New Mexico Taos
"Taos Pueblo has been continuously inhabited for a thousand years and shows no signs of stopping."
There is a particular quality of light in northern New Mexico that I have not encountered anywhere else — not in Oaxaca, not in Andalusia. It arrives sideways in the late afternoon, almost parallel to the earth, and turns the adobe walls of Taos Pueblo a color somewhere between dried blood and honey. Standing at the base of those five-story mud-brick towers, I felt the thousand years not as a concept but as a physical weight pressing gently on my shoulders.
The Pueblo at Blue Lake Road
We drove up from Santa Fe early, following the Rio Grande Gorge north until the land opened into the Taos Valley. The Pueblo sits at the end of Veterans Highway, past the plaza shops selling silver and chile ristras, and the moment you cross onto the grounds something shifts in the quality of the air — it becomes quieter, more deliberate. The Rio Pueblo de Taos runs through the center of the complex, ice-cold even in June, and the Tiwa-speaking residents still draw drinking water from it. I had not expected that. I had not expected anything so ancient to be so genuinely, stubbornly alive.
Lia spent almost an hour photographing the same corner of the North House while I sat on a low wall eating a piece of fry bread — hot from the oil, dusted with powdered sugar — that a woman had handed me from a doorway without my even asking.
Ledoux Street and the Artists
Taos became an art colony in the early 1900s when a group of painters from the East Coast missed their train and simply never left. Walking south from the plaza along Ledoux Street, past the Blumenschein Home and Museum, I understood the impulse. The light here is the kind that makes you want to stop whatever you are doing and just look. Galleries cluster on Bent Street and along the Kit Carson Road — some selling serious work, some selling turquoise earrings to tour buses — and learning which is which takes a pleasant morning of wandering.
What genuinely surprised me was finding, tucked behind a gallery on Ranchitos Road, a small acequia — an irrigation ditch — still flowing through someone’s backyard garden, the same water infrastructure the Spanish introduced in the seventeenth century, still routing snowmelt from Taos Mountain to the fields below. The continuity of it stopped me cold.
Taos Mountain
The mountain itself — Pueblo Peak, sacred to the Taos people and closed to outsiders — presides over everything. You cannot hike it. You can only look at it, which turns out to be sufficient. Ski Valley sits in the Sangre de Cristo range above town, and the drive up on Highway 150 in autumn, when the aspen go gold against the dark pines, is worth the trip on its own.
When to go: May through October offers the most reliable weather, though September brings the Rio Grande del Norte’s harvest light and cooler nights — the best combination the high desert has to offer.