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-   -   Santa Fe and Four Corners suggestions (https://www.flyertalk.com/forum/west/1302779-santa-fe-four-corners-suggestions.html)

keisari Jan 15, 2012 1:54 pm

Santa Fe and Four Corners suggestions
 
I am looking at a quick 4-5 day trip:
Flying in and out of ABQ.
Would like to spend one or two nights in Santa Fe, NM. Will visit a couple of the Pueblos around there.
I don't want to stay in one place and "relax";
Where do you suggest I go the other 2 nights? Durango, Farmington ????
I will be driving so would like to limit it at 200 or so miles from Santa Fe.
I am open to any suggestions in the area.
I like nature, hiking and get dizzy at high altitude/driving in mountains.

Disclaimer: tried to search and could not find. Links are greatly appreciated.

Wally Bird Jan 15, 2012 2:30 pm

If you like trains (if not, skip the next two)
Chama NM between Santa Fe and Durango http://www.cumbrestoltec.com/
Durango http://www.durangotrain.com/

Aztec NM ruins http://www.nps.gov/azru/index.htm between Durango and Farmington
Shiprock NM http://www.newmexico.org/learn/geology/shiprock.php
Chaco Canyon http://www.nps.gov/chcu/index.htm (if you have time)
Cuba (the NM one) just to say you've been there :)

keisari Jan 15, 2012 2:38 pm

Thank you
Where would you sleep for 2 nights?
which town is better.

cblaisd Jan 15, 2012 4:04 pm

If it were me, I'd be tempted to go for two nights to Bluff, Utah (good point for Monument Valley touring) and get an Executive Cabin or Cabin Suite at the Desert Rose Inn

This would be much, much, much more charming than staying Farmington

Wally Bird Jan 15, 2012 5:15 pm


Originally Posted by keisari (Post 17819231)
Thank you
Where would you sleep for 2 nights?
which town is better.

Not many choices really, Durango and Farmington are the only major centers. I've stayed at the Doubletree in Durango (it's OK) but know nothing about Farmington.

cblaisd Jan 15, 2012 7:59 pm

The Doubletree in Durango in my experience is not just okay, but wonderful.

MXS Jan 16, 2012 12:34 am

If you are going to be on the move...... I once stayed at a casino/hotel near four corners. If I remember correctly there was not much else around. It was a very simple and inexpensive place to stay.
If you are deciding to stay in Farmington or Durango - I think there is more to do in Durango.

MSPeconomist Jan 16, 2012 12:56 am

The day you arrive it might be nice to take the Turquoise Road rather than the interstate to Santa Fe and stay at a B&B in a town along the route. Sorry that I don't have any names to suggest.

TRRed Jan 16, 2012 10:16 pm

In August I had a good stay at Casa Cuma B&B in Santa Fe. About a 10 minute walk to the main square in downtown (maybe 100yds without a sidewalk). At that time, they were part of the B&B program that Costco sells discounted gift cards for. When I went looking, the options in Santa Fe looked much better, which was also the recommendation of my sister who had visited both.

In Durango there is an older hotel downtown near the train station that gets a fair amount of press. I have seen it but not stayed there and cannot remember the name.

MSPeconomist Jan 16, 2012 10:33 pm

If you're at all a science geek, be sure to visit the following:

Los Alamos, about an hour nice drive from Santa Fe IIRC. Federal atomic research site, famous for the development of the atomic bomb. There's a museum in a sort of strip mall on the way into town, then some preserved historic buildings showing how the rearly researchers lived. You can drive around some of the facilities but there are a lot of restricted areas in town.

Museum on military base next to ABQ. IIRC you need to make an advance reservation to get a gate pass: Free and free parking. Focus on atomic power/weapons and aircraft.

Also next to ABQ is Sandia National Labs, but AFAIK there's no way to enter as a "tourist."

Wally Bird Jan 17, 2012 8:02 am


Originally Posted by TRRed (Post 17827490)
In Durango there is an older hotel downtown near the train station that gets a fair amount of press. I have seen it but not stayed there and cannot remember the name.

Strater. Old-world, quaint or pokey depending on your viewpoint.

blue_hubba Jan 17, 2012 8:43 am


Originally Posted by MSPeconomist (Post 17827570)
Museum on military base next to ABQ. IIRC you need to make an advance reservation to get a gate pass: Free and free parking. Focus on atomic power/weapons and aircraft.

You probably mean The National Museum of Nuclear Science & History It is no longer located within Kirtland Air Force Base, but it is (again) nearby.

aztimm Jan 17, 2012 2:04 pm


Originally Posted by cblaisd (Post 17820664)
The Doubletree in Durango in my experience is not just okay, but wonderful.

Yea people in Farmington told me I should stay in Durango. I've been to Farmington for work a few times, always stayed at the Hampton...and that place is certainly only OK.

amanuensis Jan 18, 2012 8:06 am

I found the National Radio Astronomy Observatory to be a fascinating visit: http://www.vla.nrao.edu/

New Mexico has (arguably) the oldest place of continuous habitation in the United States' present borders, a Native American pueblo village named Acoma -- claimed to have been settled in 1150. http://sccc.acomaskycity.org/history This village may also have had Anglos living there continuously for longer than Anglos have lived in St. Augustine, FL, thus perhaps making Acoma also the oldest place in the United States of permanent Anglo settlement.

Regarding the Four Corners, due to a surveying error, the monument that tourists visit allowing you to squat down and have parts of your body simultaneously in four states is actually in the wrong spot. http://www.deseretnews.com/article/7...-Too-late.html

JerryFF Jan 18, 2012 11:25 am


Originally Posted by keisari (Post 17819231)
Thank you
Where would you sleep for 2 nights?
which town is better.

While all of these places are interesting, Santa Fe (IMHO) is truly unique - with its mix of Native American, Mexican, and US cultures - in so many ways and with so opportunities to experience it. Food, art, crafts, architecture, scenery, and most important, people.

Yes, the other places have some of this, but not to the extent that you find in Santa Fe.


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