Enrico and I visited Steve and Sharon in Las Vegas, New Mexico (my third visit to them in 12 months!), arriving late Friday night. Saturday we all (including Robin) visited Pecos Pueblo and Santa Fe.

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Before entering the park grounds, we toured the visitor center exhibit about the history of Pecos Pueblo. It was well done, as these things usually are at US National Parks, but I find the bloodthirsty history of the Catholic Church upsetting. I left the others watching an antiquated film about the Indians putting the poor, innocent padres to death, without waiting to find out whether it gave equal time to what the Church subsequently (and previously) did to the Indians.
I was fascinated by chollo, a type of cactus I hadn’t seen before. We had just missed its brilliant magenta blooms.

foot included for scale!

Robin entering a (rebuilt) kiva. Note the nifty new Woodstock sweatshirt!

(We didn’t.)
These round structures were either garbage pits or the remains of other kivas.

The last chollo blossom.

The remains of a Spanish church.

New adobe bricks in the making.

Buffalo gourd plant


Robin tells me this is “Indian toilet paper” - you use the leaves, not the spiky part!

Santa Fe

Enrico and Steve went to the Georgia O’Keefe museum, but I’m not a huge fan and Robin emphatically did not want to go to a museum, so he and Sharon and I ambled around town, looking at art galleries (what’s the difference with museums, from Robin’s point of view? I dunno).

As always, I was most attracted to anything featuring horses, and was delighted to find the work of someone who actually can sculpt them well, Star Liana York. I’ll have to save up first, though…

Also saw some fun and unusual stuff I’d consider buying in Pop Gallery, a refreshing change from the overwhelming (and, in the aggregate, somewhat boring) mass of Southwestern-themed art prevailing in Santa Fe.

In this exhibit by photographer Lisa Kristine, the Amazonian child on the left looks exactly like some pictures I have of Robin at that age!

There was a “mountain traders’ fair” going on in the courtyard of the Palace of Governors.

Sorta like a Renaissance festival, including the love of antique weaponry. Just slightly different costumes.

Some of the “mountain people” looked like refugees from “Pirates of the Caribbean.”

Antique carriage, possibly an Indian tonga, at the Jackalope store, home of a zillion overpriced imported oddities.
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