From the category archives:

Lincoln County


Authenticity plays a key role in the judging
Authenticity plays a key role in the judging.

Put on your cowboy hat and working pair of boots to celebrate the Old West’s restaurant on the range — the chuckwagon. Betcha there will be no microwave ovens in the infield of the Ruidoso Downs Race Track on New Mexico Highway 70 where 40 cowboy cookin’ teams will compete over open fires for a large purse for their beef, beans, potatoes, biscuit and dessert creations. Judges points are swayed by authenticity. This competition is the hottest in the West.

While others are held in convention centers and parking lots, this Chuckwagon Cookoff is located outdoors in a natural high desert racetrack infield. It’s part of the Lincoln County Cowboy Symposium, held the second weekend in October.

Conditions are rugged — no electricity, no running water, no amenities, period. Overhead there is plenty of clear blue sky, the sun beats down all day, and the stars and moon create another one of New Mexico’s enchanted evening.

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Ski Run Road. Photo by Frederick Mora
Ski Run Road.  Photo by Frederick Mora

Snow Country magazine called Ruidoso, New Mexico’s Ski Run Road “a 15-mile corkscrew with precious few guardrails.” Well, it’s actually only a little more than 12 miles up to Ski Apache (sometimes it just feels like more) and hey – there are more guardrails than there used to be.

“In the early 70s there were none,” Ski Apache General Manager Roy Parker said.

The potholes are gone, thanks to a $1 million resurfacing project. But old-timers remember the early days when it was a dirt road all the way to the top.

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My House of Old Things

by PhyllisEileenBanks January 11, 2003 Lincoln County

Technorati Tags: Lincoln County,Ancho,Carrizozo,museum,spring,summer,fall

My House of Old Things Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks

If you think I’m talking about my own home, it does contain a lot of old things. However, this "My House of Old things" is a Museum in Ancho, New Mexico.
Located two miles off U. S. Highway 54 to [...]

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Ice Age Mammoth Remains Uncovered in Southern New Mexico

by JohannaHunziker January 10, 2003 Lincoln County

Technorati Tags: Nogal,Ruidoso,Mammoth,history

Archaeologists working at the dig

In the fall of 1990, Marlo Sharpe, a local miner and geologist, and his wife Barbara chanced upon what appeared to be a tusk eroding out of the wall of Dry Gulch, just outside of Nogal, New Mexico.
Archaeologists from the Forest Service, on whose [...]

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Folklore of Lincoln County Post Offices

by PhyllisEileenBanks January 9, 2003 Lincoln County

Technorati Tags: southeast,Lincoln County,post offices

Location of an early day Lincoln County post office – in Lincoln. Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks

Lincoln County at one time encompassed almost one-fourth of New Mexico and was the largest county in the United States. It was created January 16, 1869, by an act of [...]

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Fishing at Bonito Lake — small lessons in life and death

by GregHolt January 9, 2003 Lincoln County

Technorati Tags: southeast,Ruidoso,Lincoln County,travelogue

Bonito Lake. Picture by Greg Holt.

"Think of blue water and a fish, strong and silver, swimming freely in the water. Breath deep into your belly and picture the fish who has given his body for you to eat. Feel grateful and respectful for the earth’s gifts, the [...]

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Wildland Firefighter Museum and Smokey Bear Gift shop — a must-see stop in Capitan

by Carla DeMarco January 8, 2003 Capitan

Technorati Tags: Capitan,Lincoln County,museum

Interior of Wildland Firefighter Museum

In the summer of 1999, a family of forest service firefighters with an interest in old firefighting tools put together a unique museum in the tiny town of Capitan, New Mexico. Capitan lies at the foot of the Capitan Mountains and rests on rolling wooded hills. [...]

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Bob Orlinger — New Mexico’s killer deputy

by BillKelly January 5, 2003 Lincoln

Technorati Tags: Billy the Kid,Bob Orlinger,Lincoln,Lincoln County

Bob Orlinger. Photo from author’s collection

Hero-worshiping gunslingers of the 1880s were on both sides of the law. John Wesley Hardin was the undisputed killer of the West, but most towns had their own monarchs; Wild Bill Hickok ruled over Deadwood, Wyatt Earp controlled Tombstone, Dallas Stoudenmire [...]

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ATree for my Future Ruidoso, New Mexico home

by GregHolt January 3, 2003 Lincoln County

Technorati Tags: Ruidoso,Lincoln County,general interest

Land near the author’s Ruidoso property Photo by Greg Holt

The little ponderosa pine was still standing straight even after half an hour of continuous digging around the roots. Sweat ran down my neck and dripped into my eyes. The shovel bounced and skidded on the circular trench I’d [...]

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Nogal, Ancho, and Corona – content in peaceful existence

by PhyllisEileenBanks December 30, 2002 Lincoln County

Technorati Tags: southeast,Nogal,Ancho,Corona,Lincoln County,community,profile

Nogal area. Photo by Phyllis Eileen Banks

Some towns in Southern New Mexico are so small they are scarcely noticed. Nevertheless they exist and have histories. Nogal, four miles off U. S. 370 on NM 37 and eight miles southeast of Carrizozo, is one.
Known as Dry Gulch in 1879 [...]

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