From the category archives:

Sierra County


Elephant Butte Lake Photo by Sherry Fletcher
Elephant Butte Lake

Located on the southwestern shore of Elephant Butte Reservoir, Elephant Butte offers residents and visitors mild sunny winters, hot summers moderated by afternoon thunderstorms or lake breezes, and practically perfect weather in the spring and fall.

Elephant Butte State Park is the state’s largest park, with camping, boating, and fishing on the 43 mile long reservoir. Three marinas, numerous marine service and storage facilities along with restaurants, a golf course and lodging facilities serve the many folks who use the lake.

Special events and holidays rev up the tempo a bit, when up to 100,000 visitors venture in for the fun. Fireworks displays on Easter and Independence Day attract viewers from land and sea. Brightly lit boats provide a Parade of Lights between Christmas and New Year’s. The Balloon Regatta, a combination boat and balloon event, provides ballooning fun without a big city crowd. Numerous fishing tournaments, golf tournaments, sailing regattas, power boat and jet ski races provide competition along with recreation.

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Elephant Butte Lake
at sunset
Photo by Sherry Fletcher.
Elephant Butte Lake at sunset

“Hi, how’s the weather? It’s snowing? Oh, too bad. We just got back from the lake!”

That’s my usual telephone conversation with relatives from the north on winter weekends. In its quieter months, Elephant Butte Reservoir, New Mexico’s largest lake, offers solitude and clarity that summer users will never know. The bright, clear sun, the mirrored lake surface, the warm, still air, describe many days throughout the winter months.

Add an occasional fish-splash and lots of bird sightings. Winter at the lake features great blue herons, sandhill cranes, a returning osprey, seagulls, grebes, cormorants, and pelicans. Golden eagles live in McRae Canyon, feasting on fish when people go home. Lots of ducks and other waterfowl are startled to find anything on the water besides themselves.

And we are on the water. We pack a portable lunch to eat on the boat. Sometimes we have turkey and dressing and cranberries on the sailboat. No wind, so we motor to a secluded cove. Of course, all coves are secluded in December. On a high hill behind the cove, we watch a golden eagle perch on a cactus.

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Elephant Butte Balloon Regatta and Kite Flying Event

by GingerGeorge January 8, 2003 Elephant Butte

Technorati Tags: Elephant Butte,TorC,Sierra County,outdoors,event,revise

Elephant Butte Lake Annual Balloon Regatta Photo by Julia Cooper

The blue skies over Elephant Butte Lake will be dotted with CFO’s (colorful flying objects) during the weekend of April 21-22, 2001. Hot air balloons and kites will soar into the sky early Saturday morning, weather permitting, and will repeat their [...]

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Windsurfing — a little practice is all it takes

by SunnyConley January 8, 2003 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: outdoors,water,spring,summer,Caballo,Sierra County

A windsurfer at Caballo Lake, a favorite haunt for “wave riders” Photo by Ed Conley.

Is windsurfing a popular sport in this desert land of ours? Travel only as far as Caballo Lake on any breezy day and you can witness a dozen or more windsurfers (also known as boardsailors), sporting wide [...]

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Christmas in Kingston (1882)

by JamesAMcKenna January 8, 2003 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: Kingston,winter,Sierra County,history

Victorio Hotel in Kingston, built in 1883.

Christmas was coming to Kingston. The Christmas spirit was in the air. Every burro that came into town over mountain trails packed a Christmas tree, a big bunch of mistletoe, or a branch of red berries. A little of the evergreen went to decorate Mrs. [...]

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The Barber Shop Café — Hillsboro, New Mexico

by burchd January 2, 2003 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: Barber Shop Cafe,cafe,barber shop,food,Hillsboro,Sierra County
Built in the 1880’s, the Barber Shop Café offered customers a bath, shave and haircut until about fifty years ago. The building is preserved much as it was—the original mirror still spans the width of the café with a sign stating “Baths 25 cents.” Nowadays, instead of shaves, baths [...]

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Truth or Consequences and Elephant Butte — each an oasis in the desert

by SallyBickley December 29, 2002 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: southwest,Truth or Consequences,Elephant Butte,community,profile,Sierra County

Truth or Consequences Photo courtesy TorC/Sierra County Chamber of Commerce

The “Jewel of the Rio Grande,” or Truth or Consequences, is bordered by the San Andres and Black Range Mountains on I-25 between Las Cruces and Albuquerque. It claims its fair share of snowbirds who flock there to enjoy [...]

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Caballo, Hillsboro, Kingston, and Lake Valley — water-world and peaceful mountain intrigue

by PhyllisEileenBanks December 29, 2002 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: southwest,Sierra County,community,profile,Caballo,Hillsboro,Kingston,Lake Valley

Hillsboro Apple Festival. Photo by Carla DeMarco.

Caballo is a town of people who want to live by Caballo Lake and Caballo Lake State Park, too few to warrant a population figure on New Mexico maps. Easily reached on N.M. 90, it sits approximately three miles east of Interstate 25, 15 [...]

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Truth or Consequences — City of Three Names

by PhyllisEileenBanks December 21, 2002 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: Sierra County,TorC,Truth or Consequences,southwest

Postmarks from three cities

 

Truth or Consequences, New Mexico, universally called T or C, is the third name for that city. When it was first settled it was called Palomas Springs, so named because of the large number of doves (palomas) residing in the cottonwood trees along the Rio [...]

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The Year the Apple Festival Ended Early

by JayJackson December 21, 2002 Sierra County

Technorati Tags: Hillsboro,Hillsboro Apple Festival,water,flood,festival,event,history

Jenny Audrey of Hillsboro. Photo by Jay Jackson

 

 
For most, Labor Day weekend in Hillsboro means Apple Festival – apple pie, arts, crafts, antiques and three days of fun on the banks of the Percha River.

But for some like Sue Bason of Sue’s Antiques and Bonnie Guess of Kingston’s Camp [...]

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