Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts
Showing posts with label travel. Show all posts

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

Other New Mexican Doorways

Religious icons are a part of every village and many of the homes. The more colorful, the better.
An artist's private home in the village of Talpa. This was the most luxurious home in the village. Notice the "private" sign. Tourists can be very intrusive.

A home on the San Isildro Indian Pueblo. Very typical of homes found through out the Santa Fe area. This home probably had 800 square feet. You have not lived until you have seen a 10,000 square foot adobe home. Those tend to be behind secure gates, but even from a distance, it is very interesting.


Splash of Color

New Mexico has such different building traditions from Texas, my home state. Living in a huge city with sprawling subdivisions and every fourth house is the same elevation, we are attuned to brick, rock, green lawns, and landscape crews running amok around neighborhoods. Once you are in the heart of New Mexico, the home construction begins to take on its on sameness. The construction method of choice is adobe. The adobe is almost always a taupe/camel/tan color. In order to separate their homes from one another and as an homage to the south of the border aesthetic, many of the doorways have one very colorful element. The doorways can be incredibly ornate with carvings, ironwork, and statuary. However, even in the most basic home in some poorer villages, the homes still have splashes of color. I imagine they tell their visitors to look for the third adobe on the left with the aqua door topper :) These doorways always open onto a small or vast courtyard depending on the size of the home. I will post some photos of other homes and their doorways as a point of comparison. Can you imagine having a door like this in some of our neighborhoods with the "deed restrictions?" Letters would fly; neighbors would stare in dismay;threats would be made...not near as much fun as painting your door exactly like you want, is it?

The Charm of a General Store

Long before Walmart, CostC0, Target, and other big box type stores, there were the "little box stores" known as "the general store." Located in small towns/villages across America they were the lifeline for those folks who lived in the far outposts of America. One of the beauties of leaving the congested, over trafficked land of urban America where the big box stores are on every corner is finding the "little box store" that still exists in many places in this country! On the High Road to Taos between Chimayo and Taos, is the mountain hugging village of Truchas. Literally , half of the village clings to a mountain side. One small jiggle of the earth could send houses, churches, mobile homes, and people plunging to the valley below. These villages are simple outposts where people have been born,lived, and died. They tend to be mostly Native Americans and native born Spanish speaking descendants of those who explored this special land. And, there are those who are escaping something in their lives...urban chaos, the police, life, or whatever has chased them up these mountains. Their homes are very basic. I thought Texas had a plethora of mobile homes, but New Mexico must be a close second. The drive into Espanola or Taos is time consuming and requires a great deal of sobriety/alertness. The switchbacks make for interesting driving. So, enter the Truchas General Store.
The residents of this small village can buy anything they need until the next trek into larger civilization. I am sure when the snow closes the roads and the ski mobs are winding their way up the mountain this store is a welcome sight. Inside is every type of need one can have...from food to batteries to birth control. And, yes...every type of alcohol known to man. That should scare anyone who has ever driven in areas like this. More on that later. Next time you are somewhere "away from civilization" drive off the beaten path and find the local "box store." Go in, buy something, and take a deep breath. It does not smell like the Target in the next block. By the way, this store is for sale. Anyone interested?