mosquero and Roy are located are visible in the distance. This escarpment was created by the Canadian River and Ute Creek leaving a "peninsula" of the High Plains intact.
Clayton's website has lots more information about this crossroads town. CapulinThis town is most noted for its namesake volcano (actually a cinder cone), Mount Capulin, a nearby National Park. This volcano was active over 10,000 years while Folsom Man was hunting mammoths in the area.Humans were here as long ago as the Ice Age. Roughly 12,000 years ago you could well have witnessed the receding glaciers while an active volcano or two still spewed ash and lava into the atmosphere. Right here, you could have seen an occasional woolly mammoth as well as the ancient buffalo hunters pursuing the gigantic ancestor to our modern-day bison. It was a long held belief that humans had only been on this continent for 3000 years or so, but a discovery just north of the Capulin Volcano, near the little town of Folsom, changed all that. Almost 80 years ago, a local cowboy discovered bones of a gigantic buffalo. Scientist studying those bones discovered that the animal didn't die of natural causes, but had been hunted and killed. Among the bones they found the spear tips used by man, subsequently named the Folsom Man after the nearby town. Texas Locales:Adrian
A Tabblo of Adrian is here. Vega
A Tabblo of Vega is here. Old Tascosa
A Tabblo of Old Tascosa and Boot Hill is here.
Channing
A Tabblo of Channing is here. DalhartFolsom |
|
View My Stats |
||