From the category archives:

Carlsbad

Yucca & Agave 4x6If you are planning a trip to Carlsbad, New Mexico, don’t miss the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens State Park. This gem in the rough offers a chance to get up close and personal with some fascinating creatures and plants. And it is all easily accessible from a short walk (or roll, for  those in wheelchairs or strollers).

We visited in May, when the desert was truly alive, especially once we turned into the park gates just off Highway 285 north of town. After driving through stark scrub desert to the north, we were greeted on the park road by tall, snaking ocotillo with fiery red tips and prickly pear cacti covered with large yellow blossoms and furled pink buds. Perhaps because of an unusually rainy spring, the blossoms were budding not only on the edges of the spiked pads but even in the centers of the  pads.

The road wound up to a low building on a ridge overlooking the Pecos River valley and town of Carlsbad. We would soon learn we were at 3,200 feet, atop the Ocotillo Hills, named for the bright cactus that had greeted us. Around the large parking lot were large soaptree yucca, also covered in enormous, spiky white blooms, and many species of agave, or century plant. These giants grow close to the ground, storing energy for about twenty years before sending up a single blossoming stalk to reproduce, after which the plants die. Those twenty years must have seemed like a century to whoever gave the agave their common name.

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CARLSBAD, NM – Living Desert Zoo and Gardens State Parks in Carlsbad, New Mexico will celebrate its 21st annual “Mescal Roast and Mountain Spirit Dance” from May 10-13. This event, which celebrates the culture and history of the Mescalero Apache people, received a Dorothy Mullins Arts and Humanities Award from the National Recreation and Parks Association. The Mescal Roast is sponsored by the Friends of Living Desert.

Single Crown Dancer“The Mescal Roast is truly a special event,” said Ken Britt, Park Superintendent. “The sharing by the Mescalero Apache people is a genuine gift that brings all participants closer together as well as closer to our natural surroundings.”

The Mescal Roast provides a better understanding of the Mescalero Apache people and the importance of protecting the Chihuahuan Desert ecosystem upon which the Apache once totally depended.

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Off-trail at Carlsbad Caverns

by TerryMarshall January 11, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: Carlsbad,Eddy County,travelogue,Carlsbad Caverns

Trail to Slaughter Cave Photo by Terry Marshall

I’m flat on my belly inching through the crawl space into Spider Cave. My head lamp casts a shadowy glow into this twisting channel, but I can’t raise my head far enough to see where I’m going. The cave ceiling scrapes [...]

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Living Desert Zoo and Gardens State Park — where the wild things are

by PhyllisEileenBanks January 11, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: zoo,wildlife,park,Carlsbad,spring

Living Desert Zoo and Gardens State Park Entrance Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks

The flora and the fauna come together in the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens State Park at the north edge of Carlsbad, New Mexico, on U.S. Highway 285. It takes visitors through the diverse Chihuahuan Desert, the largest [...]

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Carlsbad Caverns National Park’s Five Guided Off-trail Tours

by TerryMarshall January 11, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: Carlsbad,Eddy County,travelogue,Carlsbad Caverns

Lower Cave formations Photo courtesy National Park Service

Carlsbad Caverns National Park runs five guided off-trail tours. They are so different it’s hard to imagine they are in the same park. Spider Cave delivers an intimate caving experience, wriggling into the hidden underworld, coming face-to-face with earth’s inner secrets. [...]

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Carlsbad Caverns add Immeasurably to Life’s Meaning

by TerryMarshall January 11, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: Carlsbad,Eddy County,travelogue,Carlsbad Caverns

Matlocks’ Pinch in the Hall of White Giant tour Photo courtesy National Park Service

Recently I wriggled my way, not into a cave, but into a goals-setting retreat of Carlsbad Caverns National Park staff – three long days trying to [...]

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Christmas on the Pecos — Carlsbad’s ultimate celebration of the season

by DebraBenjamin January 8, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: winter,Carlsbad,Eddy County

Christmas on the Pecos Photo by Armando Martinez.

Winter in Carlsbad isn’t about snow, ice or cold. It’s about warmth. The warmth of the holiday season. And families coming together. Carlsbad is alive with the ultimate celebration of the season – Christmas on the Pecos River.
Picture the setting:  The night [...]

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Caving off the Beaten Path in Carlsbad Caverns

by TerryMarshall January 8, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: Carlsbad Caverns,Carlsbad,caving,Eddy County,southwest

Offbeat trails lead to scenic wonderlands inside Carlsbad Caverns. Photo by Carla DeMarco

Like Dorothy’s yellow-brick road, the shiny black trail through New Mexico’s Carlsbad Caverns leads to a mystical journey in a spectacular underworld.
The emery-chip trail, lighted and guarded with steel hand rails, ushers us underground, into a [...]

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The Carlsbad Caverns National Park

by TerryMarshall January 5, 2003 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: Eddy County,Federal Land,Carlsbad Caverns

Spectacular formations are subtly illuminated along paved trails inside Carlsbad Caverns. Photo by Carla DeMarco

Three miles of lighted and paved trails take visitors into the heart of the Capitan reef. Subtle lighting illuminates unique formations in the cavernous walls. [...]

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Carlsbad — city of contrasts

by PhyllisEileenBanks December 29, 2002 Carlsbad

Technorati Tags: southeast,Carslbad,Eddy County,community,profile

Carlsbad Caverns. Photo by Carla DeMarco

Carlsbad was originally christened Eddy about 1888 with a bottle of champagne. Long before that, around 25,000 B.C., its occupants were representatives of Sandia Man. Other nomadic hunters, including the Apache, followed hunting buffalo. Spanish explorers were next until the conquest [...]

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