Sunday, June 1, 2025

 05/26/2025 Taos Pueblo & Rio Grande Gorge

For over 1,000 years, Taos Pueblo 
has been the only living Native American pueblo 
that is both a UNESCO World Heritage Site 
and a National Historic Landmark. 
The mission churches are just one of the many historical 
and cultural features that make Taos Pueblo a World Heritage Site
 and a National Historic Landmark. 
The ruin of Mission San Geronimo and the rebuilt church 
are physical reminders of the turbulent history of the pueblo 
and the resilience of the Taos people.

Ai-thloo's (Grandma's) Cafe,
open for business thanks to her coveted Frito pies, 
Fresh Frybread, Red and Green Chile,
and Tara's favorite Pinon coffee.
The Sacred Mountain
(Taos Mountain or El Monte Sagrado)
The slopes lead up to Blue Lake,  
for spiritual and cultural traditions
and resting their ancestral dead. 

Taos Pueblo Cemetery

What possessed us to leave the warm and dry shelter 
of our van in pelting rain and a driving wind 
strong enough to blow us into kingdom come 
for a chance to take some photos 
of the Rio Grande Gorge Bridge, a steel-deck bridge 
565 feet above the river, with a 50-mile chasm 
dramatic vista plunging 800 feet?


These Bighorn sheep 
weren't bothered by the weather in the least.
 
Not far from the bridge was the strangest thing 
most of us had ever witnessed. 
Unfortunately, the weather worsened, and it was a challenge to take photographs of the "Garbage Warrior," Michael E. Reynolds'
Earthship Biotecture History.

For a wonderful biography of his life, check: https://earthship.com/earthship-history/
 






1 comment:

  6/10/2025 Discover Mesa Verde National Park Our Mesa Verde Local Tour Guide introduced us  to the first archaeological park established in...