Desert Exposure Dec 2013
Desert Exposure Dec 2013
Desert Exposure Dec 2013
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Contents
6 Editors Notebook Spy vs. You and I
Udall, Heinrich and Pearce agree on one thing: The NSA has gone too far. By David A. Fryxell
7 Letters
Our readers write.
8 Desert Diary
Cop talk and blond guys, plus more reader tales.
10 Tumbleweeds
Virgin Galactics media relations, a pack of reader critter photos, and the Top 10.
Silver City: Ilene Wignall (575) 313-0002, ilenew@desertexposure.com Las Cruces/Mesilla: Kristi Dunn (575) 956-7552, kristi@desertexposure.com Deming: Marjorie Lilly (575) 494-5095, marjorie@desertexposure.com
Advertising Sales
Web Designer
David Cortner
Columnists
Linda Ferrara, Henry Lightcap, Larry Lightner, Marjorie Lilly, Vivian Savitt, Bert Stevens, Scott Thomson P.O. Box 191 Silver City, NM 88062 (575) 538-4374 www.desertexposure.com
About the cover: Happy holidays from all of us at Desert Exposure! Photo by Lisa D. Fryxell. Read all about tamales and this months Tamal Fiesta y Ms in downtown Silver City beginning on page 22 of this issue.
Desert Exposure is published monthly and distributed free of charge at establishments throughout Southwestern New Mexico. Vol. XVII, number 12, December 2013. Mail subscriptions are $19 for 6 issues, $37 for 12 issues. Single copies by mail $4. All contents copyright 2013 Continental Divide Publishing LLC. All rights reserved. No portion of this publication may be reproduced without written permission. All rights to material by outside contributors revert to the author. Views expressed in articles, advertisements, graphics and/or photos appearing in Desert Exposure do not necessarily reflect the views of the editors or advertisers. Desert Exposure is not responsible for unsolicited submissions of articles or artwork. Submissions by mail must include a self-addressed stamped envelope for reply or return. It will be assumed that all submissions, including e-mail letters, are intended for publication. All submissions, including letters to the editor, may be edited for length, style and content.
Dec. 9, 2013: Over seventy 2014 Spring Courses posted for review at www.will-learning.com Jan. 9, 2014: WILL Course registration for WILL members begins at 8:00am. Jan. 15, 2014: WILL Spring Sign-up Social
Be sure to renew your membership or join WILL by Jan. 8 so youre ready to sign up for courses on Jan. 9. Visit www.will-learning.com for membership forms and information. WILL Office
Lower Level, WATTS HALL NW Corner of Swan St. & Hwy 180 Silver City, New Mexico
WILL Office will be closed from Dec.21, 2013-Jan. 6, 2014 Regular office hours resume on Jan. 7, 2014
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Kathy Anderson
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Udall, Heinrich and Pearce agree on one thing: The NSA has gone too far.
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hen the editors of Time magazine put their reach of the federal government. heads together later this month to pick the publications annual Person of the Year, he USA Freedom Act includes a number of key they should give serious consideration to one of the provisions to protect Americans privacy and men most reviled by the US government: spy-agency freedoms, according to Pearce. It ends bulk contractor-turned-leaker Edward Snowden. collection of Americans records, and implements Keep in mind that the selection does not neces- and strengthens prohibitions against other targetsarily reflect approval, but rather an individuals im- ing of Americans. Government agents would have to pact, for good or ill, on the world that year; both show they are looking for specific suspects thought Hitler and Stalin made the cover when Time still to be working for or in contact with a foreign power called it Man of the Year. And theres no question or engaged in activity currently under investigation. that Snowden broke the trust of his bosses at the It creates an Office of the Special Advocate to National Security Agency (the NSA, so secret its promote privacy interests before the Foreign Intellisometimes called No Such Agency). But the NSA, gence Surveillance Act (FISA) courts closed proceedas Snowdens revelations keep bringing to light, has ings. It improves transparency and accountability by broken the trust of the American people, exceed- requiring the government to submit new reports on ing its mandate and engaging in mass domestic data its data-gathering activities. The legislation fixes the collection bringing us perilously draconian gag orders attached to closer to Big Brother. FISA rulings, which prevent comContact us! Snowdens leaks and the inpanies ordered to turn over data PO Box 191 vestigations following up on his from providing basic information Silver City, NM 88062 disclosures have also had the reto their customers and the public. telephone (575) 538-4374 markable effect of getting all three The goal would be to end the conemail: men who represent New Mexicos struction of a web of secret laws editor@desertexposure.com Second District in Congress on and court orders, utterly devoid of letters@desertexposure.com the same pageat least in pushindependent scrutiny. ads@desertexposure.com ing back against the surveillance The secret FISA court would state. Senators Tom Udall and still be able to issue subpoenas, Martin Heinrich and Rep. Steve but these would be limited to inPearce dont often agree on much, with the two lib- formation that directly pertains to a terrorist, his aseral Democrats far to the left of the hard-right Re- sociates or his activities. In the absence of an emerpublican Pearce. But all three deserve credit for rec- gency or a court order, the act would prevent the ognizing that theres a place in the partisan political government from searching through data collected spectrum where patriotic Americans come together on US individuals under the FISA Amendments Act. to protect our basic freedoms. And the USA Freedom Act closes a loophole in the FISA that allows reverse targeting of Americans dall, Heinrich and Pearce are all original co- email and Internet communications. The government has not made the case that this sponsors of the USA Freedom Act, which would roll back some of the excesses of the is an effective counterterrorism tool, says Leahy of misbegotten Patriot Act and rein in the NSAs drag- the vastly expanded spying, especially in light of the net collection of data on innocent Americans. The intrusion on Americans privacy rights. bill was introduced last month in the Senate by Judiciary Committee Chairman Patrick Leahy (D-Vt.) espite these commonsense arguments, exand in the House by Rep. James Sensenbrenner (Rpect pushback from the nations sprawling Wis.), chairman of the Subcommittee on Terrorism intelligence community. Spymasters will conand Crime and lead author of the original Patriot Act. tinue to wave the bloody flag of 9/11, a dozen years Both the Bush and Obama administrations have after that tragic day. They would certainly prefer a wrongly used the Patriot Act to authorize mass col- bill offered as an alternative by Sen. Dianne Feinlection of domestic phone data, Sensenbrenner says. stein (D-Calif.), which would give the NSA explicit This misinterpretation of the law threatens our authority for mass data collection. That bill would First, Second and Fourth Amendment rights, he ar- make clear that phone, email and Internet data can gues. Congress never intended this. continue to be gathered without even a scintilla of Udall, who cast a courageous post-9/11 vote in the suspicion, much less the probable cause guaranteed House against the Patriot Act, agrees. I believed the by the Fourth Amendment. The Feinstein bill would Patriot Act was hastily written and had the power to for the first time in history explicitly authorize dragundermine the constitutional rights of our citizens, net domestic spying programs targeting ordinary he says. Unfortunately we now know that those Americans. concerns were justifiedgovernment surveillance But wouldnt ever-greater surveillance make us under the law is far broader than the American peo- safer? As Leahy notes, that case has not been made. ple believe is acceptable. We should perhaps remember, in any event, the Pearce spoke out even more strongly in endors- words of Benjamin Franklin: They who give up esing the reform legislation, saying, Americans are sential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety, dedisgustedand rightfully soto know that the FBI serve neither liberty nor safety. and NSA have grossly misused and abused the law to Fortunately, our three New Mexico voices in Concollect phone records and other data. This legislation gress have come down squarely on the side of essenrestores and narrows the Patriot Act to its original tial liberty. In supporting the USA Freedom Act, they intent: to protect our communities, cities and nation join nearly 90 other bipartisan co-sponsors in the from terrorists both foreign and domestic. Ameri- House and Senate, along with such diverse organizacans should never have to fear that their government tions as the American Civil Liberties Union and the is spying on them. Todays legislation responds to the National Rifle Association. public outcry by putting a stop to the appalling overAs the calendar page turns to 2014, lets hope that together we can take this important step forwardinstead of meekly accepting a world that looks instead ever more like 1984. k
Frumpy Fox
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Desert Exposure editor and publisher David A. Fryxell wishes readers and advertisers happy holidays.
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Letters
the monster and Igor replied, Abby, Abby Normal. I guess you get what you pay for. Kathryn D. Lynnes Los Alamos National Laboratory
Editors note: Youre conating two separate editorials, as the partisan-product comments were actually part of a second editorial bashing (in your words) a proposal by New Mexicos Democratic Party chair. We object to the Kochs Americans for Prosperity efforts not because of what they stand for but because of the way their PAC ads twist and distort the truth. For a long list of examples, see the nonpartisan FactCheck.org (www.factcheck.org/ tag/americans-for-prosperity). Were no fan of Rev. Sharpton, either, but thats more a matter of style than substance. Thanks for writing.
Packing a Punch
njoyed your column on baggage (Baggage Claims, Continental Divide, November). Sometime try dealing with the different rules for domestic versus international. It gets interesting when you have to fly from El Paso to LA and then onward to Asia. Ed Teja via email k Let us hear from you! Write Desert Exposure Letters, PO Box 191, Silver City, NM 88062, or email letters@desertexposure.com. Letters are subject to editing for style and length (maximum 500 words, please), and must be in response to content that has appeared in our pages. Deadline for the next issue is the 18th of the month.
Creating a Monster
enjoyed your editorial in the November Desert Exposure (Republicans Unbound). I used a similar, although less literary, comparison when discussing the Tea Partys behavior during the shutdown with my fellow nonessential federal workers and contractors. Instead of Mary Shelleys Frankenstein I compared the situation to the scene in Young Frankenstein when Dr. Frankenstein asked Igor about the source of the brain he had just implanted in
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end of our marriage. Im done. Im leaving forever! Calm down, calm down! says his mother-in-law. There is something very odd going on here. Jean would never do such a thing! There must be a simple explanation. Ill go speak to her immediately and find out what happened. Moments later, the mother-in-law comes back with a big smile. I told you there must be a simple explanation, she says. Jean didnt get your e-mail! On a more philosophical note, theres this submission from Toni in the Vets Ofce: No dictionary has ever been able to define the difference between complete and finished. However, in a linguistic conference, held in London and attended by some of the best linguists in the world, Samsundar Balgobin, a Guyanese, was the clever winner. His final challenge was this: Some say there is no difference between complete and nished. Please explain the difference in a way that is easy to understand. His response was: When you marry the right woman, you are complete. If you marry the wrong woman, you are finished. And, when the right one catches you with the wrong one, you are completely finished. His answer received a five-minute standing ovation. Finally, CharlesC passes along this romantic yarn: A wife, being the romantic sort, sent her husband a text: If you are sleeping, send me your dreams. If you are laughing, send me your smile. If you are eating, send me a bite. If you are drinking send me a sip. If you are crying, send me your tears. I love you! The husband replied, I am on the commode. Please advise.
Desert Diary
ids say the darnedest things From the mouths of babesand the email of GeeRichardwe have this first yarn: While shopping with his grandfather, a small boy became separated from the elderly man. Remembering what he was taught about safety around strangers, the child sought out a uniformed mall security officer. Ive lost my Grandpa, the boy told him. Whats his name? the officer asked. Grandpa, the boy replied. The officer smiled, then asked. Whats he like? The boy pondered for few moments, then his face brightened and he said, Single-malt whisky and women with big chests!
nnals of law enforcement Southern cops have a way with words, says Old Grumps, who sends along what are purported to be actual comments made by South Carolina troopers that were taken off their car videos: You know, stop lights dont come any redder than the one you just went through. Relax, the handcuffs are tight because theyre new. Theyll stretch after you wear them a while. If you take your hands off the car, Ill make your birth certificate a worthless document. If you run, youll only go to jail tired. Can you run faster than 1,200 feet per second?
Because thats the speed of the bullet thatll be chasing you. You dont know how fast you were going? I guess that means I can write anything I want to on the ticket, huh? Yes, sir, you can talk to the shift supervisor, but I dont think it will help. Oh, did I mention that Im the shift supervisor? Warning! You want a warning? OK, Im warning you not to do that again or Ill give you another ticket. The answer to this last question will determine whether you are drunk or not. Was Mickey Mouse a cat or a dog? Fair? You want me to be fair? Listen, fair is a place where you go to ride on rides, eat cotton candy and corn dogs and step in monkey poop. Yeah, we have a quota. Two more tickets and my wife gets a toaster oven. No, sir, we dont have quotas anymore. We used to, but now were allowed to write as many tickets as we can. Im glad to hear that the chief (of police) is a personal friend of yours. So you know someone who can post your bail. You didnt think we give pretty women tickets? Youre right, we dont. Sign here. Dont make us issue a warrant for your jokes! Send them to diary@desertexposure.com and maybe well go easy on you. close shave Thanks to Ned Ludd for sharing this grooming tale: An old cowboy walks into the barbershop for a shave and a haircut and he tells the barber he cant get all his whiskers off because his cheeks are wrinkled from age. The barber gets a little wooden ball from a cup on the shelf and tells the old cowboy to put it inside his cheek to spread out the skin. When hes finished, the old cowboy tells the barber that was the cleanest shave hes had in years. But he wanted to know what would have happened if he had swallowed that little ball. The barber replied, Just bring it back in a couple of days like everyone else does.
ersons of the blond persuasion Finally, says The Santa Claran, jokes about blond (note theres no e) men! Nonetheless, as always you are free to substitute the hair hue of your choice: A friend tells the blond man: Christmas is on a Friday this year. The blond man then says, Lets hope its not the 13th. Two blond men find three grenades, and they decide to take them to a police station. One asks: What if one explodes before we get there? The other says: Well lie and say we only found two. A blond man is in the bathroom and his wife shouts: Did you find the shampoo? He answers, Yes, but Im not sure what to do. Its for dry hair, and Ive just wet mine. A blond man goes to the vet with his goldfish. I think its got epilepsy, he tells the vet. The vet takes a look and says, It seems calm enough to me. The blond man says, Wait, I havent taken it out of the bowl yet. A blond man shouts frantically into the phone: My wife is pregnant and her contractions are only two minutes apart! Is this her first child? asks the doctor. No, the blond shouts, this is her husband!
Postcards from the edge Continuing to catch up (but keep them coming, folks!) with photos submitted by traveling readers, showing themselves holding a copy of Desert Exposure, we open with Bob and Kari Scullion, who celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary on the island of Maui. They were joined by their daughter, Kimberly Scullion from Palo Alto, Calif., and long-time friends Bob and Claudia Dignan from San Luis Obispo, Calif. Kari adds, I have been reading and enjoying Desert Exposure for several years, and always look forward to Postcards just to see where readers take the biggest little paper in the Southwest. When planning our Hawaiian vacation, I knew what I would be reading during our six-hour ight!
osing the battle of the sexes We have several reports from the front lines of the gender wars this month, beginning with this courtesy of the Silver City Greek: The mother-in-law arrives home from shopping to find her son-in-law boiling angry and hurriedly packing his suitcase. What happened? she asks anxiously. What happened!? Ill tell you what happened. I sent an e-mail to my wife telling her I was coming home from my fishing trip today. I get home and guess what I found? Yes, your daughter, my Jean, with a naked guy in our marital bed! This is unforgivable, the
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Postcards from the edge Our second reader photo with the biggest little paper in the Southwest was sent in by Nadine Robele, who writes: I went to metro-Chicago for the month of June, taking the May issue of Desert Exposure so I could share with my relatives and friends there the outstanding short stories written by students of Aldo Leopold High School (where my youngest daughter just graduated from). At Northwestern University my husband and I attended our middle childs graduation and were able to spend time with her before she leaves for a year-long fellowship to South Africa. The picture is of me in front of the Bah Temple in Wilmette, just a short distance north of Chicago. Whether youre celebrating a special occasion or just getting away from it all, snap a picture of yourself holding a copy of your favorite publication (ahem, that would be Desert Exposure) and send it to PO Box 191, Silver City, NM 88062, or diary@desertexposure.com.
DECEMBER 2013
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he friendly skies Put your seat backs and tray tables in the full upright and locked position for this funny from Shanty Shaker: Shortly after a British Airways flight had reached its cruising altitude, the captain announced: Ladies and gentlemen, this is your captain. Welcome to flight 293, non-stop from London Heathrow to New York. The weather ahead is good, so we should have a smooth, uneventful flight. So, sit back, relax, andOH, MY GOD! Silence followed. Some moments later, the captain came back on the intercom. Ladies and gentlemen, Im sorry if I scared you. While I was talking to you, a flight attendant accidentally spilled coffee in my lap. You should see the front of my pants! From the back of the plane, an Irish passenger yelled, For the luvva Jaysus, you should see the back o mine!
ermon notes This view from the pew was contributed by GeraldH: A minister was completing a temperance sermon. With great emphasis he said, If I had all the beer in the world, Id take it and pour it into the river. With even greater emphasis, he said, And if I had all the wine in the world, Id take it and pour it into the river! And then finally, shaking his fist in the air, he said, And if I had all the whisky in the world, Id take it and pour it into the river!! Sermon complete, he sat down. The song leader stood very cautiously and announced with a smile, nearly laughing, For our closing song, let us sing Hymn #365, Shall We Gather at the River.
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apital pun-ishment The puns toll for thee in this tale from Jess Hossinaround in Areolitical incorrectness Finally, expressing nas Valley: a view we suspect is shared by readers of all After Quasimodos death, the bishop of the Capolitical persuasions these days, this brief edithedral of Notre Dame sent word through the streets torial from Judge Hazard A. Guess: of Paris that a new bell ringer was needed. The bishThe Washington Redskins are going to change op decided that he would conduct the interviews their name because of all the hatred, violence and personally, and went up into the belfry to begin the hostility associated with their name. screening process. From now on they will be known simply as the After observing several applicants demonstrate Redskins. k their skills, he had decided to call it a day. Just then, an armless man approached him and announced that he was there to apply for the bell ringers job. The Send your favorite anecdotes, jokes, puns and tall tales to Desert Diary, PO Box 191, Silver City, bishop was incredulous: You have no arms! NM 88062, or email diary@ No matter, said the man. Observe! And he be- desertexposure.com. The best gan striking the bells with his face, producing a beau- submission each month gets tiful melody on the carillon. The bishop listened in a Desert Exposure mouse pad, scientically proven to astonishment, convinced he had finally found a retake the strain out of emailplacement for Quasimodo. ing jokes to Desert Diary. But suddenly, as he rushed forward to strike the bell, the armless man tripped and plunged headlong out of the belfry window to his death in the street below. The stunned bishop rushed down 295 church steps. When Serving Southwest NM and Southeastern Arizona he reached the street, a crowd, drawn by the beautiful music they had heard only moments before, had gathered around the fallen figure. As they silently parted to let the bishop through, one of them asked, Bishop, who was this www.abetterchimneynm.com Stoves Sales Service GB98 Lic. # 033328 man? 1800 US Hwy 180 E., Silver City 575-534-2657 I dont know his name, the DE
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his months collection of reader photos of our Southwest zoo ranges across the region geographically as well as zoologically. This tarantula posed for Geri Reeves of Lordsburg, who writes: Weve had a visitor come creepy-crawling through the yard several times a week that Ive named Tickles. Im fairly new to living in the desert and its unusual creatures so Im always taking pictures of whatever I see. Im not afraid of tarantulas so I got as close as I could with my camera. I hope this hairy fella wasnt too upset with my paparazziness and feels safe enough to stick around so we can enjoy his visits next year, too.
From arachnid to avian, heres this picture from Kara Naber: I took this photo of a dove family, safe from predators in a cholla cactus, outside our home in Columbus.
Turning to mammals, weve got another shot from Ron Saltzman, proprietor of the Frame and Art Center in Las Cruces. This bison was part of a photo safari at the Ladder Ranch in southern New Mexico. Lizards, anyone? Dennis Lane of Silver City writes: This juvenile Greater Short-horned Lizard, Phrynosoma hernandesi, was seen on the road to Bear Mountain Lodge. Of the horned lizards, this is one of the most common in the area because the species is more adaptable to higher elevations compared to its horned-lizard cousins. The adults are about three and a half inches long and their diet includes harvester ants, which we found in abundance along the trails. Identification was done by Julian Lee. Share your own photos of local creatures across the taxonomic spectrum! Send to editor@desertexposure.com or mail to PO Box 191, Silver City, NM 88062, and include your postal address for a little thank-you. k
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f Virgin Galactic could manage the intricacies of spaceflight as well as it handles the news media, its SpaceShipTwo would already be ferrying tourists skyward at New Mexicos Spaceport America. (Instead, the Richard Branson space enterprise is at least five years behind its original schedule, a fact seldom mentioned in fawning media reports.) Last month, NBC Nightly News devoted a chunk
of precious airtime to a wholly uncritical piece on the promise of space tourism, featuring Branson but not, alas, a single mention of Spaceport America. Branson and son Sam, who along with daughter Holly will be aboard the maiden flight whenever it finally happens, were interviewed about the thrill of going into space. Left unsaid was the detail that SpaceShipTwo will launch tourists only to the very edge of the technical definition of outer space, at about
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70 miles upless than two-thirds the 116-mile altitude achieved by astronaut Alan Shepard, the first American in space, in 1961. Lacking any apparent news pegSpaceShip Twos last powered test flight was back in Septemberwhat motivated NBC to air this puff piece? The answer came at the end of the segment, when it was announced that Virgin Galactic and NBCUniversal have signed a multi-platform partnership for the networks affiliates to transmit the maiden flight. According to the Universe Today website, Disclosed platforms so far include CNBC, MSNBC, NBCNews.com, Syfy and The Weather Channel. They also plan a primetime special on NBC on the launchs eve, and to host a live event for three hours on NBCs Today show. Financial terms were not released. A Today story suggests that flight could actually launch from Spaceport America in Upham, NM, rather than Virgin Galactics Mojave, Calif., testing facility as originally planned. s for the test flights underway at the Mojave airstrip, Virgin Galactic CEO George Whitesides wants science journalists to, well, stop acting so much like journalists and more like the cheerleaders at NBC. Speaking at the New Horizons in Science conference, a meeting of science writers at the University of Florida, his presentation ended with a plea for the media to put such projects in context. According to the New Space Journal website, Whiteside said, We face a challenge in the Western world right now, and that is an aversion to risky projects. We need a capacity to engage in audacious, bold and risky projects in our society. The media, he said, have a duty to contextualize such efforts and the publics resulting perceptions. Im not arguing that that means the press should cast an uncritical eye towards such projects, he said. But, in cases like, for example, flight tests, you all play a critical role in explaining to the information consumer whats really going on, and how people should think about it. Were doing flight tests now. Things will go wrong in flight tests, I guarantee you. The point of flight tests is to figure out where things go wrong and to fix them before you put them into commercial service. After the talk, when one questioner asked the CEO, With all the problems we have on Earth, why are we creating amusement park rides in space for rich people?, Whiteside shot him down: We are privately funded, so its not up to you. You have a right to talk about your tax dollars, because its your tax dollars. This is not your money, so you dont have a right to say that it shouldnt be done. Apparently the Virgin Galactic CEO doesnt count the more than $200 million New Mexico taxpayers have contributed toward building Spaceport America. The New Mexico Spaceport Authority (NMSA) recently requested an additional $6.9 million to fund the paving of a $15 million road to the spaceport. The agency blamed delays in the launch schedule for shortages of expected revenues from Virgin Galactic spaceflights and tourists. k
DECEMBER 2013
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Who and whats been making news from New Mexico this past month, as measured by mentions in Google News (news.google. com). Trends noted are vs. last months total hits; * indicates new to the list. Number in parenthesis indicates last months Top 10 rank. We ofcially have our rst Top 10 Lady Gaga sighting, as the singer announced plans to perform at Spaceport America before blasting off and singing from space. Plus were keeping an eye on the much-chattered Chris Christie-Susana Martinez 2016 ticket, while wondering why it shouldnt be Martinez-Christie instead. 1. (2) Gov. Susana Martinez387 hits () 2. (5) Virgin Galactic371 hits () 3. (3) New Mexico + immigration252 hits () 4. (-) Spaceport America221 hits () 5. (9) Sen. Tom Udall191 hits () 6. (6) New Mexico gay marriage190 hits () 7. (-) Lady Gaga + Spaceport174 hits * 8. (-) New Mexico spaceport171 hits () 9. (4) New Mexico drought147 hits () 10.(-) Susana Martinez + NJ Gov. Chris Christie112 hits* Future Spaceport America passenger Lady Gaga. Were pretty sure shes already out there.
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DECEMBER 2013
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Santa on Horseback
Wishes for the holidays and beyond.
W
SEEDBOAT GALLERY
here did this year go? Seems like only yesterday I was writing about all the things I was thankful for during 2012 and in my horsemanship past. Now 2013 is coming to an end. One of the first attractions of the horse world for me was the need to be in the moment, in horse time, if you will. When you were with your horse, time sort of stood still. No looking forward or dwelling on the past, just dealing with things as they are right now the way the horse lives. I found this a great way to put the day-to-day grind of life, business and commitments aside for a few hours. But if things keep moving as fast as the distance from the numbers on my birth certificate, maybe its best to look forward with a wish list before the coming year becomes history. If there is a Santa, a genie or someone else who delivers on good wishes, maybe he or she will be reading Desert Exposure this month. his is a big one, and certainly not possible, but I wish for a home for every horse. I could say the same about every dog, cat or other animal that has been neglected or become unwanted, as they have no say or alternatives in their lives beyond what man decides. For all the horses that will never find a home, I wish there were more people like Carol Johnson and all the volunteers at End of the Road Ranch in Silver City (sanctuary@endoftheroadranchnm.com). Working tirelessly, and at great financial burden, they provide a sanctuary for as many horses as possible, where they are promised a home for life. I wish for a lottery win for Carol and everyone else trying to do the same thing for the literally hundreds of thousands of unwanted horses. In fact, I wish more people would come out and visit Carols ranch, especially to meet one of the most inspiring horses I know, Cheyenne. Pushing 37 years old, a bit sway-backed and missing a few teeth, she strolls the grounds greeting volunteers and visitors, and keeping an eye on the herd. She even breaks into a spirited trot up the driveway and back to her field at mealtime. She embodies the magic and wonder of the horse and what kindness and respect can mean to an animal. Im not sure what 37 years old for a horse translates to in human aging, but I hope I look as good and move as well as she does when Im that age. I wish there were more breeders like Heidi Col lings of Dripping Springs Ranch in Mule Creek. I spent a good deal of time this past summer helping some good friends and students looking for new horses, and had a chance to meet Heidi and some of her Spanish Barbs. Being in the business, it was inspiring for me to see someone who lets her horses grow up as horses and starts them correctly. She seemed more focused on truly matching the horse and rider, based on the variables that are important to me as a trainer, rather than just trying to sell a horse. Im sure she would walk away from a sale if she thought the match was simply not going to work. You cant imagine how rare this is. If youre looking for a smaller, handy horse with a great mind and superior foundation, you should go see Heidi and her Barbs (sbhorses@gilanet.com).
T
PAULA WITTNER ANTI GRAVITY
Ending Reception December 7, 4-6 pm Narrative slide show by the artist at 5:30
pony for her daughter, who had been begging for her own horseonly to find that her daughter spent more time playing with a virtual horse on her computer than with her real horse in the backyard, because the virtual horse was nicer, cleaner and easy to take care of. For the veterinarians in Silver City, and all over for that matter, I wish for no weekend emergencies so they can get some sleep and enjoy their families. I wish that some of the folks in the cattle industry who have been hit so hard by the drought and other factors would take a look at all their land and see that it might still be profitable as a retirement home for horses. There are so many horse owners who have the means but not the space and want or need to retire their horses. There simply arent enough safe and well-managed retirement operations with affordable prices to meet the demand. I wish buying local and supporting local small businesses meant something to more horse people. Sure, were a small town and dont have the population and financial base to be state-of-the-art in everything to do with horses. But there is a lot of talent and experience here that will not be able to survive or improve if horse owners ship their dollars out of town every time they think they need help in some area. Im sure every business owner in Silver City feels the same way. If we dont want local resources to dry up and blow away in the spring winds, we need to keep some money here. or some of the people I know who are entering the final phase of their riding lives, I wish their last years on their horses will be happy and safe. I wish I had the time, the space and years left to take all the knowledge and experience Ive gained to bring along a horse that is a blank slate. I have a beautiful young horse in my facility for foundation training for a great owner, and it is simply amazing to watch and be part of the learning process. It confirms one of my strongest beliefs that so much of what happens with horses is based on what happens in the first few years, and that developing a horse doesnt require a fight or that you have to break them. I wish I had time to do it for myself. For every horse owner, I wish for lower hay prices. I wish someone would design riding pants for men that looked like jeans but were as comfortable as riding tights. We could still look manly but not be as grouchy after a long ride. I wish researchers could find the definitive cause for laminitis and come up with a cure so horses prone to this awful problem could still get a treat once in awhile. A similar wish for finding a way to keep horses colic-free for their entire life. I wish designers could find a way to make safety helmets and vests look cool enough that more riders would wear them and not feel they were giving up Western style. I wish more drivers would respect that a horse trailer probably contains horses and stop tailgating. I wish there was one Mr. Ed out there who could tell us exactly what horses really think about what we ask them to do. Finally, I wish our two horses could stay as energetic and entertaining as they are now for as long as were able to get up in the saddle. Happy holidays to all and have a great New Year! Stay deep in the saddle and think about just how lucky your are to be able to enjoy the company of one of the most amazing creatures on earth. k Scott Thomson lives in Silver City and teaches natural horsemanship and foundation training. You can contact him at hsthomson@msn.com or (575) 388-1830.
Our holiday hours are as follows: Thurs., Dec. 19 through Mon., Dec. 2310-4 Tues., Dec. 24, Christmas eve9-2 closed the 25th and 26th Fri., Dec. 27 through Sun., Dec. 2910-4 We've got holiday greeting cards and Hanukkah candles this year! Happy Holidays from Nora, Arlan, and Andrew! 505 N. Bullard Silver City, NM
wish we could keep the instant gratification, quick-fix, top-line mentality of the Internet age out of the horsemanship business for as long as possible. It just seems like instant and horses dont go together. To think there is a shortcut, a piece of equipment or even, God forbid, an app that will immediately solve a performance or behavioral issue with a horse completely devalues the horse as a living being. I hope the horse/human partnership, and the time and patience it takes to build it, does not get abandoned because it takes too long and is really never finished. Case in point: I wish I never have to hear another story like the one I heard this summer from a mom in one of my clinics who loved horses and bought a
DESERT EXPOSURE
DECEMBER 2013
13
Arts Exposure
The latest area art happenings.
Arts Scene
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SAT., DEC. 21 - 4 to 7 pm Join in the Christmas spirit with the Yankie-Texas Art District. Luminarias, Music, Cookies and Drinks!
Hours: Sat 10 am to 4 pm 211C N. Texas, Silver City, NM (575) 313-9631 www.loisduffy.com loisduy@live.com
ART DISTRICT
Vibrations Gallery 108 W. Yankie 654-4384 Lois Duffy Art 211C N. Texas 313-9631 Copper Quail Gallery 211A N. Texas 388-2646
Yankie/Texas
at the crossroads of Yankie & Texas Streets in Historic Downtown Silver City
Molly Ramolla Gallery & Framing 303 & 307 N. Texas 538-5538 or 654-0334 www.ramollaart.com
Palomas, Mexico
1-866-474-4299
Monday-Sunday
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DECEMBER 2013
ARTS EXPOSURE continued nated his collection to the museum for a new exhibition. To showcase this compilation of Shufelts work, the museum staff renovated part of the Generations exhibit in the Heritage Gallery to create a new fine art section called the Heritage Art Gallery. About 50 or 60 of the 132 Shoofly lithographs donated to the museum will make up the initial art exhibit, which opened Nov. 23 and will be on long-term display. Shufelt retired from the commercial art world in order to get away from deadlines. In 1975, he and his wife Julie moved west from Chicago, settling first in Tucson, and later in Wickenburg, Ariz. Since 1991, the Shufelts have called New Mexico their home; they now live in Hillsboro. Shufelt, who says being an artist is a compulsion, not a decision, is a master of the pencil. He brings to life dramatic imagery with bold sunlight and shadow. Cowboys have always been my heroes, Shufelt says. Most of todays cowboy art romanticizes and
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her during her stay in Thailand. 491 N. Main St., 5412137, www.las-cruces.org.
Paul Hotvedt
Representational Painting
Painting what you see not what you think you see. A personal journey through landscape and imagination.
We carry the finest in art supplies as well as art for the discriminating collector
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Merry Christmas from Cow Trail Art Studio
Contemporary Figurative Art 19th and 20th Century Original Prints by American and New Mexican Artists
A collection of works by Robert Shooy Shufelt is now on display at the Farm and Ranch Heritage Museum in Las Cruces. thus misrepresents the cowboy. I know of no other labor which involves so much skill for so little pay as that of the professional cowboy. My aspiration for drawing the cowboy way is to depict the spirit of ranching. I never stage a theme to draw, but work from environmental and cultural involvement with my subject. The museum is open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Saturday and from noon to 5 p.m. on Sunday. Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for senior citizens, and $2 for children ages 5 to 17. Children 4 and under, museum friends members and US military veterans with ID receive free admission. 4100 Dripping Springs Road, 522-4100.
he Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery this month features Rayma Claessen and Richard Spellenberg. Claessen will exhibit landscapes, including miniature collections of the Organ Mountains. Spellenberg holds a PhD in botany in plant diversity with a minor in art, who became interested in wood turning after retiring in 2000. 2470-A Calle de Guadalupe, 522-2933, www.mesillavalleyfinearts.com. The Las Cruces Arts Association will hold a Christmas Bazaar at the Mountain Gallery, featuring handcrafted art, decorations, prints, cards and other works of art. Hours are Friday, Dec. 6, from 4-7 p.m. during the Downtown Ramble and Saturday, Dec. 7 from 10 a.m.-2 p.m. 138 W. Mountain Ave. The Main Street Gallery hosts a presentation of art by Mary Beagle, Many Faces from Different Places, featuring her oil portraits of Native American and Latino cultures as well as several pieces of stone sculpture. The show opens with a reception Dec. 6, 5-7 p.m. 311 N. Main St., 647-0508. Creative Harmony Gallery and Gifts will host An Evening with the Artist with Pamela Needham on Dec. 6, 5-8 p.m. Needham works in photography, focusing primarily on nature themes and landscapes. Next months artist evening, Jan. 3, will feature Linda Hagen, who paints Southwest landscapes, horses and Western scenes in oils. 220 North Campo St., 312-3040. On Dec. 14 the Mesquite Historic Preservation Society is hosting its third annual A New Mexico Christmas on the Camino Real and Second Saturday of the Month Camino del Arte event. At the same time, the city of Las Cruces Senior Programs and individual seniors are co-sponsoring an art show at Nopalitos Galeria, Artistic Moments and Winter Bazaar. A horse-drawn stagecoach will tour the Mesquite Historic District, and Santa Claus and Mrs. Claus will arrive on the stagecoach for a stop at Klein Park about noon. ArtForms is seeking participants for the 16th annual For the Love of Art Month member show at the Branigan Cultural Center, Feb. 7 to March 1, 2014, and for a regional-artists show (non-members welcome) at the Convention Center, Feb. 7-8. Deadlines are Jan. 3 and Jan. 10. For information, see www. artformsnm.org or email artformsfloa@gmail.com or call 527-0020.
Stop by for coffee, cider, and conversation Mondays 1-3 during December.
he Las Cruces Museum of Art presents Tejido Fronterizo/Border Tapestry by the Juntos Art Association and The Border Artists and Metamorphosis, the artwork of Santa Fe artist Gail Factor. Both are on display through Jan. 18, with receptions Dec. 6, 5-7 p.m. New Mexico artists Gunnar Plake and Marietta Leis showcase their works in separate exhibitions now on view at the Museum of Art. On Saturday, Dec. 7, Plake will host a gallery talk at 10 a.m.; Leis will speak at 1 p.m. the same day. Both exhibitions are on display through Jan. 18, 2014. Plakes exhibition, Extended Passage of Time is composed of panoramic images collected during a winters day at White Sands National Monument. Rather than photographys concentration on the frozen moment, I am after the space between moments where time is expanded and dates compressed, explains Plake of his exhibition. By moving the camera during exposure, I include more information in each image and expand the expressive possibilities of the photographic medium. Leis exhibition, GREEN Abundance, was influenced by a recent artist residency in Thailand. My studio was a veranda with a thatch roof that looked out to vegetation of all colors, so my palette was ever-changing, notes Leis. The color linchpin, however, was greenthe living breathing color of life. Her multimedia works are an expression of the imagery and ideas that flooded
tudio LeMarbe in Deming will hold an open studio sale on Dec. 7, 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 4025 Chaparral SE, 544-7708. The Deming Arts Centers Christmas Market, with handcrafted gifts, continues through Dec. 22. Hours are Tuesday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. The next exhibit at the center, opening with a reception Jan. 5, 1-3 p.m., features Las Cruces painter Irma Lee. 100 S. Gold, 546-3663, Moon at Sunrise by Gunnar Plake (right) and Chronicles 3 by Marietta Leis, featured at the Las Cruces Museum of Art.
Luna County
DESERT EXPOSURE
vendors selling specialty arts and handcrafted gifts, the annual raffle of an original work of art depicted on collectible art prints, and the popular $49.99 Art Show and Sale. Each item in the art show will be sold for $49.99 to a winning ticket holder, and all items are guaranteed to be worth more than that. Raffle tickets can be purchased for $1 for a chance to win the original framed pastel painting, A Chile New Mexico Christmas, created for the event by Hillsboro artist Judy Madden. The winning ticket will be drawn at the Community Center at 3:45 p.m. LimitThe Mesilla Valley Fine Arts Gallery features works by Carlos West. ed-edition prints of Maddens artwork are also for sale. In addition to Christmas in the Foothills events demingarts@hotmail.com. The Black Range Fine Art Show, to benefit the at the Community Center, Hillsboros Main Street Wounded Warrior Project and homeless veterans, is merchants, including restaurants, antique shops and looking for submissions of original fine art. The in- museums, will all be open, and musicians and singers door event will be held at the Mimbres Valley Event along Main Street will provide seasonal and regional Center in Deming next year, Oct.11-12. There will be accompaniment to the festivities. Nine miles west in extensive advertising and $2,400 in cash awards will Kingston, holiday celebrations include vendors at the be given. For more information, call Lyn at 546-4650 famed Spit and Whittle Club. During the weekend, Dec. 6-8, the Hillsboro Hisor email blackrangeart@gmail.com. torical Society will showing the work of three Native American artists donated to the Society from a priSierra County he 8th Annual Yuletide in Chloride continues vate collection. The paintings will be exhibited at the through Dec. 8. Many of the old building in the Societys Education Center. Hillsboro is located on Hwy. 152 approximately 17 historic ghost town will be decorated for the holidays, and the Monte Cristo Gift Shop & Gal- miles west of I-25 at exit 63. From Silver City take lery will feature works by local artists. The Chloride Highway 152 east 57 miles to Hillsboro. Signs and Bank Caf will be serving up hot cocoa and treats holiday greeters in Santa hats will direct visitors to along with regular menu items. You can also take in the Hillsboro Community Center. k the Pioneer Store Museum while in town. 40 miles west of Truth or Consequences via Hwy. 52. 743-0493, All phone numbers are area code 575 except as 743-0414, montecristogallery@windstream.net. noted. Send gallery news to events@desertexpoHillsboros annual holiday celebration, Christsure.com. mas in the Foothills, will be Saturday, Dec. 7, from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. at the Hillsboro Community Center. Highlights of the festival include a wide array of ARTS EXPOSURE continued on next page
DECEMBER 2013
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1-4 pm
211A N. Texas Corner of Texas & Yankie in Silver City Open Tues-Sun 11-4 575-388-2646
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DECEMBER 2013
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Texas, 534-0822. Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Original paintings, cards and prints. www.loisduffy.com, loisduffy@signalpeak.net. LlOYD STUDIOs, 306 W. Broadway, (303) 378-0926. Weds-Sat. 11 a.m.-7 p.m., Sun. 12-5 p.m. lloydstudios.com. MImBREs REGION ARTs COUNcIl GallERY, Wells Fargo Bank Bldg., 1201 N. Pope St. www.mimbresarts.org. MOllY RamOlla GallERY &FRamING, 307 N. Texas, 538-5538. www. ramollaart.com. Off BEaD GallERY, 701 N. Bullard, 388-8973. Mon-Fri 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Ol WEsT GallERY & MERcaNTIlE, 104 W. Broadway, 388-1811/3132595. Daily 11 a.m.-6 p.m. SEEDBOaT CENTER fOR THE ARTs, 214 W. Yankie St., 534-1136. Weds.-Sat 11 a.m.-5 p.m. or by appointment. info@ seedboatgallery.com. SIlVER SPIRIT GallERY, 215 W. Broadway, 388-2079. STONEwalKER STUDIO, 105 Country Road, 534-0530. By appointment. Barbara Jorgen Nance. STUDIO BEHIND THE MOUNTaIN, 23 Wagon Wheel Lane, 388-3277. By appointment. www.jimpalmerbronze.com. THE STUDIOSPacE, 109 N. Bullard St., 534-9291. www.jessgorell.com. STUDIO UPsTaIRs, 109 N. Bullard St., 574-2493. By appointment. SUsaN SZaJER STUDIO, Sanctuary Road, 313-7197 By appointment. TaTIaNa MaRIa GallERY, 305 & 307 N. Bullard St., 388-4426. TOP HaT ART, 115 N. Bayard. 21 LaTIGO TRaIl, 388-4557. Works by Barbara Harrison and others. URsa MINOR, 303 N. Texas St. The little blue box of eccentricities. VIBRaTIONs GallERY, 108 W. Yankie St., 654-4384, starxr@usa.net. WIlD WEsT WEaVING, 211-D N. Texas, 313-1032, www.hosanaeilert. com. Mon.-Thurs. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Fri.Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m. WIND CaNYON STUDIO, 11 Quail Run off Hwy. 180 mile marker 107, 574-2308, (619) 933-8034. Louise Sackett. Mon., Weds. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. and by appointment. WYNNEGaTE GallERY & STUDIO, 110 W. Yankie St., (214) 957-3688. Mon., Thurs.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun. 11:45 a.m.-4 p.m., Tues.-Wed. by appointment. YaNKIE ST. ARTIsT STUDIOs, 103 W. Yankie St., 313-1032. By appointment. ZOEs GallERY, 305 N. Cooper St., 654-4910. MOONsTRUcK ART STUDIO, 501 Covellite Dr., 956-5346, 654-5316. By appointment. SUN DawG STUDIO, 501 Malachite Ave., 388-3551. By appointment. HEaRsT CHURcH GallERY, Gold St., 574-2831. Open late-April to earlyOctober. Fri., Sat., Sun. and holidays, 10 a.m.-5 p.m. CHamOmIlE CONNEcTION, 3918 Highway 35N, 536-9845. Lynnae McConaha. By appointment. COTTaGE STaINED Glass & MORE, Cedar Lane off Hwy. 35, 536-3234. Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 2-5 p.m. KaTE BROwN POTTERY aND TIlE, HC 15 Box 1335, San Lorenzo, 536-9935, katebrown@gilanet.com, www.katebrownpottery.com. By appointment. NaRRIE TOOlE, Estudio de La Montura, 313-2565, www.narrietoole.com. Contemporary western oils, gicles and art prints. By appointment. REEsE-BENTON ARTs, 3811 Hwy. 35, 536-9487. By appointment. KaTHRYN AllEN ClaY STUDIO, 601 Erie St., 537-3332. By appointment. T. AlI STUDIO, 421 E. Elm St., 5373470. By appointment. FIERRO CaNYON GallERY, 4 Hermosa St., 537-3262, www.errocanyongallery.com. Thurs.-Mon. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. La GaRITa, 13 Humboldt, 537-6624. By appointment. JWART GallERY, Old Hurley Store, 99 Cortez Ave., 537-0300. Weds.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., www.jwartgallery.com. JUsTUs WRIGHT GalERIa, 266 W. Court Ave., 526-6101, jud@delvalleprintinglc.com. J.T. MacRORIE STUDIO, 639 S. San Pedro, 524-1006. Las CRUcEs MUsEUm Of ART, 491 N. Main St., 541-2137. Tues.-Fri. 9 a.m.4:30 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. LUNDEEN INN Of THE ARTs, 618 S. Alameda Blvd., 526-3326. Daily 8 a.m.-6 p.m. MaIN STREET GallERY, 311 N. Downtown Mall, 647-0508. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 9:30 a.m.-1 p.m. MEsQUITE ART GallERY, 340 N. Mesquite St., 640-3502. Thur.-Fri. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 2-5 p.m. MOUNTaIN GallERY aND STUDIOs, 138 W. Mountain St. Thurs.-Sun., 10 a.m.-4 p.m. M. PHIllIPs FINE ART GallERY, 221 N. Main St., 525-1367. NEw DImENsION ART WORKs, 615 E. Pion, 373-0043. NEw MEXIcO ART, 121 Wyatt Dr., Suite 1, 525-8292/649-4876. Weds. 1-6 p.m., Thurs.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. NMSUART GallERY, Williams Hall, University Ave. east of Solano, 6462545. Tues.-Sun. NOPalITOs GalERIa, 326 S. Mesquite. Fri.-Sun., 8 a.m.-8:30 p.m. QUIllIN STUDIO aND GallERY, behind Downtown COAS Books, 312-1064. Mon.-Thurs., Sat. TIERRa MONTaNa GallERY, 535 N. Main St., 635-2891. Tues.-Sat., 11 a.m.-5 p.m. TOmBaUGH GallERY, Unitarian Universalist Church, 2000 S. Solano, 522-7281. Weds.-Fri. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. or by appointment. UNsETTlED GallERY & STUDIO, 905 N. Mesquite, 635-2285. VIRGINIa MaRIa ROmERO STUDIO, 4636 Maxim Court, 644-0214. By appointment. agzromero@zianet.com , www.virginiamariaromero.com. La MEsa STaTION GallERY, 16205 S. Hwy. 28, 233-3037. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 1-4 pm. ART ON THE WEsTERN EDGE, at Windwalker Guest Ranch B&B, Hwy. 11 north, mile marker 7, 640-4747. ART SPacE GallERY, 601 S. Silver, 546-0673. Mon., Fri. 12-6 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., donni@chris-donni.com. DEmING ARTs CENTER, 100 S. Gold St., 546-3663. Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. GOlD STREET GallERY, 112-116 S. Gold St., 546-8200. REaDERs COVE UsED BOOKs & GallERY, 200 S. Copper, 544-2512. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Photography by Daniel Gauss. STUDIO LEMaRBE, 4025 Chaparral SE, 544-7708. CHIRIcaHUa GallERY, 5 Pine St., 557-2225. BaRBaRa MassENGIll GallERY, 894-9511/895-3377, Fri.-Sun. 10:30 a.m.-4:30 p.m. MONTE CRIsTO, Wall St., 743-0190. Daily 10 a.m.-4 p.m. k SUBmIT GallERY INfORmaTION TO Desert Exposure, POBox 191, Silver City, NM 88062, fax 534-4134, email editor@desertexposure.com.
Arts Exposure
Gallery Guide
ANN McMaHON PHOTOGRaPHY, 125 Country Road. By appointment. www. AnnMcMahon.com. ANN SImONsEN STUDIO-GallERY, 104 W. Yankie St., 654-5727. ART +CONVERsaTION, 614 N. Bullard, 388-3350. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sundays 12 a.m.-6 p.m. Gallery and gathering space. www.artandconversation.com. ARTEsaNOs, 211-B N. Texas St., 519-0804. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 12-6 p.m. [a]SP.AE, 110 W. 7th St., 5383333, aspace.studiogallery@gmail.com. AZURITE GallERY, 110 W. Broadway, 538-9048, Wed.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. www.azuritegallery.com. BlUE DOmE GallERY, 60 Bear Mountain Ranch Road (Bear Mountain Lodge, 2251 Cottage San Road), 534-8671. Mon.-Sat. 11 a.m.-5 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. www.bluedomegallery.com. ClaYfUl HaNDs, 622 N. California, 534-0180. By appointment. Phoebe Lawrence. ClaYmOON STUDIO, 13 Jade Dr., 313-6959. Marcia Smith. By appointment. COmmON THREaD, 107 W. Broadway, 538-5733. Mon., Thurs, Fri. and Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Retail and gallery space for ber arts. www.berartscollec-
Bayard
Silver City
tive.org. COPPER QUaIl GallERY, 211-A Texas St., corner of Yankie and Texas, 3882646. Tues.-Sun. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Fine arts and crafts. COw TRaIl ART STUDIO, 119 Cow Trail in Arenas Valley. Mon. 12-3 p.m. or by appointment, (706) 533-1897, www.victoriachick.com. CREaTIONs &ADORNmENTs, 108 N. Bullard, 534-4269. Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Work by Diane Reid. FRaNcIs McCRaY GallERY, 1000 College Ave., WNMU, 538-6517. GUaDalUPEs, 505 N. Bullard, 5352624. Thurs.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m., Sun. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. HOwEll DEsIGN &GallERY, 200 W. Market St., 388.2993. www.anthonyhowell.com. LEYBa & INGalls ARTs, 315 N. Bullard St., 388-5725. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. Contemporary art ranging from realism to abstraction in a variety of media featuring artists Crystal Foreman Brown, Romaine Begay, Christana Brown, Susan Brinkley, Gordee Headlee, Diana Ingalls Leyba, Dayna Griego, Constance Knuppel, Mary Alice Murphy, Phillip Parotti, Betsey Resnick, Teri Matelson, Joe Theiman, Zoe Wolfe, Melanie Zipin. www.LeybaIngallsARTS.com, LeybaIngallsART@zianet.com. LOIs DUffY ART STUDIO, 211C N.
Hanover
Hurley
ANNIEs ON THECORNER, Hwy. 180 and Adair, Luna, 547-2502. CasITas DE GIla, 50 Casita Flats Road, Gila, 535-4455. Sat.-Sun. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. or by appointment. gallery@casitasdegila.com, www.galleryatthecasitas.com. WIllOw GallERY, Hwy. 15, Gila Hot Springs, 536-3021. By appointment. ADOBE PaTIO GallERY, 1765 Avenida de Mercado (in the Mesilla Mercado), 532-9310. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. GalERI AZUl, Old Mesilla Plaza, 523-8783. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-6 p.m. GalERIa ON THE PlaZa, 2310 Calle de Principal, 526-9771. Daily 10 am.-6 p.m. GalERa TEPN, 2220 Calle de Parian, 523-3988. Thurs.-Sun., 11 a.m.-5 p.m. MEsIlla VallEY FINE ARTs GallERY, 2470 Calle de Guadalupe, 522-2933. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., Sun. 125:30 p.m. THE POTTERIEs, 2260 Calle de Santiago, 524-0538. ROKOKO, 1785 Avenida de Mercado, 405-8877. AlEGRE GallERY, 920 N Alameda Blvd., 523-0685. AZURE CHERRY GallERY & BOUTIQUE, 330 E. Lohman Ave., 291-3595. Wed.Thurs. 12-5 p.m., Fri.-Sat. 12-8 p.m. BlUE GaTE GallERY, 311 Old Downtown Mall, 523-2950. Tue.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 9 a.m.-noon. CHaRlEs INc., 1885 W Boutz Rd, 523-1888, Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. COTTONwOOD GallERY, 275 N. Downtown Mall (Southwest Environmental Center), 522-5552. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. CREaTIVE HaRmONY, 220 N. Campo St., 312-3040. Weds.-Sun. 12-5 p.m. CRUZ NOPal, 1175 W. Picacho, 635-7899. Thurs.-Sat.10 a.m.-6 p.m. or by appointment. ouida@ouidatouchon. com, www.ouidatouchon.com. CUTTER GallERY, 2640 El Paseo,541-0658. Tues.-Fri. 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Sat. 10 a.m.-3 p.m. GalERIE AccENTs, 344 S. San Pedro #3, 522-3567. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-6 p.m. GallERIE CRamOIsIE, 1695 Hickory Loop, 524-9349. Mon.-Fri. 9 a.m.-4:30 p.m. GRIGGs &REYmOND, 504 W. Griggs Ave., 524-8450, Tue.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m.
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Studio Sale
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Sunday Jesi Tallman, Keyboard Noon Dustin Hamman, Guitar & vocals2 pm Need not be present to win
DIRECTIONS: Take Hwy 152 to the Mimbres, 61 South to Royal John Mine Rd (between MM 19 & 20). Follow signs 2 1/2 miles to MHSR. No pets, please.
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Vital Vaccinations
pectedly, so establishing a communication spot that you touch when you need to wake them up is a good idea. We have trained him that the top back of his head is the communication spot, and when we touch it and he is sleeping he immediately begins wagging his tail because he knows it is one of us, says Nelson.
ertain breeds of dogs, such as Dalmatians, carry a gene that causes deafness. If the deafness isnt genetic, it is still common for a dog to lose hearing from an ear injury or simply from old age, just like people. If you believe Spot may be deaf, there are various tests you can perform. Simple at-home tests work just fine, like clapping your hands together or ringing a bell, but the most reliable way to test for deafness is called BAER testing (Brainstorm Auditory Evoked Response). This test can be costly, but it is extremely accurate and will let you know if your dog is partially or wholly deaf. If you came and interacted with our two dogs, you would not be aware that one is deaf, as we talk to him just like the other dog and the hand signs are subtle, says Nelson. He has been totally deaf since birth and is a wonderful boy that loves people, animals and children. Despite the few adaptations you must make for training and living with a deaf dog, the love and appreciation you receive far outweighs any perceived adversity from their disabilities. The friendship between a human and their dog, hearing or not, knows no boundaries. k Pet Talk is a service of the College of Veterinary Medicine & Biomedical Sciences, Texas A&M University. Stories can be viewed on the web at vetmed.tamu.edu/pettalk. Suggestions for future topics may be directed to editor@cvm.tamu.edu.
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SkinwalkersSomeone tries to kill Jim Chee and three murdered people are found with small pieces of bone in their bodies at various locations on the reservation. Several clues guide Leaphorn and Chee to follow leads related to Navajo skin-walkers. Red Sky at Morning by Richard Bradford is the story of southerner Josh Arnold, a teenager spending the years of World War II in small-town northern New Mexico while his father is in the Navy. Josh and his friends Steenie and Marcia bear witness to the earthy humor, swagger and pathos of adolescence. The book is a humorous, bittersweet take on the life, characters and cultural mix of Bradfords small town. The most memorable dead horse scene in print will stay with you for years. Bradfords pithy dialogue begs for some out-loud reading and by all means, if the last time you read this was for high-school English class, pick it up again. The 1971 film version earned a Golden Globe Award. Alburquerque: A Novel by native son Rudolfo Anaya is written through the lens of boxing champion Abran Gonzalez, a product of two cultures. (The title really is Alburquerque, as in the original 1706 Ranchos de Alburquerque.) Abran and his bicultural friend Joe learn together the ways in which community and family might once more be linked by a lasting connection to the earth and the rhythms of the people, according to local author Kevin Mcilvoys review in the Los Angeles Times. The novel is woven around ceremonies and fiestas as it explores some of the issues that have always intrigued New Mexicans: land, water, class and culture. Another of Anayas well-known novels, Bless Me, Ultima, was produced as a film in 2013. Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather tells the fictional story of Bishop Jean Latour and Father Joseph Vaillants arrival and subsequent life work in New Mexico. As Jeff Berg noted in Desert Exposure (Local Characters, January), Cather studied up on many real folks, including Jean-Baptise Lamy, using different names to portray him and others in the book while slipping in real-life luminaries such as Kit Carson. With all the reading Ive done over the years, Id missed this one. What a mistake! Cather has an exceptional ability to create fine art with the written word: Elsewhere the sky is the roof of the world; but here the earth was the floor of the sky. The landscape one longed for when one was far away, the thing all about one, the world one actually lived in, was the sky, the sky!
The essential New Mexico library, plus where to get your books x.
His steamer was wrecked and sunk in the Galveston harbour, and he had lost all his worldly possessions except his books, which he saved at the risk of his life.Death Comes for the Archbishop
Required Reading
Gabriel DAmmassa, age 5, discovers the joy of reading at Readers Cove in Deming. (Photo by Algernon DAmmassa)
have enthusiastically collected New Mexicothemed books for a couple of decades now and enjoy them for inspiration, use them for research, and just generally revel in the topics they cover about my beloved state. Several years ago I sold every extra non-New Mexico book I could stand to give up to purchase a copy of Cow Dust and Saddle Leather by Ben Kemp and J.C. Dykes, a volume Id asked Coas Books in Las Cruces to find. The anticipation of waiting for a requested book to turn up is part of the fun of the hunt. New Mexico has served as setting and subject of many books written by authors who have made its uniquely beautiful landscape home. But which should be part of an essential New Mexican library? Choosing which to include is admittedly a subjective task. I agonized over which books to give place of honor for this best of New Mexico roundup. How to choose one and not include another? Its like asking which of your children is your favorite; it cant be done. So, with the caveat that I know readers will have their own favorites, following are brief synopses, in no particular order, of the ones that made my personal list. If you have a local book-lover on your holiday gift list, consider this a place to start. I also polled four area bookstore owners about what books would be on their lists. They know their books and are persistent in tracking down elusive books for their customers. These folks are owners of some of the best places to spend a day in the southern part of the state, hands down. As fellow bibliophile Mark Twain once said, In a good bookroom you feel in some mysterious way that you are absorbing the wisdom contained in all the books through your skin, without even opening them. Tularosa: Last of the Frontier West by C.L. Sonnichsen is one of the foundational books for acquiring an overview of the New Mexico west as it was and is. This is the place to start for anyone seeking to understand a bit of western culture as it was played out here in the southern part of the state. You need to know about Fountain and Fall, cattle and lawmen, miners and Apaches, Garrett and the Kid. Sonnichsen writes: On a clear day you take in a panorama of 300 miles of heaven and earth, and it puts you in your proper place. No Life for a Lady by Agnes Morley Cleaveland is a classic memoir of a young ranch woman in the Datil area beginning in 1886. It is dedicated to: All those Pioneer Women whose stories can never be adequately told but whose courage, endurance and determination to hold fast to their highest ideals contributed to the making of America. The protagonists first sight of the wide open country leading to her new home is memorable: No sign of human habitation greeted us as we topped the divide west of town and gazed across at the blue bank of haze that blanketed the western skythe Datil Mountains, our destination, 40 miles away. The book details the amazing
amount of freedom and responsibility young people in New Mexico often experienced. Black Range Tales: Chronicling Sixty Years of Life and Adventure in the Southwest by James A. McKenna is an eyewitness description of the life of a miner, prospector and explorer in the West of the late 1800s. McKenna, a true gentleman, relates with classic western humor and rare poignancy the adventures, legends and characters he encountered while living in southern New Mexico. This book is suggested reading for New Mexico newcomers and history buffs alike. Ghost Towns and Mining Camps of New Mexico by James E. and Barbara H. Sherman is a comprehensive look at more than 130 of the states old and defunct mining, farming, railroad and lumbering communities. The book is full of historical photos from the towns heydays as well as more current shots of what remains (or did, when it was written in 1975). There is even a map section to help you with your weekend explorations. The well-researched back stories for each entry are loads of fun; I often curl up on a winter night with my dog-eared copy of this book just to daydream. The Great River: The Rio Grande in North American History by Paul Horgan is a beautifully written, extensive overview of our history-making river. His preface to the fourth edition states, In its length of nearly 2,000 miles and its cultural evidence encompassing 10 centuries and more, the Great River remains the unifying vein of history not only of the life adjacent to its banks, but also of the greater southwest. Horgan, winner of the Bancroft and Pulitzer Prizes in history, achieved his goal of producing a sense of historical experience rather than a bare record. The river is the anchor point around which time, history and culture revolve in New Mexico. The Milagro Beaneld War by John Nichols is a rollicking good read set in northern New Mexico. The characters are hilariously recognizable here in the southern regions, too. Those of you with agricultural connections may feel as if you live parts of this story on a regular basis. Derek Fisher of Santa Fe Following are four great places to go for your writes: There is one thing about The Milagro Beaneld War. You cannot put it down. I have lived in book fix, with the booksellers own picks. Take your northern New Mexico for most of my life, and there is list and you can knock out your Christmas shopping no written word that comes close to the people here in a delightful afternoon. except for The Milagro Beaneld War. I must say that growing up in a small northern New Mexico town, I have seen most of this story first hand. (I went to school with the young versions of these characters). This is such a comedic book, I fell off the couch several times laughing so hard it hurt. The 1988 film version was shot in Truchas, NM. Skinwalkers? A Thief of Time? Hmm, how to choose a favorite Hillerman book? A prolific, The recently brightly repainted Readers Cove in Deming. (Photo by award-winning author, Tony Hill- Daniel Gauss) erman was best known for his series of 18 mystery books featuring Navajo police officers Jim Chee and Joe Leaphorn. Readers Cove Wes Studi and Adam Beach played the officers in the eaders Cove Used Books and Gallery in DemPBS film version of three of the books (Skinwalkers, ing has been located at 200 S. Copper St. for 17 Coyote Waits, A Thief of Time). Its always troubled years. Current owners Margaret Fairman and me that the American people are so ignorant of these Daniel Gauss bought the store in May 2012 and kept rich Indian cultures, Hillerman once told Publishers the name. Margarets deeply ingrained love of reading Weekly. I think its important to show that aspects of and books has been with her since childhood, when ancient Indian ways are still very much alive and are shed talk with friends about owning a bookstore. highly germane even to our ways. When we travel we go to the used bookstores, she I have to pick both: says. I can tell you all over the country where the A Thief of TimeDeals with pot hunters, a miss- used bookstores are. Her favorite topics tend to ficing anthropologist and sacred ground as well as a tion, memoirs and nature writings. She just finished couple of corpses, all set in the Four Corners area reading a book about snakes and commented that on the Navajo reservation. Jim Trageser in the Chula theres not time to read at the store but Im always Vista Star-News writes, The characterizations are taking books home. also of the highest order, with the major players beDans photography (Shot on Site Photography) ing fleshed out, with all the faults and shortcomings is displayed in the store. Margaret says, Its mostly inherent to real-life human beings. Reading Hiller- New Mexico-related: mountains, landscape, flora man is pleasure not only for the fine story he tells, and fauna, New Mexico creatures, plus vintage cars, but for the sheer joy of watching how he does it. fireworks and other miscellaneous. She also carries
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gift items such as collectible dolls and Kachinas. The Coves bestselling titles include anything to do with New Mexico and the Apaches. As soon as I get something in related to Apaches or the Apache Wars, it goes, Margaret says. People passing through the area are often interested in anything about Billy the Kid. Other popular books at Readers Cove are The Great River and Black Range Tales as well as Bless Me, Ultima. She recommends Ben K. Greens stories of horse trading, wild cows and western veterinary life and also sells a lot of natural history-type books. There is a big Mike Beckett helps customers at Coas Books in Las Cruces. (Photo by interest in western history and Brandon Beckett) Ketchikan by Max Evans Margaret says, Im amazed at the No Life for a Lady by Agnes Morley Cleaveland variety of things people come in here looking for. Gila Descending and Gila Libre! by Dutch Margaret Fairmans Essential New Mexico Salmon Library Black Range Tales by James A. McKenna The Great River by Paul Horgan Coas Books Catherines Son: The Story of a Boy Who Became oas has one of the largest book inventories an Outlaw by James L. Smith (written from perspecavailable anywhere and is one of the most tive of Billy the Kids mother) charming places in Las Cruces to spend some Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya free time. The family-owned enterprise, named with Milagro Beaneld War trilogy by John Nichols the Nahatual term for digging sticks, was started Madame Millie: Bordellos from Silver City to in 1984 by historian and archaeologist Pat Beckett. In 2007 his son, Mike, and Mikes family took over, sons Brett and Brandon working alongside their parents. Located on the Downtown Mall at 317 N. Main, the stores convenient proximity to the Las Cruces Farmers Market (held Wednesdays and Saturdays) is a wonderful excuse to head downtown and get lost in the books for a while. Coas has also expanded into a second location at 1101 S Solano Dr. The Land of Enchantment is such a perfect thing to describe New Mexico, says Mike. He should know, as not only was he born in Las Cruces, but his Lucero family has been in the area since the 1600s.
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While studying engineering, he discovered that although he enjoyed it, Im too social. Running a bookstore scratches that socializing itch; he really enjoys being with the people who come into the store. He likes visiting with local authors, too. Theres kind of an unknown author by the name of Dan Aranda; he helped write these Fat Boy books. This guy knows his history, its amazing.... Hes part of the Historical Society and he really knows history, he loves it, he lives it! Coas Books with the backdrop of the Organ Mountains. (Photo by Mike also mentions works by Brandon Beckett) Chris Shurtz, Billy Kiser and John P. Wilson, but says there are so many good local authors hes afraid hell inadvertent- and opened a bookstore, which she ran for over 40 ly leave one out. As we wander through the store he years. David Thomas, author of La Posta, a book that stops and grabs books off the shelf. Handing me one has been selling well for the Mesilla Book Center, called The Texas Rangers by Charles H. Harris and describes the property: Lot D: Originally owned by Louis R. Sadler, he exclaims, Oh, gosh, these guys Pedro Perez and his wife, who have a store on the have won three Western Spur awards. Thats a pretty lot. Pedro appears in the 1851 census and is one of big accomplishment. Theyre both out of NMSU. the administrators of the Mesilla Civil Colony Grant. He goes on, One that we push a lot is Tularosa, also The historic building has two-foot-thick interior Black Range Tales, the Pot Thief Books by [J. Michael] walls and some original flooring dating from the Orenduff, and the Cricket Coogler books, Murder Near days of the Confederate occupation of Mesilla. Paul the Crosses and Cricket in the Web. His favorite photo- Blevins, Cherylls husband, notes that one of the four graphic book is The Las Cruces Photographic Journey, original fireplaces is decorated with tile from the old produced by local newsweekly The Bulletin. Fort Fillmore. Today there is an antique Mexican Mike Becketts Essential New Mexico Library buggy stored in the small courtyard, originally acTularosa by C.L. Sonnichsen cessed by a zaguan, or alleyway, behind the shop, The Two Alberts: Fountain and Fall by Gordon next to a tile mosaic of St. Francis. R. Owen Cherylls family connections to the plaza and New Las Cruces by Linda Harris Mexico history run deep; the Bowlin family has been The Fabulous Frontier, 1846-1912 by William A. involved with the Navajos and state history for a long Keleher time. Her parents even had the New Mexico pavilion The Great River by Paul Horgan at the 1964 New York Worlds Fair. Paso Por Aqui by Eugene Manlove Rhodes The bookstores business card notes: Some of the A Brief History of New Mexico by Myra Ellen Jen- best books never make the bestseller lists. Cheryll kins and Albert H. Schroeder says of bookselling, You dont do it because you Turmoil on the Rio Grande by William Kiser make money at it. The Cloud-Climbing Railroad: Highest Point on The shop carries a tremendous selection of historthe Southern Pacic by Dorothy Jensen Neal ical books and volumes covering more current border issues in addition to southwestern collectibles, including pottery and Navajo and Chimayo textiles. The wonderful childrens room invites a lingering browse among books and toys. When you stop for a visit, the shop dogs will wag a friendly greeting and then leave you to your browsing. Cheryll Blevins Essential New Mexico Library (Its hard to choose) Tularosa by C.L. Sonnichsen The Great River by Paul Horgan Black Range Tales by James A. McKenna Anything by Tony Hillerman Gods Middle Finger by Richard Grant Mesilla Book Center, on Old Mesilla Plaza. (Photo The Border Trilogy: All the Pretty Horses, The by Karen Ray) Crossing, Cities of the Plain by Cormac McCarthy No Life for a Lady by Agnes Morley Cleaveland The Rounders by Max Evans Mesilla Book Center The Time It Never Rained by Elmer Kelton ot many people can say they grew up in a A Place as Wild as the West Ever Was by Mary bookstore, but owner Cheryll Blevins really did. The building that houses the Mesilla Daniels Taylor She sells quite a few of the Into the Lawless Book Center on the plaza in Old Mesilla was also her home. The store began life as a mercantile and dates books by Richard Grant and also anything about from the 1850s. Blevins says it was remodeled in the Billy the Kid. There are several interesting ones but 1950s and today remains pretty much the same. Cheryll recommends The West of Billy the Kid by Her mother, Mary Bowlin, born on the Navajo reser- Fredrick Nolan. Other popular topics are Pancho Vilvation at Fort Defiance, bought the building in 1966 la and anything about Colonel Albert Fountain, such as Murder on the White Sands by Corey Recko. Cheryll comments that we have much in common with Old Mexico, due to the border location, and the shops selection reflects this multicultural nature. Mesilla Book Center stocks beautiful photographic books representing the state as well, including New Mexico: Portrait of a State by David Muench and New Mexico, Wild and Beautiful by Lawrence Parent and Emily Drabanski.
Mural and books inside Mesilla Book Center. (Photo by Karen Ray)
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Readers Cove Used Books & Gallery, 200 S. Copper St., Deming, (575) 544-2512. Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Coas Books, 317 N. Main St., Las Cruces, (575) 524-8471. Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m., Sun. 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Coas Books, 1101 S. Solano Dr., Las Cruces, (575) 647-4472. Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-6 p.m., closed Sun. Mesilla Book Center, 2360 Calle Principal, west side of the plaza in Old Mesilla, (575) 526-6220. Tues.-Sat. 11 a.m.- 5:30 p.m., Sun. 1-5 p.m. OKeefes Book Shop, 102 W. Broadway, Silver City, (575) 388-3313, Tues.-Sat. 10 a.m.-4 p.m.
DECEMBER 2013
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a childhood home filled with books. My mom especially loved reading and the books themselves. But they couldnt compete with guitar and sports, much to my moms regret, he relates. He began professional life as a civil engineer out of NMSU, but became bored and started building adobe homes in Santa Festill reading very little. After quitting building and searching for more of an intellectual life, I discovered the beauty and power of books for the first time in my life. He opened up OKeefes Books in Silver City in 1984 with his mother, brother and sister-in-law, all of us pooling some of our own books for the stock. Years later he took over operation and ownership of the shop, at 102 W. Broadway. In 1996 Dennis met his wife, Allyson Siwik, when she came in the shop Virginia one Saturday Woolf said, during a visit Second-hand from Connectibooks are wild cut. They now books, homehave a lovely less books; 1 3 - y e a r- o l d they have come daughter, Gatogether in vast briela. flocks of varieWe are a gated feather, mostly used and have a bookstore, as charm which I still prefer the domestithe recycling cated volumes nature of used of the library books, Dennis lack. explains, but Bookstores we do handle are some of the some new lomost enjoyable cal and Southplaces on the west books and Gabriela OKeefe in front of her dads shop in Silver City. (Photo by planet. I hope field guides. Dennis OKeefe) youll take the His top-selling time to stop in books include: Gila Descending by Dutch Salmon, Black Range and savor the word-art offered up in these four reTales by James McKenna, Madam Millie by Max gional gems. Take your book list with you; youre Evans, Six-Guns and Single-Jacks: A History of bound to find a new addition to your collection of Silver City and Southwestern New Mexico by Bob New Mexico books. k Alexander, and No Life for a Lady by Agnes Morley Karen Ray is preserving stories of ranching Cleveland. His two favorite photographic books are and farming life in southern New Mexico for a both titled New Mexico, one by David Muench and collection of essays. If you have one youd like to the other by Laurence Parent. share please contact her at Karen@rememberingDennis has a remarkable story about the most thetime.net memorable book hes come across: In the early years of buying books at estate sales, I waited all day to bid on a small box of 100-year-old, leather-bound books.... I persisted and got the books. My favorite one was a huge, four-inch-thick Don Quixote, illustrated by Gustave Dore, with probably 150 full-page steel-engraved prints. The book is over a hundred years old and I still love it. I decided back then to keep it for myself and its on my shelf at home. He still does some book repair and enjoys being able with simple materials to put a family treasure back together for someone. In his early years he worked with one of Santa Fes top architects and continues architectural design work through OKeefe Design. OKeefes Book Shop in Silver City. (Photo by Dennis OKeefe)
In a 2008 Business Exposure column in Desert Exposure (Another Chapter), Donna Clayton captured Dennis enthusiasm for both people and books: I get to meet the really neat people who want to sell their books, and talk with them about their books. And its great to see the look on peoples faces when they find something unique, or even just what theyd been looking for, some obscure book of poetry or something. Dennis OKeefes Essential New Mexico Library Milagro Beaneld War by John Nichols Bless Me, Ultima by Rudolfo Anaya Red Sky at Morning by Richard Bradford Tortuga by Rudolfo Anaya A Taco Testimony by Denise Chavez Sky Determines by Ross Calvin Fire on the Mountain by Edward Abbey House at Ottowi Bridge by Peggy Pond Church Death Comes for the Archbishop by Willa Cather People of the Valley by Frank Waters
Southwestern Jewelry and supplies Mineral specimens Unique gifts Free Mineral Museum Rock Hounding supplies and books 575.538.9001 royalsceptergems@yahoo.com
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Silver City celebrates the tastes and traditions of tamales, Americas oldest Christmas food.
Holiday Wrapping
o you like to play with your food? asks Consuelo Hester with a twinkle in her eye. Because this is like playing with
Consuelo Hester holds up an hoja and asks her WILL class, Do you like to play with your food? (Photos by David A. Fryxell)
your food. The 15 students in her Western Institute for Lifelong Learning class chuckle, and a few shift nervously in their folding-chair seats in the parish hall of Good Shepherd Episcopal Church in Silver City. Theyve assembled this Friday morning to learn how to make tamales, the traditional Mexican holiday fare, and most seem game for whatever Hester (literally) dishes out. But just how messy will this be? You may not want to do it once you see all the paraphernalia and how long it takes, Hester adds, gesturing at the array of bowls, string, corn husks, masa harina packages, chiles, cheese and spoons on the table in front of her. Fortunately, she and husband Tomwhos serving as her sous chef for the classhave already done most of the prep work: mixing bags full of masa dough from scratch, cooking a turkey and shredding it into a fragrant sauce, soaking dried corn husks (hojas) to make them pliable. The class will be playing with their food by learning to spread the masa onto a corn husknot too much, not too littleheld in the hand, using a vigorous motion with the back of a spoon that winds up applying the last swipe of masa to your palm. (If you dont get a little on your hand, youre not doing it right.) Then the students will add a generous dollop of turkey fillingsqueeze it with your already-messy hands so its not too liquidand fold. Got it? Repeat. If this were a true tamalada, a pre-celebration tamal-making gathering of family as traditional and essential to Hispanic holidays as Christmas cookiebaking is in other parts of the continent, the repetition would continue until the steaming pots on the stove had cooked 30-dozen tamales or more. Its not a tamale, Hester addsone last point before getting down to business. Its a tamal.
making honors, which last year were shared by Masa y Mas and St. Vincent de Paul Church. Tamales are, as the Lonely Planet travel website puts it, Americas oldest Christmas food. Native peoples started making tamales long before contact with Christianitythe word comes from the Nahuatl tamalliand no one knows for sure how the food came to be associated with this particular holiday. The general explanation is that no one wants to go through the effort of making them more than once, suggested Lonely Planet writer Andy Murdock after a tamal-sampling visit to New Mexico, so you might as well do it for the biggest meal of the year. The communal tamal-making of the tamalada continues a long a tradition of women gathering in the kitchen to labor over filling, masa and hojas. So delicate is the processnot so unlike giving birththat in parts of the Yucatan the tamal is referred to as the baby. Buying them in the grocery store, as you can around Christmas time throughout the Texas and the Southwest, might be considered non-traditional; ordering tamales online from Williams-Sonoma$60 a dozen, shipped frozenis definitely cheating. Although tamales are eaten all year, its the holiday season when tamaladas make them in bulk, hundreds at a time. For Mexican families, the holidays begin with the Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Dec. 12 and extend through Three Kings Day on Jan. 6. Nearly a month of celebrating can require a lot of tamales. The process of making tamales, syndicated columnist Gustavo Arellano (Ask a Mexican) told the New York Times, communicates the culture across generations, encompassing the value of family, nourishment and collectiveness. Arellano added, Tamales are a magical thing.
Hesters tamales, sealed with the masa dough, can simply be folded rather than tied individually, then bound in batches of six for steaming. be made in advance, to be warmed directly atop a bed of coals, steamed or grilled, even eaten cold on the move. Some scholars believe leaf-wrapped tamales predated those wrapped in corn husks. But corn has always been the essence of the tamal. Early Mesoamerican peoples believed that the gods created humans out of corn, and their diets went a long way toward making that metaphorical literal. First they domesticated maize, then developed the process of nixtamalization that made the primitive kernels digestible and nutritive to the human body: The hard corn was soaked with water and ashes (to make an alkaline solution), then hulled and ground into corn flour, known as masa. Today the process usually employs limewater, and is used in the production of tortillas and tortilla chips, hominy and of course tamales. The nutritional benefits of the process saved the entire Mesoamerican civilization, according to Claudia Alarcn, a Texas cultural historian who is writing a book on the history of tamales. The painstakingly wrapped tamales, she told the SeattlePI.com web-
Masa spread and lling added, the tamal gets folded rst the sides, then from the bottom.
ester will also be demonstrating the making of tamalespluralat the Silver City Museum on Saturday, Dec. 7, as part of the day-long Tamal Fiesta y Ms downtown, sponsored by the Southwest New Mexico Green Chamber of Commerce. The third annual fiesta will feature tamales and other traditional treats, such as capirotada, bizcochos and Mexican hot chocolate, and even redchile kettle corn. Competitors will vie for top tamal-
really got introduced to tamales when I was eight years old, Consuelo Hester recalls. My parents were undocumented workers, living in south Texas, and we didnt have any family there. So we went back across the border on a bus and I was introduced to this big, huge Mexican family. They lived in an old village outside of Monterrey. They killed a pig and we all shucked the corn. The women Hester demonstrates spreading the masa with the back of a spoon. made lard in this big copper pot. Kids in my age group learned about selection; you had site, became a part of ritual offeringseven a sort to pick perfect hojas. Wed shoo the flies away from of human stand-in: When the conquistadores came, the meat and masa. Making tamales was an event and and human sacrifice was no longer acceptable, they used tamales as a substitute, placing little bundles of a feast, everybody coming together. When she was a little older, age 12, Hester got corn as offerings. Although pork, beef and chicken are the most comto help make the actual tamales. Ive been making them ever since, she says with a smile. We make mon fillings in traditional Mexican tamales, over the them for Christmas, New Years, Day of the Dead, centuries tamales have been made with cheese, fish, weddings, birthdays, baptisms, any place you see frogs, turkey, mushrooms, rabbit, goat, wild boar, large families. Five years ago, we drove to Chicago to lamb, ox, gopher and even ants. Sweet tamales have visit my sister, and there she was on Christmas Eve, contained chocolate, raisins, honey, bananas, pumpkin, berries and pineapple. In a second WILL class on making tamales to eat after midnight Mass. She adds, I dont know how to make small sweet tamales, Hester features chocolate with pine nuts and star anise, cinnamon and pecans; she has amounts. The way I make them, its five dozen. Fortunately, tamales freeze well; the fully cooked also made them with raisins and other dried fruits, samples shes brought for the class to take home are and is experimenting with an apple pie tamal filling. Fillings also vary by geography. Garfish tamafrozen into bricks of a half-dozen, wrapped in aluminum foil. To reheat, she advises, steam without thaw- les are popular in the Gulf Coast state of Tabasco. ing first just as you would cook newly made tamales, In Oaxaca, in southwestern Mexico, tamales are but allow 90 minutes to two hours, rather than 45 to 60 wrapped in plantain leaves instead of corn husks minutes, because theyre frozen. You can also grill pre- and filled with chicken, onions and a mole made cooked tamales, still in the husk, or microwave them. with poblano peppers and chocolate. Venezuelan Asked about sauces for tamales or other fancy fix- versions, called hallacas, favor a filling of pork, raiings, she wrinkles her nose. The way I learned to eat sins and olives. People in Chiapas, Mexico, and in them, growing up, we ate them right out of the pot Guatemala make bean-filled tamales, similar to the and you tried to get as many as you could as fast as broadswords or bean bread enjoyed by the Cherokee. Brazilians make a sort of corn dumpling called you could. Its a hand food. You do have to peel them, Hester reminds her pamonhas, while Cuban street vendors cook up a masa and meat porridge known as tamal en cazuela. class of tamal novices. Dont eat it with the husk! amales date to pre-Columbian times, probably from what is now Mexico, when warriors needed a portable yet sustaining food. They could
amales came to the United States with Mexican immigrants to places like San Antonio, Texas, and Los Angeles, where they were so
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popular by the 1870s that city officials struggled to regulate an army of street vendors. California celebrates its tamal heritage with the annual Indio International Tamale Festival, held every December, which has set records both for the worlds largest tamal (40 feet in length) and as the worlds largest cooking and culinary festival. Texas adopted tamales with equal enthusiasm, and entire makeshift factories spring up to meet Dallas holiday-season hunger. The rest of America first experienced tamales at the 1893 Worlds Columbian Exposition in Chicago, where even today machine-made tamales wrapped in paper are sold Consuelo Hester checks on a pot full of steaming tamales, while husband and sous chef Tom looks on. alongside hot-dog stands. A different strand of tamal heritage was already established, however, in northern If your tamales taste too bland, put more chiles Louisiana, where Spanish settlers from central Mexi- in. You dont want a hot burnyou want to be able to co arrived in 1721. A Tamale Fiesta is still held every taste it when eating it, to taste the meat inside. And October in Zwolle, Louisiana. Perhaps as an offshoot dont just boil the meat; put in carrots, celery, chiles of this culinary tradition, or inspired by later migrant and my favorite, garlic. For pork tamales, I start with Mexican laborers, African-Americans in the Mis- a 10-pound pork shoulder roast. sissippi Delta developed a spicy Finding good hojas is crucial. tamale made from cornmeal Shell shop at Pros Ranch Market instead of masa, boiled in corn in Las Cruces, but also picked up husks. Roving vendors of these taa tamal-making kit at Wallys males pop up in the lyrics of early (she refuses to call it WalMart) 20th-century blues music, and that has promise. Avoid dried corn Robert Johnson sang about them husks with brown areas or dark in a popular 1937 song, Theyre spots, Hester says. And if you see Red Hot. huge ones, run away! The tamale pie, a sort of cornTraditional tamales are tied bread casserole, was invented with a strip of the corn husk, but around the turn of the 20th century as a lazy alterna- here Hester departs from the old ways. I got modtive to hand-wrapped tamales. Dont even talk to the ern, she confesses, holding up a ball of twine and a cooks at a true tamalada about tamale pie. pair of scissors. None of the recipes she hands out to the class calls for lard, another traditional component. You n Consuelo Hesters WILL tamalada, its all about the ingredients. Try to find the freshest types of can make the masa dough, Hester says, with shortenfood, especially the chiles, she advises. I prefer TAMALES continued on next page anchos, but its hard to find ones that are fresh, not old.
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I dont know how to make small amounts. The way I make them, its ve dozen.
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ing, butter, margarine or even canola oil, in a recipe she dubs Heart Smart Masa. If you want to use olive oil, she recommends freezing it first. She also opts for the modern in choosing how to mix the dough, recommending a heavy-duty stand mixer. Start with a whisk to beat the shortening, salt and baking powder until fluffy, then switch to a paddle attachment and add the moistened masa harina in handfuls. Beat, slowly adding vegetable or chicken stock, until the masa is smooth, about the consistency of cake frosting. Then whip for another 25 to 30 minutes until fluffy. Another of her recipes says simply, Beat together all the ingredients. Beat till smooth. Beat some more. How do you know when youve worked the masa dough enough? Drop a grape-sized bit of masa into cold water. If it floats, its airy enough to spread on the hojas. If it sinks, beat another five minutes and try again.
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aking a well-soaked corn husk and a healthy dollop of masa dough, she sets the open husk in her palm and applies a smear of masa with the back of a spoon. (Not the tip of the spoon, but the bowl.) With each whisk of masa, she moves the husk around in her hand to present a fresh canvas. With each whisk, too, a yellowish line of dough winds up on her palm at the end of the stroke. She covers slightly more than the top half of the husk with masa, then adds the filling. The sides fold inone, two. Unlike tamales made more like a burrito, with the masa plopped in the middle rather than spread like peanut butter on a sandwich, this approach sacrifices a little masa when the steamed tamal is unwrapped. It has the advantage, however, of employing the sticky dough to seal the folded tamal. Up goes the bottom to complete the basic tamal fold. The top remains open, so the tamales need to stand upright in the steamer. Because of the doughs adhesion, its not necessary to tie each individual tamal to keep it closed. Hester places them, folded side down, on a cutting board until she has a half-dozen, then runs twine around the entire bunch. Into the steamer they go, with extra hojas inbetween layers. If you do not have a stew pot with a rack on the bottom, her recipe handout advises, crumple aluminum foil to make about a three-inch reservoir where you pour water and place 10 small pebbles. When the pebbles click during cooking, you know you dont need to add water. When the clicking stops, add boiling water to the pot. (Another layer of hojas goes between the aluminum foil and the tamales bundle.) Cook covered for about 45 minutes. Cool slightly and enjoy with family. k In Desert Exposure editor David A. Fryxells house, the traditional Christmas fare is Scandinavian krumkake. Right: Hester displays a nished batch of tamales, hot out of the steamer.
Activities for the third annual Tamal Fiesta y Ms in Silver City include: On Broadway west of Bullard Street, Saturday, Dec. 7: 10 a.m.-3 p.m.: Food and folk art vendors 10-11 a.m.: Opening ceremony with a mariachi troupe 11:15 a.m.-noon: Traditional dancers from Chihuahua, Mexico Noon: Tamal judging, awards for best traditional and gourmet tamales 1-4 p.m.: Tardeada, street party with live music, dancing, shopping and food At the Silver City Museum, 312 W. Broadway: Friday, Dec. 6, 2 p.m.: Book signing with Stacia Spragg-Braude, author of If Theres Squash Bugs in Heaven, I Aint Staying, about a woman farmer from Corrales, NM Saturday, Dec. 7, 10 a.m. for adults, 1 p.m. for children: Tamal-making workshops with Consuelo Hester. Learn about cultural heritage in the kitchen. Also, the museum will have printouts of traditional Hispanic recipes available all day. At the Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College: Wednesday, Dec. 4, 10:30 a.m.: Storytime, with an Hispanic foods theme. For more information, call (575) 538-1337 or visit www.tamalestaymas.org. To learn more about classes offered by the Western Institute of Lifelong Learning, see www. will-learning.com.
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A crowd gathers in the plaza in Taos on Dec. 11, 1942, to hear the US declaration of war. (National Archives)
very day we lose more and more World War II veterans. Of the 16 million Americans who served in the armed forces during the war, it is estimated that about 600 per day dont make it to the next sunrise. Somewhere between 1.2 and 1.7 million of those US veterans still survive to mark Pearl Harbor Day this month. New Mexico, as everyone knows, played an enormous role in the warthe development and testing of the atomic bomb at Los Alamos and White Sands, respectively. Then there were the members of the New Mexico National Guard who were captured at Bataan and took part in the Bataan Death March and imprisonment. About 1,800 New Mexicans participated in the battle at Bataan, with fewer than half returning home after the end of the war. Battery G of the 200th Coast Artillery, part of the Bataan defense, listed its home station as Silver City, while the Regimental Headquarters and Headquarters Battery listed Deming as their home stations. The 200th was an offshoot of the New Mexican cavalry units that were sent to Cuba during the Spanish-American War. New Mexican members of the Dine (Navajo) tribe became Code Talkers, whose distinctive language helped defeat the Japanese army in the Pacific. (There were also Comanche Code Talkers in the European Theatre, and several from the Meskwaki Nation in Iowa were used in North Africa.) Although not a Code Talker, Sgt. Joe Kieyoomia was a Dine of the 200th Coast Artillery who was taken prisoner on Bataan and survived the Death March and several years of imprisonment. He was tortured repeatedly, including being forced to stand in the snow until his feet froze, tearing the skin off his soles when he was finally allowed to move. His captors at first thought he was a Japanese traitor, but when they finally realized that error they tried to force Sgt. Kieyoomia to break the code. He was not trained in the Code Talkers lingo, which used shortened and metaphorical versions of the native language (such as the Dine word for potato for hand grenade), and he thought it was gibberish. Sgt. Kieyoomia also has the distinction of surviving the atomic bomb dropped on Nagasaki, crediting the thick concrete walls of his prison cell for his survival. New Mexico also contributed two journalistic icons, writer Ernie Pyle and cartoonist Bill Mauldin, to the story of World War II. War correspondent Pyle, although originally from Indiana, was fond of Albuquerque, where he lived for a few years before his death in the Pacific. He wasnt as embracing of other parts of our fair state, noting that many of the authors and artists in Santa Fe were freaks and pretenders, who had overinflated views of themselves. (That same sentiment is shared by many 70 years later.) Mauldin, who was born in Mountain Park, NM, in Otero County, later moved to Arizona, but is still seen as a great New Mexico-bred talent. His car-
toon work, often depicting Willie and Joe, two bedraggled infantrymen, led to a great print career and earned him two Pulitzer Prizes.
ut New Mexico went above and beyond the call of duty in other ways as well. Nearly 50,000 men from the state were drafted or enlisted in the armed services, with around 2,500 New Mexicans giving their lives. New Mexico had the highest rate of volunteers and the highest percentage of casualties of all the then-48 states. Additionally, New Mexico was home to prison camps, several Japanese-American internment camps, artillery and aerial bombing ranges, training stations, and a number of other military installations, many of which were clustered in southern New Mexico. Among them was the Alamogordo Army Air Field, which is now Holloman Air Base, a training base for B-17 and B-24 bomber crews. It also was a base where WASPsWomen Airforce Service Pilots were used, flying B-17s, C-47s and at least six other types of planes. They did cargo deliveries, search missions and flight checks. WASPs served extensively stateside, with nearly 1,100 women passing the training of the 25,000 or so that applied. WASPs were also used at Biggs Field in El Paso, Clovis Army Air Field, Deming Army Air Field (where the women flew at least four different types of military aircraft) and Fort Sumner Army Air Field, where they were used as utility pilots for C47s and C-53s. No African-American women were allowed as WASPs, although one Lakota Sioux was accepted; it is not clear if any Latinas were part of the crew. During the short existence of the WASPs, 38 women died. They were not considered veterans or even part of the military until the late 1970s, after a long fight with the military higher-ups. Other air bases were established in Carlsbad, Roswell, Hobbs and of course Albuquerque, the former Albuquerque Army Air Base. That base is now Kirtland Air Force Base, the sixth largest airbase in the US. All were used for training. The famed Tuskegee airmen, the US first African-American aerial combat group, also trained in Deming and Roswell.
New Mexican Bill Mauldin won two Pulitzer Prizes for his Willie and Joe cartoons.
his hometown was in the hands of the Russian Army. After being pressured by his American wife, in 1985 he turned himself in. He was formally forgiven and became a US citizen and lived until January of this year. Lordsburgs place in history as a Japanese internment camp was sealed in July 1942, when two Japanese men, Toshio Kabata, age 58, a farmer from California afflicted with TB, and Hirota Isomua, 59, a fisherman in California who had spinal injuries and who is said to have walked with a stoop, disembarked from a train in Lordsburg. While one of the soldiers assigned to guard them went for water, the second, a PFC Clarence Burleson, shot and killed both men, whom he claimed tried to escape. Burleson was court-martialed and charge with manslaughter, but was found not guilty. Locally, he was briefed feted as a hero; an officer kept the shotgun-shell casings from the gun that killed the two men, proclaiming that Burleson deserved a medal. That did not happen. Camp Santa Fe housed POWs and Japanese internees as well over the course of the war. It was not without its own problems, the first being when a group of armed locals went to the camp in early 1942, bent on revenge after hearing of the Bataan Death March. The camp commandant talked them out of it, noting that any action might lead to harsher treatment of American POWs by the risoners of war Japanese. were also sent to In March 1945, an New Mexico, which A 2005 aerial photo shows the World War II airuprising by some of the had at least three camps: eld at Fort Sumner still visible. Japanese took place, in Santa Fe; in Roswell near the Walker Airbase, which held about 4,800 when they were protesting the transfer of three of German and Italian soldiers; and Camp Lordsburg, their comrades who were leaders of an earlier protest. which housed German and Italian prisoners and more Some rocks were thrown at Border Patrol agents and Japanese internees. The latter had branch camps in the response was quick and harsh, as the guards used Hatch, Fort Bayard, Deming, Anthony and Las Cru- batons and tear-gas grenades to break up the melee. ces (from which Werner Paul Lueck escaped in 1945, Four Japanese were injured and taken to hospital. As reported in the Montreal Gazette, of all places, not being caught again until 1954 in Mexico City), as pointed out in Roger Lanses interesting book, World four German sailors escaped the camp located at War II Prisoner of War Camps in Southwest New Fort Stanton, near Capitan: A mounted, gun-toting Mexico (Stalag Lordsburg, June 2011). Lanse notes posse of ranchers and cattlemen rounded up and corthat there were nearly 700 POW camps or branches in ralled four escaped German prisoners from the fedthe US during the war, which held a half-million pris- eral internment camp at Fort Stanton today. On[e] prisoner was wounded slightly in a brief exchange of oners over the course of the conflict. In New Mexico, the prisoners were used for all gunfire as the posse surprised the sleeping Germans types of work, from agriculture to clerical to con- on a hillside in the Lincoln National Forest about 14 struction, and were paid $3 per day, the minimum miles from Fort Stanton. The Germans, seamen from wage of the times. Prisoners also helped build the the scuttled liner Columbus, were interned after the outbreak of the European war in 1939. state fairgrounds in Albuquerque. Perhaps that soldier was the only Axis casualty on There is mention of another camp at the Portales fairgrounds where Italian prisoners were held, but the US mainland. there is not much information available about the accuracy of that possibility. ombing ranges were also numerous, used by An interesting story that took place at Deming, a flyers for practice. The ranges were used for camp that was used for less than a year, was the escape dummy bombs made of concrete or that were of Georg Gartner, a German prisoner, who was never metal shells that were filled with sand. A smoke recaptured. Even though the war had ended, Gartner charge was inside each bomb, to mark where it wasnt too anxious to return home after learning that landed. In Albuquerque, mock airplanes were placed
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around. When daybreak came, the theory went, the bats would hide in dark placessuch as attics. The timer would tick down shortly after and, without obvious explanation, hundreds of thousands of Japanese buildings (which were built mostly of wood and paper) would burn to the ground. The military liked the idea so much that it allotted $2 million for the project, which started in 1942, but was scrubbed in 1944, since it would have taken at least another year to develop. But that was only after some bats that were acciden- War correspondent Ernie Pyle tally released burned a test range lived in Albuquerque. in Carlsbad, where the idea was being tested, due to the availability of the millions of bats that roost in the caverns. Not content with that, the disgruntled bats, with explosives attached, went to roost under a fuel tank. A V-2 rocket, the awful weapon developed by Complete Germany for World War II, also made history in New Mexico, but not until 1947. That was when an errant variation of the V-2, the Hermes 2 missile, was fired from White Sands, and due to a breakdown in missile range safety protocol was launched and headed a bit too far south, landing ironically in a cemetery 3.5 miles south of Juarez, Mexico. The missile took only five minutes to reach its destination, creating a crater 50 feet across and 24 feet deep. There were no injuries, apologies were made and the area cleaned up at US taxpayers expense. Quipped an expatriate German scientist working on the project at White Sands: We were the first German unit to not only infiltrate the United States, but to attack Mexico from US soil! War never serves any useful purpose, but when it was required, New Mexicans certainly proved that they would do their part to bring the world back to some semblance of peace. k Longtime Desert Exposure contributor Jeff Berg now lives in Santa Fe.
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Fiery aftermath of the bat bomb test in Carlsbad. on tall poles and were used for target practice by aerial gunners. Our fair state was also the home of two other unusual war-era incidents, one during the war and one a couple of years after, which demand a notation. The first was the testing of a new device called the bat bomb. An idea proposed by a dentist, Dr. Lytle Adams, the bat bomb came to be when he discovered that bats could carry up to three times their own weight, which would allow for them to be used to firebomb Japan. According to nowiknow.com, Adams theory was straightforward: Collect a million of bats and strap timed incendiary devices to their backs while they hibernated. Stick a thousand of them each into a thousand bombs designed to open at high altitudes. Fly over Japan at night, drop the bombs, and then let the bats fly
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cil down to the nub, it had been customary to borrow a pencil from a classmate who had two. Cotton and Cepeda did their best to change that practice. From somewherefrom the garbage cans behind the college dorms and the nearby high school, I suspected they acquired an inventory of pre-owned pencils, some of them with teeth marks, few of them with erasers intact, none of them more than three or four inches in length. They began selling these gems to us in the capacity of stop-gaps for a reduced price. That is, a new pencil bought from the nearest grocery store cost five cents; a C & C Specialeven that early they had already adopted the C & C logo for their enterprisescost three cents, unless the used pencil was more than four inches long, whereupon the price tended to go up. (Cepeda carried a flexible plastic ruler in his hip pocket, a handy reference to be used when closing a deal.) I wont tell you that the boys made a heap of money from this venture, but they did make money until Miss Bascomb, our teacher, discovered what they were doing and put a stop to it by supplying the principals office with a box of new pencils that could be purchased for one penny each.
ave I known them long? Cotton and Cepeda? Ray Cotton and Rudy Cepeda? Well yes. I think they both joined our class right after the Korean War ended. That was in 53, so we must have been starting the sixth grade at the time. Their fathers were Korean War veterans, but before that, I think that both men had been drafted during the Second World War. Afterward, theyd been in the reserves, so theyd had the bad luck to be called up a second time for Korea. I saw Cottons father a few times; he worked as a jack-of-all-trades for one of the Realtors, and from what I recall, he was a lean man and didnt smile much. According to Cotton, his father had been wounded in Korea and had a purple heart. Someonemaybe it was Jesse Wallmantold me that the Cottons had moved up here from one of the villages south of El Paso, from Fabens or Fort Hancock, where their father had worked for the railroad between the wars. I didnt know Cepedas father, but he worked at the Santa Rita mine, on a drilling crew, or so Rudy told us. Cepeda and his sisters had been born in Bisbee,
but their father had brought them all over here after he came back from Korea because the Bisbee mine was closing while the copper pit at Santa Rita was thriving. Oh, no, nothing of the sort. Both of them settled right in and adjusted to the rest of us in quick time. Most of us, boys as well as girls, had been together since kindergarten. Once, in the fourth grade, a girl had joined the class who was not accepted, but she was with us only for a brief stretch and moved somewhere else within a couple of months. Cotton and Cepeda were accepted immediately. Sports, or what passed for sports in those daystouch football on the September playgroundbroke the ice. Cotton was fast, and Cepeda had a good throwing arm, so we werent three days into the first week of school before those talents put them on greased grooves. What we boys accepted, the girls also tended to accept, so within a week or two, it was as though they had started with us from the beginning and always been a part of our class. There was, however, a slight catch to our relations, and it is about that catch which I probably ought to inform you. During the time I was growing up in Silver City, by national standards, we kids were all poor only we didnt know it. My father, a teacher, did well enough, but nevertheless, we still raised chickens and tended a good garden in the spring and summer because we needed to supplement what we bought at the grocery store. Food was expensive; the monthly grocery bill took more than a quarter of my fathers salary, while we were also trying to pay a mortgage and making payments on our first car. We had enough to eat,
From somewhere from the garbage cans behind the college dorms and the nearby high school, I suspected they acquired an inventory of pre-owned pencils.
ith Cotton and Cepeda, the entrepreneurial urge struck early and struck deep. In those days, child labor laws being what they were, all we boys had jobs of one kind or another. Allowances for the girls seldom topped a quarter a week, enough to cover the cost of a movie and a box of popcorn, but for the boys, things were different. I worked Saturday mornings in a mom-and-pop grocery around the corner from my house, earning the princely sum of 25 cents per hour for stacking the shelves, sweeping the floor, and keeping the cooler filled with sodas. Two of my friends mowed lawns throughout the warm months and managed to make their way through winter on the proceeds. Three others had newspaper routes. As soon as the leaves began to fall, Cotton and Cepeda went into the leaf-raking business, earning an hourly wage for their labor while contriving to double their profit by selling the bagged leaves to people who wished to use them for compost. That was regular employment in my book, but where I learned that they had to be watched was when the two of them went into the pencil business. At school in 1954, we still did our written work with fountain pens; ballpoints were only in their infancy, and our teachers didnt like them because the ink tended to smear. Arithmetic, science and a host of other assignments were still done in pencil, and when this or that classmate sharpened his or her pen-
hat I like to remember as The Great Snake Scam followed shortly thereafter. In the mid-Fifties, almost all of us belonged to the Boy Scouts. Aside from weekly troop meetings, weekend hikes, quarterly overnight camp-outs, the annual merit badge show, and our yearly first-aid competitions, the really big event of the year, the one to which every boy looked forward, was summer camp. This promised one entire week to be spent 20 miles north of town, high up in the Gila National Forest at Camp Tuff Moses, a small paradise located on Meadow Creek at the foot of Signal Peak. The mere thought of spending a whole week unrestrained by parental rules, sleeping in tents, staying up late, reliving the adventures of real mountain men was more than enough to gladden the heart of every boy under the age of 14if, that is, one could raise the $14 camp fee. That fee covered, probably, what passed for food in the mess hall and a few minor incidentals such as our entrance physical, which was designed to prevent us from carrying chicken pox or measles into the camp. I wasnt working in that mom-and-pop grocery for nothing; I had Camp Tuff Moses in mind. I am fairly certain, too, that the C & C pencil business added at least a dollar or two to what Cotton and Cepeda had been saving up from their leaf-raking venture toward the camp fee. So, when the time came, right after school let out, we packed our knapsacks, rolled our sleeping bags, laid down our entry fee, and set off for a joyous week at Boy Scout camp. Now, I must say that with regard to most things, Cotton and Cepeda were fearless. They had no hesitation about climbing higher into Silver Citys ubiquitous Chinese elm trees than any of the rest of us were prepared to go. Cotton, risking life and limb, regularly practiced for track season by pole vaulting over barbed-wire fences, and when we were attempting to eradicate a wasps nest somewhere around town, something which Silver City had in abundance, both boys were invariably in the forefront with whatever weapons they could bring to bear. But when it came to handling reptiles, I happened to know for a fact that both of them were terrified of snakes and lived in mortal fear of crossing paths with so much as a bull snake or, worse yet, a live rattler. I knew this, and therefore, on the third day of camp that year, while I was sitting on a rock 10 or 15 feet above a shallow pool on Meadow Creek, whittling with my jack knife, I was not surprised to see the two of them turn over a rock below me and then leap about six feet into the air as they jerked to back away. What they had done was to uncover a nest of harmless baby water snakes, none of them more than 10 inches long. Once the shock of their discovery wore off, frightened but fascinated, they each picked up a long stick and began, more or less, to herd the little reptiles which, being so recently hatched, appeared to have no intention of leaving the water. And it was in that moment, not more than a minute or two after the snakes had been uncovered, that the lambs showed up to be shorn. The lambs in this case, a group of eight or nine urban scouts from an El Paso troop, all of them wearing Tenderfoot badges on their uniforms, all of them under the supposed leadership of one Second Class
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leader, the Second Class scout, was either an idiot or too much caught up in the excitement of the moment. Cotton and Cepeda immediately collected $4.25, while nine Boy Scouts from El Paso waded straight into the pool and began chasing snakes. If you are wondering about the odd 25 cents, one of the Tenderfeet had only a quarter, so they cut a deal by selling him the runt of the litter.
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scout, appeared unannounced from around a boulder in the direction of the mess hall. They spotted Cotton and Cepeda stirring the waters and hastened forward, intrigued. Hey, the one in the lead called out, whatcha got there? Cotton, playing it cool, said nothing but continued to stir the waters amidst the snakes, leaving Cepeda to seize the opportunity and open the negotiation. Our snakes, Cepeda said, in a calm, flat voice, barely glancing in the direction of the newcomers. Were exercising them. Whadayatalkin about? said the kid from El Paso. Our snakes, Cepeda replied. Once a day, we bring them down to this pool and exercise them. They need exercise just like you and me. Hey, wanna sell one? said one of the Tenderfeet, rushing forward enthusiastically. Well, Cepeda said, hesitating, sounding like he would rather cut off his right foot than part with one of the little darlings, I dunno. Ill give you 25 cents for one! the Tenderfoot offered. Cepeda looked grim. And again, he hesitated, and then he turned to Cotton. Whadaya think? he said. Do you want to sell Rover or, maybe, Harry? I dunno, Cotton said, finally turning in the direction of the El Paso troop. Fact is, weve gone to a lot of trouble to collect these snakes. Weve been working at it for the last three days, and then, if you see what I mean, we sort of hate to break up the herd. If, maybe, you guys would be willing to buy the lot for say oh, 50 cents each, and collect them after they finish with their exercise, and keep them together as troop mascots, well I suppose we might be willing to let them go. Personally, with that bit about collecting them after they finish with their exercise and keeping them together as troop mascots, I thought Cotton had overplayed his hand. I thought the Tenderfeet would break out laughing. They didnt. Instead, they coughed up, leading me to believe that their patrol
Our snakes, Cepeda replied. Once a day, we bring them down to this pool and exercise them.
o, nothing of the sort. When we all finally got to high school, rather than tone down their operations, Cotton and Cepeda turned C & C Enterprises into a going concern. First, if memory serves, came the sunflower-seed concession, Cotton and Cepeda buying sunflower seeds wholesale from the local grocery warehouse and selling them for an inflated price before and between classes. That worked pretty well for about two months, until the janitors complained about having to sweep up so many of the discarded shells. Mr. Craven, our principal, he of the 300 pounds and the foghorn voice, summoned Cotton and Cepeda to the office. With his usual keen eye, Mr. Craven had failed utterly to notice that sunflower seeds were being sold, but after being informed by the school secretary, she who knew everything about everything that went on in our school, operations were closed at once, and adjustments were set in motion. Cotton and Cepeda next established C & C Catering: Food for the Gods! This business operated from the trunk of a dilapidated 1942 Ford, still painted olive drabsomething, I have to imagine, that Cotton and Cepeda had acquired from an Army surplus auction or a condemned junk yard in a place like Deming or, perhaps, Lordsburg. Understand, if you will, that in those days we still qualified for New Mexico drivers licenses at the age of 14, so once those two had their licenses, they invested the proceeds of the sunflower-seed business in the 42 Ford and got it for about $35, or so Cepeda claimed. That car was such a wreck and the tires so slick that I dont know how they ever managed to keep it running, but in fact, the heap formed the foundation of their business. They were able to race away from school at noon, whip straight down to Bennies Diner on Pope Street, pick up whatever hot dogs theyd pre-ordered for the dayall nicely wrapped in clean waxed paperand rush back to the high school parking lot within 15 minutes. There, applying a 100% markup, they swiftly sold out to hungry students who were trying to avoid the school cafeteria. Business proved invariably brisk; as everyone knew, the food in the school cafeteria resembled the swill from a piggery, particularly on Friday when ground bottom-feeders were offered in imitation of fish. Eventually, someone complained, and in this case, it happened to be the bookkeeper who kept books for the cafeteria. The rub was that Cotton and Cepeda were feeding about a hundred students each day, so the cafeteria teetered on the verge of bankruptcy. A health inspector was summoned, and as soon as he took one look at the C & C Catering vehicle where the cooler used to keep the hot dogs warm happened to be resting on the boiled-out skeleton of a deceased raccoon, C & C Catering was closed down under COTTON AND CEPEDA continued on next page
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andy bars, bottles of pop, cigars and other such items never sold as well for C & C as the hot dogs, so I have no option but to think that our sophomore year in high school offered slim pickings for Cotton and Cepeda. But during our junior year, in chemistry class, when the two of them hit upon the idea of renting test tubes to students, they struck a gold mine and managed to work it to the limit for about a month. By nothing more than pure chance, Cotton happened to be in the lab, alone, on the day when a delivery man showed up at the door with a large crate of brand-new test tubes, which Mr. Martinez, our chemistry teacher, had been anxiously waiting to receive. Time and normal breakage had made a considerable dent in the preceding years supply of test tubes. Because we were about to start qualitative analysis, Cotton knew that large numbers of the glass tubes would be needed in order for each student to complete the associated experiments. Once more seizing an opportunity, Cotton shifted about half the contents of that delivery into his and Cepedas individual storage drawers, carefully hiding them beneath old lab aprons. During the weeks that followed, when this or that student ran short of test tubes, Cotton or Cepeda generously offered to loan their classmates any number of additional test tubes for only a small rental fee. As I recall, it came to about a nickel a test tube. I caught onto the scam after it had been in operation for two weeks, but I dont think that Mr. Martinez ever did. Business continued undetected until it ended swiftly one afternoonleaving C & C Enterprises with profits well into the blackwhen Lola Fae McNight carelessly set the lab on fire with a Bunsen burner. This unexpected event caused the chemistry classes to dispense with lab work for the remainder of the year. ell, no. The test tube rental was a clever project, but it was far from the slickest thing that I ever saw Cotton and Cepeda try. Now, understand, if you will, that I left for college in 1959, so what C & C Enterprises might have undertaken between 1959 and 2005 when I retired and returned here, I really cant say. Given the houses those two are presently living in, the cars their wives are driving, and the businesses that Im told they own, they seem to have done very well for themselves. But with regard to the facts about how they came by their apparent wealth, I dont know a thing, and to tell
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What the hell would any self-respecting New Mexican want with a bunch of poblano chile peppers?
you the truth, Im not sure I want to. What I remember as their attempt at a Grand Slam happened a long, long time agoin the fall of 1958 to be exact, not long after we had started our senior year in high school. It was about the time that the Republican Party was starting to assemble a war chest for the 1960 presidential camp a i g n as well as a host of local and state races. One morning in September, about two weeks after we started school, about the time the chile roasters began to appear around all the grocery stores, I got a telephone call from Cotton. Rudy and I could use a little help, he said. Were going to pick up some chile. Want to go for a ride? Well promise to have you back before supper. I wasnt working that day, so I said, Sure. Fifteen minutes later, I was surprised to see a stake truck stop in front of the house and honk the horn. I had, I suppose, expected to see the pickup they had bought to replace the 42 Ford. Where they had found the stake truck was anyones guess, but as soon as I saw it, I knew why they needed me: They werent going after some chile; they were going after a lot of chile.
The next surprise came when, instead of heading east out US 180 in the general direction of Central, Bayard, Hurley, Deming and, ultimately, Hatchgreen chile capital of the worldwe turned south up Cooper Street and made a beeline for Highway 90, accelerating rapidly in the direction of Lordsburg. What the hell? I said. This isnt the way to Hatch! Were not going to Hatch, Cotton said, letting loose a snicker. No, said Cepeda, throwing me a broad grin, Who said anything about Hatch? Were going to Portal. Portal? Portal what? I said. Id never heard of the place. Portal, Arizona, Cotton said. Its just a little southwest of Rodeo. I knew about Rodeo. It was a tiny spot on the road well down in Hidalgo County not far from the place where Geronimo had once surrendered and just across the border from Arizona. Youve got to be kidding, I said. Thats alfalfa country. They dont grow chile down there. Oh yes, they do. Cepeda grinned. Guy we know down in Portal has one entire acre of poblanos just waiting to be picked, bagged and returned to Silver City for a whopping big profit. Now I know youre kidding, I said. What the hell would any self-respecting New Mexican want with a bunch of poblano chile peppers? You planning to sell the darn things as fertilizer? No, Cotton said, what we intend to do with these particular chiles is sell them to willing buyers for use in their enchilada suppers and the like. I broke out laughing. Not a chance, I said. No New Mexican that Ive ever met would even once risk replacing a good Hatch or Rio Grande chile with a poblano. You guys are going to go bankrupt on this deal. Wanna bet? said Cepeda. After a seconds hesitation, I said, No. I knew who was offering me the wager.
They generously offered to loan their classmates any number of additional test tubes for only a small rental fee.
apologize. I dont mean to mystify. I know that you have only been in town for a short time, and I fully recognize that a lifetime lived in Philadelphia is no foundation for understanding much about chile, so let me try to explain. When you go downtown in Silver City to Georges Cafe, the Copper Taco Parlor, or Esperanzas Mexican Food and order an enchilada or a chile relleno, you can rest assured that you are going to be sold genuine Hatch chile or, at the least, Rio Grande chile grown somewhere on the river around Mesilla. Hatch chile is not a variety; Hatch chile is merely a New Mexico chile grown in the vicinity of Hatch, NM. You might call it an Anaheim chile, but if youve ever sampled a Hatch chile youd know the difference. Poblano peppers, imported originallyIm COTTON AND CEPEDA continued after next page
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toldfrom somewhere around Puebla, Mexico, are much fatter and deliver far less heat and taste than Anaheim chilees, and frankly, most New Mexicans dont much like them. They might get by for some dish worked up in a Tucson restaurant, but not here. Hence my astonishment when I discovered that we were driving south, well away from the Rio Grande Valley, in search of a load of mushy poblano peppers. We got over to Portal around 10:15 a.m. that day, so by 2 p.m., we had picked that acre clean of poblanos, bagged the lot, and started home. We pulled into Silver City at about 4:30, whereupon Cotton drove straight to Reston Keefers house. Reston owned a small appliance store; he also liked to do barbecue events for the service clubs in town. In addition, he held down a minor post in some association that lent support to the local conservatives. In advance of two or three forthcoming enchilada suppers that the Republicans were preparing to put on for the purpose of fundraising, Reston had offered to act as party quartermaster for the events. How Cotton and Cepeda had learned of this, I cant say, but they knew it, and that is where they saw their opportunity. What the hell do you mean, these are Republican chile peppers? Reston grunted, barely able to conceal his amusement. Well, they are! Cepeda protested. These peppers are fresh, and they come straight from Arizona. Thats Goldwater country! You know, Mr. Conservative! How much more Republican can you get? And just think of the marketing potential. You could advertise with something like The Grant County Republican Party Invites You to an Enchilada Supper Where the Enchiladas Will Be Made from Genuine 100% Republican Chile! Yeah, Cotton said, youll pack them in like sardines! You might even run out of peppers! Reston Keefer broke out laughing, slapping his thigh. Ive got to hand it to you, boys, he said, once hed caught his breath. For sheer brass, that beats anything Ive ever heard. But if I actually tried to do a number like that anywhere in Grant County, Id be run out of New Mexico on a rail or, worse yet, boiled in oil. Do the two of you really suppose that a single citizen anywhere around hereAnglo, MexicanAmerican, or even Asiancant, in an instant, differentiate between a poblano pepper and a Hatch chile? But because I like your style and dont want to stand in the way of free enterprise, Ill give you some advice that just might help you unload how many sacks did you say youd picked? Forty, Cepeda said, somewhat crestfallen. Right, Reston said. Forty sacks. Well, either of you boys ever hear of that stuff they call Tex-Mex? Isnt that the kind of Mexican food they try to pass off as genuine somewhere down in Texas? Cotton asked. Reston Keefer smiled. Give you any ideas? he asked. Cepedas eyes lit up. I wonder how far it is to Fabens or Fort Hancock? he said. I think, Reston speculated, that you might have to go a little farther, possibly as far as Van Horn, before you begin to hit the kind of uninformed Tex-
These peppers are fresh, and they come straight from Arizona. Thats Goldwater country!
Mex cooks that youre looking for. You mean Anglos who have never seen a real, flat, New Mexico enchilada?
Cotton clarified. Exactly,said Reston Keefer. If we leave now, Cepeda said, looking at his watch, we can make Van Horn in time for breakfast, just about the time the restaurant people are starting to buy their days supplies. Right, Cotton said. Thanks for the help, Mr. Keefer. Dont worry about me, I said. Ill walk home from here, and good luck. One more thing, Reston Keefer said, as the boys were starting to head for the truck. Yes, sir? Cotton said. I think Id forget about calling those things Republican peppers, if I were you, Reston said. Id just tell whoever you happen to meet that you have chile to sell and let it go at that. Exactly what may have happened in Van Horn, I dont know, but two days later, Cotton and Cepeda were back, having sold all 40 sacks or their poblano peppers to their new buddy, Billy Jim. Billy Jim, I gathered after a few minutes conversation with them, was the owner of Billy Jims Tex-Mex Fiesta Garden, a diner of sorts located somewhere on the outskirts of Pecos, Texas, which is a stretch beyond Van Horn. That the trip proved lucrative was only too true because the boys werent back three days before they called me again to see if I wanted to help them pick a two-acre stand of poblanos growing somewhere in the vicinity of Willcox, Arizona. Having never smelled so much as a scent of remuneration for my previous labors on their behalf, I declined by telling them that I was already slated for work at the grocery.
o, if, as you say, you are really planning to buy a car from C & C Motors, let me offer you these few words of advice. If it is a new car that you are planning to buy, I would imagine that you are on fairly firm ground. If, on the other hand, you are looking at one of their pre-owned vehicles, I would check very carefully to make sure that the car has not previously been floating amidst the Hurricane Sandy sea surge. And do look at the alternator, wont you? It would be embarrassing for you to find, at a later date, that your alternator was actually a hamster running itself ragged inside an exercise wheel. k Phillip Pep Parotti grew up in Silver City during the 1940s and 1950s and has retired and come home after a long teaching career at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas.
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sit at the large wooden kitchen table with Gloria Reyes and the representative of Casa de Amor for elderly people, Maria Lopez. The television sound is at a low level. Glorias mother, Maria de Jesus, sits in a chair against the wall, probably because its easier for her to sit there than at the table. Shes 80 years old and can hardly raise her hand far enough to shake mine. Gloria tells an all-too-typical story for Palomas. Shes helping take care of her mother in the middle of a daily and weekly struggle to eat and pay bills. She cleans house for people, sometimes two times a week, sometimes not at all. Her two unmarried sons are still working in the chile fields in Colonia Victoria. But they get just between $15 and $18 a day, with $2.50 taken out of that for the ride to work. Wood from mesquite bushes is one thing thats for free in the desert. Fortunately, Gloria has a heater made of a black metal barrel that is fed by this wood. But Gloria is two months behind on her water bill. Finances are difficult now, but its even worse in winter, when they sometimes eat just once a day. Maria Lopez has not had any funds for elderly people for two months, and isnt sure when shell get more. Hunger in Palomas has gone on unchanged since the disasters struck in recent yearsthe tightening of the US border that dried up the sources of employment depending on border crossers, then the US recession, and then the drug violence that scared Americans away from going to the oculists, pharmacists and dentists in town. Palomas has a new mayor, Talaco Sanchez, who served as mayor before the late Tanis Garcia did. Townspeople can only hope that he can bring new employment to the town.
ou might think that people in Mexico can live on less money than we do, or that things are cheaper there. The people seem to live in a kind of minuscule, Lilliputian economic world compared to ours. But in reality they live in the same world. And Glorias sons earn in one day what people working for minimum wage in the US do in two hours. A study of Juarez carried out about a year ago concluded that the cost of living there is just 19% less than it is across the border in El Paso. Even though the macro-economy is improving in Mexico, the micro-economy in Palomas and areas nearby isnt changing, and people still could use help.
appearing to study much at all, Sheila says. Shes suAsilo para Ancianos per sweet and c/o Reina de Cisneros, PO Box 981 one of the most Columbus, NM 88029 ambitious kids in Palomas. Border Partners A m a n d a s 406 S. Granite St. older sister was Deming, NM 88030 (575) 546-1083 pushed into (715) 292-9557 (cell) prostitution by info@borderpartners.org her parents, www.borderpartners.org and Sheila and other people Casa de Amor Para Ninos (House of Love for Children) feared that the The Light at Mission Viejo same thing c/o Jim Noble might happen 4601 Mission Bend to her. So SheiSanta Fe, NM 87507 la has given a (505) 466-0237 info@casadeamorparaninos.org stipend to the www.casadeamorparaninos.org parents for necessities and Our Lady of Palomas keeps Amanda PO Box 622 learning. Columbus, NM 88029 (575) 531-1101 A 17-yearourladyoaspalomas.org/palomas_ old went to hunger_project.html study nursing in Nuevo CaRio Grande Borderland sas Grandes, Ministries (267) 322-1708 and when she PO Box 216 came back she Columbus, NM 88029 talked about Contact: Susan Hutchins all the things susan1028@aol.com shes learning. Now there are a couple other girls who are planning to be nurses, too. When they see someone go to college, its as if they see how they do that, and think about doing it themselves, Sheila says. She avoids getting help from church organizations or anything institutional. Instead, she finds support in spontaneous friends who come along, both Mexican and American. Theres more spirit in it that way! she says heartily. Sheila carries out the same project west of Mexico City. Its my passionits pedal to the floor! Unhappily for Palomas, shes planning to make her base in that part of the world pretty soon.
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heres someone Ive gotten to know recently whos doing exciting things in Palomas. Shes Sheila Bjelitich, one of the travelers mentioned in last months column. Shes a semi-retired former engineer whos promoting the idea of free online education to street kids and other poor kids in town. Last year they used to meet with kids where the empty tables are at the Del Rio store, and there were 20 kids there sometimes. This year theyre meeting in smaller groups at the library, where they can be seen fingering the keys of very small laptop computers. To illustrate some particularly heart-rending aspects of poverty, Ill transmit some of Sheilas stories about these children. Sheila tells about two boys whose mother has a new baby every year, and theres never enough to feed them. So the boys are prostituting themselves to men for their younger siblings sake. The boys dont buy anything extra for themselves, Sheila claims. Whether the child abusers are American or Mexican, or if theyre part of a prostitution ring, Sheila doesnt know or even ask. She just keeps herself on the positive side and gets them educated. (Male prostitution has gone on in Palomas for years, but apparently on a small scale only.) Sheila knows a 13-year-old girl named Amanda whose father took her out of school in sixth grade to sell gum on the street, even though shes exceptionally bright. She gets the highest grades without
uring the past two or three years, it seems as if donations for Palomas organizations through this column have come to a standstill. Its hard to track these things, but none of these organizations is reporting any inflow of money at all. It could be partly because the violence in Palomas has slowed down and there is less of a crisis now. But there is no less need there at all. Hunger is silent and invisible. People still need food donations, which come mostly through Casa de Amor. All the other organizations do essential things, too. There will forever be a need for soap, shampoo, toothbrushes and toothpaste, diapers for children and elderly people, and all kinds of household items. Casa de Amor has a very hopeful scholarship program for kids at all levels of school. The Asilo para Ancianos appears always wanting for sheets, diapers, towels, food and cleaning materials. Border Partners can always use more funding for its creative projects. And Our Lady of Las Palomas has distributed several thousand dollars worth of food in Palomas this year. So please give generously this year, taking into account that contributions are tax-deductible. And may everyone have a happier holiday than usual this year. k Borderlines columnist Marjorie Lilly lives in Deming.
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have rarely been accused of being some sort of pinky-extending gourmand, or a revered authority among the gastronomical illuminati. I am unrepentant about my appetite for starchy, salty foods that are generally smothered in melted cheese or gravy. Sometimes both. My future coronary surgeon will doubtlessly disapprove of my gullet-stuffing shenanigans, but until he has my credit-card number on file, I will hold no caloric delivery system more divine than that fluffy staple of local cuisine, the venerable burrito. The humble burrito has been around for a long time in New Mexico, probably longer even than nonfunctioning turn signals. My mom grew up in Socorro (town motto: Its Not Always Dusty, But When It Is, Its All Sad, Huh?), caught up in that twilight zone between southern and northern New Mexico. Thus, she introduced these soft cylinders of wonderfulness to me as burros as a kid. We would all squeeze into the family pickup and drive up to the Monzano Mountains to cut firewood for the day, and spread across the dashboard were foil-wrapped bean-and-cheese burros for lunch, basking in the warm autumn sunshine coming through the windshield. Mom would pack my school lunch, and on a magnificent day, these same bean-and-cheese carb-missiles would be in my brown sack. Once the family relocated to Las Cruces, however, I was quickly informed that these delicacies were actually known by a more diminutive name. Menso, the overly large kid with apparent glandular problems said as he relieved me of my lunch, Theyre called burritos. t struck me then as a perfect, portable food construct, a beautifully simple solution to onerous mealtime traditions. By ensconcing a mixture of beans, chile, meat, cheese or any combination of said items in a tight, edible flour-tortilla wrapper, I could munch with confidence that there would be no waste. In fact, one of the benefits to the burrito is that it requires no external support apparatus: no plate, no fork, not even a napkin if you use the last scrap of tortilla efficiently to dab the corners of your meat-hole. It wasnt long until I discovered the amazing versatility of the burrito. You can stick anything into a flour tortilla and ram it down your gullet. Ive introduced a plethora of non-traditional ingredients into the burrito format with positive results: hot dogs, lunch meat, meatloaf, leftover enchiladas, fish sticks and even once, in an experiment that can only be
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described as a bold vision that didnt meet expectations, gummy bears. Its perfect for breakfast stuffed with eggs, chorizo and potatoes. At lunchtime, a light concoction of frijoles and green chile will work. And smothered burritos can rule the dinner table like rotund little pipes of chewy joy. Like a designer tuxedo, a burrito is perfect for all occasions. Some gastronomical infidels have introduced maverick ingredients to the basic burrito concept that are pushing the envelope a bit too far, however. And yes, Im looking at you, California. I have no particular gripe about adding rice to a burrito, but I am fully aware it is a cheap filler, not a tasty bonus ingredient. If rice becomes a primary ingredient, youre doing it wrong. Even more worrisome is the trend to stick healthy food into the tortilla. Bean sprouts, lettuce, salad dressing, alfalfa sproutsyou know, panda food. Luckily, these offending entres are classified as wraps so theyre easier to avoid. Less easy to avoid are the fast-food temples that compress a watery egg-and-sausage-dust mixture into a soda-straw-sized cylinder and market it as a breakfast burrito. It tastes like a mouthful of sadness and disappointment. As much as I encourage burrito experimentation, moreover, thou shalt not deviate from the classic white-flour tortilla. A tomato-basil-pine-nut gluten-free tortilla will get your ass beat. Epic burritos are still whispered about in reverent tones whenever we New Mexicans gatherthe burritos that changed our lives and brought us closer to God. For me, the legendary ones are few but classic: a greasy Frontier breakfast burrito in Albuquerque; a meat-packed giant as big as a babys forearm at Go Burger in Las Cruces; a smothered chorizo burrito at Andeles in Mesilla. We all have our life-changing burritos, and luckily for us, they can be found at every hard-grease, back-alley restaurant in every town in New Mexico. Perfection may be the realm of the Gods, but the burrito is proof that divinity lives within each of us. k Henry Lightcap lls his burritos in Las Cruces.
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The primary relationship is between the addict and the substance. You come second.
Addiction as Adultery
ven though adultery is sexual, and addiction usually isnt (unless its an addiction to something sexual), addiction and adultery are first cousins. When youre in a committed relationship, and your partner turns to someone else for sex, you can draw basic conclusions about his (or her) relationship with you and with the lover: 1. Perhaps he isnt sexually satisfied at home. That could speak to your vitality as a sexual partner and to your sexual congeniality, or it could reveal something about him, perhaps an evasion of commitment, an internal boredom, selfishness, lack of maturity, a wish to feel young again, or a sexual addiction. So maybe its partly about you, or maybe not. 2. For whatever reason, he or she doesnt consider you as important as his sexual satisfaction. One friend asked a devoted husband if hed ever cheated on his wife during their 30 years of marriage. Oh, no! he said. It would hurt her too much. Id never take that chance. He was thinking of consequences for his wife. She loved and trusted him, which gave him a responsibility. If your partner is cheating on you, its pretty clear the potential effects on you arent his primary concern. It isnt that he actively wants to hurt you (most of the time), just that he hasnt really thought about how it might affect you. Youre not at the top of his list of priorities. 3. In other words, maybe he or she doesnt connect the dots emotionally. He might even believe the affair has nothing to do with his love for you. He compartmentalizes. The fling is his; the relationship with you is separate, unrelated. He may have no wish to jeopardize the relationship. He just believes his convenient delusion that the affair is happening on another continent and theres no intercontinental travel. These comments are about adultery. If someone you love is addicted to somethinga substance or a behavior the same conclusions apply: (1) You may or may not be a causal factor. (2) His or her primary relationship is with the addiction. (3) She may kid herself that it isnt affecting you. Whatever ideas, justifications, excuses and logic decorate the addiction, the one certainty is that everything else, and everyone else, including you, comes a distant second.
Hes probably not drinking to punish them. He just wants, he needs, his drink (or his drug, his exercise, his work, his pornography...).
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on is married to Janine, and they have three children. Ron cares about his family but is most deeply attached to his drink. Because he keeps disappointing them, their love for him is steadily eroding. They know he isnt truly engaged in their lives; he goes over to his lover, his buzz, his drink, his high, every evening. Since the people who believe and hope they matter to him are secondary, hes betraying his marriage. Hes betraying his family. He doesnt think of it that way, but whenever theres a conflict between those people and his alcohol, like a tug-of-war, the rope MASSAGE THERAPY connecting him to his drink turns out to be stronger than the rope connecting him to his family. Lic. in NM #MT930 Member AMTA Part of what his family strugMassage tailored to your individual needs. gles with is knowing he doesnt Give the special gift of a massage for the Holidays want to hurt them. He also doesnt Gift Certificates available want to be an alcoholic. Hes Call or text: 915-525-3885 probably not drinking to punish Additional Services: them. He just wants, he needs, his Personal Care ProviderBabies to Seniors Travel Companiondomestic & international drink (or his drug, his exercise,
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BODY, MIND & SPIRIT continued ing them. Try not to take it personally. (Which means admitting more fully the breadth and power of any addiction, and feeling more grief for this person you love.) At the same time, its absolutely about you, because it affects you deeply. Thats where your responsibility toward yourself begins.
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hat are your choices? And what are the addicts (or the adulterers) choices? You can enable, in whatever degree, or you can name whats going on. If you enable, youre making a decision about whats worth what to youfor your own reasons, youre choosing to tolerate the pain of staying with someone you no longer trust. How you weigh the cost/benefit of staying or leaving will vary widely according to each person and situation. And theres no right or wrong answer. It just has to be digestible for you. If you enable, you make the compensationsearn the money he doesnt because he isnt reliable, go to all the childrens games, activities, school meetings, by yourself. Participate in the community as a wife without her husband present. Protect his image, because its part of your image. Figure out how to manage your own anger. Believe it isnt that bad... discipline yourself to put up with a choice you feel you have to make.... Or you can change the game. Stop pretending to others that hes a social drinker. Stop picking up all the pieces he drops. Tell him what you perceive to be the truth (without softening it to protect his ego), and state your own limits: If you keep drinking, Im leaving. Ill tolerate your drinking three evenings a week as long as you dont drink the other four. (I realize that sounds odd, but I know a couple for whom it worked.) Whatever you can live with. he hardest part, if you love someone whos an addict, is recognizing that the addictive substance or behavior is her meaningful relationshipher lover, her (sadistic) muse, her other household. As long as shes engaged with her addiction, you are just not as important to her. But that recognition honors you by respecting yourself enough to tell the truth. Once you name it, you admit, you know, she isnt primarily interested in you or the family, even if she herself wishes she were. Theres freedom in that acknowledgement. If she isnt primarily interested in you, maybe you dont have to be primarily interested in her. Shes doing what she most cares about; you can focus on what matters to you. You can think of that as to hell with her, or you can think of it as equilibrium. Youre not doing it against her; youre doing it for yourself and to balance the relationship. You dont have to stay angry to change your own priorities. You can swear and grieve, and then change your expectations, adjust your life. It isnt fun, and it feels lonely, but it is strong. Youre taking care of yourself, you can crawl out of the infinite pit of his or her addiction-attachment, and you can design days that hold you at their center. If youre telling truths out loud, you can choose to put it to him: This is how his addiction and his behavior are affecting you and others. How much does he care? Enough to make changes? Enough to get the help he needs in order to make changes? Does he really want to try, or is he trying because he doesnt want to lose the status quo? How far gone (into the addiction, away from you) is he, really? Can he even know himself well enough to tell the truth? How trustworthy he is, how trustworthy his an-
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swers are, how much staying connected matters to you, how much you need the relationship financially, how scared you are of unhooking... those are your questions, which only you can answer. If you name his realities, such as his addiction, youll end up having to name your own as well (often a motivation to keep enablingas usual, the enabler has her reasons for enabling). If he keeps insisting its not a big deal, your situation is not hopeful. If he blames you (youre too sensitive about it), thats not hopeful, either.
575-534-1261 Carol@CarolsChallenge.com
If you enable, youre making a decision about whats worth what to you
regret that it isnt simple to deal with. A few people can say, Hes drinking, or hes screwing aroundIm leaving. Most people arent so clear, especially when there are complex ingredients like families, long histories and integrated finances involved. So you struggle. But time will provide the guidance, and it will probably come from within you. If you tell the truth, stop blaming yourself or making excuses, youll wake up one morning and have your answer. I can put up with this, on such-and-such terms; or, Ive lost my connection and need to leave; or, I know what I need and can get it inside or outside of the relationship; these are my limits.... Whatever feels true for you will be your guide. So tell yourself your truth, give it some time, and listen well. Then youll be in charge of your life again. That is, youll be your own first-in-line, no longer just the person someone left for a lover. k Bina Breitner, MA, is a licensed marriage and family therapist (LMFT) in private practice in Tucson. She can be reached at (575) 538-4380, or (520) 820-7930, on Skype at bina.breitner, or at <binasun@yahoo.com>.
575-388-8858
Are you struggling with uncomfortable thoughts and feelings? Sometimes life presents you with challenges that you never dreamed of. Give me a call it is time to meet. I work with individuals who, have suffered deeply, find a path to healing. I help individuals move through difficult and strenuous times in their life. By restoring and increasing their well-being and love and acceptance of oneself. I am dedicated to my clients and determine to meet their needs. I am able to offer a special focus of therapy on addiction, codependency, abuse, depression, and anxiety.
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Maximizing Nutrition
ve spent the past 10 years combing through scientific studies for little-known, but important nutritional information about fruits and vegetables. Ive discovered a great deal of valuable research that has yet to filter down to consumers. Follow these 10 tips to get the most from your food.
S S
resh fruits and vegetables continue to respire, or breathe, even when stored in the depths of your refrigerator. Some fruits and vegetables re- For increased nutrition, look for deeply colored produce. Purple prospire more quickly than others duce is often the best choice. (Photo: Jo Robinson) I call these heavy breathers. These are the foods you should aim to eat as soon as ing them in your garden. possible after you harvest them or bring them home from the market. Foods that fall into this category 4. Chill Out include artichokes, arugula, asparagus, broccoli, ommercial growers know produce stays freshBrussels sprouts, cherries, corn, kale, lettuce, musher longer if its chilled right after harvest. We rooms, okra, parsley, raspberries, scallions, snap would do well to follow that example. Rather beans, spinach and strawberries. than leaving a basket of freshly harvested lettuce or kale sitting on your back porch, bring it in, dunk the greens in ice water, dry them off, and store them in 2. Fresh and Picked Ripe oft vegetables and fruits, such as berries, will the crisper drawer of your refrigerator. Meat and dairy must be refrigerated ASAP, but the provide incomparable flavor and nutrition if grown at home or bought from a local farmer. heat in a car can also spur the growth of potentially These foods are easily damaged during mechanical deadly bacteria on fresh produce. Make a habit of harvest, shipping and storage. Berries are naturals shopping for food after youve completed all of your for the home garden because theyre delicate and can other errands. Take along an ice chest if you have a spoil in a matter of days. Treat yourself to a feast of long journey home. flavors by growing these at home or embarking on a U-pick session at a local farm. 5. Make Mine Crunchy sparagus, broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cabbage should be cooked lightly. If they cook 3. Taste the Rainbow for more than five minutes, their natural o-called novelty vegetables, such as blue potatoes, purple cauliflower and red carrots, sweetness disappears, and off flavors and sulfuare beginning to show up more often in super- rous fumes begin to develop. To shorten the cooking markets, farmers markets and seed catalogs. Weve time, chop the vegetables into smaller pieces. Follow bred out the rich hues in favor of white, green and these steps to perfectly steam broccoli: Cut the brocorange. Unwittingly, when we got rid of the blue, coli into egg-sized clumps and arrange them stempurple and red, we were casting away anthocya- side-down in a steamer basket over a pot of boiling ninspotent antioxidants that may reduce the risk water. Put on the lid, and set a timer for four minutes. of cancer, cardiovascular disease, obesity, diabetes As soon as the timer rings, take off the lid, remove the broccoli from the heat and arrange it in a serving and memory loss. Reclaim these benefits by buying deeply col- dish. ored fruits and vegetables at the market or growBODY, MIND & SPIRIT continued on next page
Mindfulness!
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Qigong
Located at the New Mexico College of Natural Healing 310 West 6th Street in Silver City, NM
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One on One & Group Classes Yoga Class Schedule Tuesday & Thursdays
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Class Fees
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Urology
Dental Implants Cosmetic Dentistry Dentures Porcelain and Gold Crowns Bridges Porcelain Fillings Partials Extractions Cleanings Dr. Alejandro Baron L. Root Canals Dra. Yolanda Navarrete O. OPEN Free Transportation U.A.C.J. (from Columbus parking lot available) Mon-Sat
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eighborhood bragging rights typically come from growing the biggest fruits and vegetables on the block, but new research shows that smaller varieties may be more nutritious. This is especially true for tomatoes: The smaller and darker red the tomato, the more lycopene it has per ounce. Small tomatoes are also higher in sugar and have a more intense tomato flavor than slicing or beefsteak varieties.
8. Onion Nutrition
Take care not to overcook broccoli, asparagus, cabbage and cauliower, or you will lose a lot of nutritional value. Only lightly steam broccoli when you cook it, and eat it raw when possible. (Photo: Teresa Kasprzycka)
Bina Breitner
Consultations available by Phone: (520) 820-7930 (575) 538-4380 Skype: bina.breitner or at her Tucson office
Accepts Insurance
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se sweet onions for salads, sandwiches and other foods you eat raw. Use hotter, more pungent onion varieties in all other foods. If you cook them for just five minutes, they will become sweet and mild without losing any nutrients. Red onions can be either sweet or hot. You can tell them apart at a glance because the hotter ones are oval or round while the milder, hamburger onions are flat and wide. Red Baron is a small variety with vibrant burgundy bulbs that are extra-high in antioxidants. Scallions (or green onions) are better for your health, because the green part of the vegetable is more nutritious than the white bulb. The same is true for leeks.
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reason has to do with the arrangement of its leaves. The sun is essential for plant growth, but it also emits damaging UV rays. Plants protect themselves from the harmful part of the suns spectrum by creating a chemical sunscreen in shades of red, purple or reddish brown. When we eat the plants, those same chemicals go to work protecting us from UV light and diseases that result from UV exposure. The plants protection becomes our protection.
110 E. 11th Street SILVER CITY, NM 88061 (575) 388-0184 (575) 388-0186 Fax
Purple, yellow and red carrot varieties offer the most nutrients. Choose purple varieties of produce when possible. (Photo: Jo Robinson)
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For more information, call the Grant County Community Health Council at (575) 388-1198 ext. 10
Body, Mind & Spirit is a forum for sharing ideas and experiences on all aspects of physical, mental and spiritual health and on how these intersect. Readers, especially those with expertise in one or more of these disciplines, are invited to contribute and to respond. Write PO Box 191, Silver City, NM 88062, or email editor@ desertexposure. com. The opinions expressed herein do not necessarily reect the views of Desert Exposure or its advertisers, and are not intended to offer specic or prescriptive medical advice. You should always consult your own health professional before adopting any treatment or beginning any new regimen.
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D T
ear EarthTalk: Can you discuss pollutants in car interior materials, and also pollution inside cars originating from gasoline and diesel exhausts outside the car? he interior of your car may seem like a safe haven from air pollution, but it may actually be quite the opposite. Chemicals emanating from the steering wheel, dashboard, armrests and seats mix with the airborne pollution being generated under the hood to form a witchs brew of toxins for those riding inside. Research shows that vehicle interiors contain a unique cockThe Ecology Centers 2012 Consumer Guide to Toxic Chemicals in tail of hundreds of toxic chemiCars compared over 200 different cars across the 2010 and 2011 cals that off-gas in small, confined model years. Those scoring the most kudos in regard to interior air spaces, says Jeff Gearhart of the quality include the Honda Civic, Honda CR-Z and the Toyota Prius, Ecology Center, a Michigan-based pictured here. (Photo: Toyota) non-profit. The extreme air temperatures inside cars on sunny days can increase the concentration of Volatile Or- without BFRs. ganic Compounds (VOCs) and break other chemiConsumers can check on their late-model car by cals down into more toxic constituents. Some of the steering their web browser to the HealthyStuff.org worst offenders include airborne bromine, chlorine, website, the Ecology Centers free online resource lead and other heavy metals. Since these chemicals for consumer information. While environmental are not regulated, consumers have no way of know- and public health groups are working to try to get ing the dangers they face, adds Gearhart. automakers to clean up their interiors, individuals Exhaust fumes also find their way into the pas- can reduce their exposure by parking in the shade, senger cabins of many cars. The International Cen- using interior sun reflectors to keep temperatures ter for Technology Assessment down inside the car and roll(ICTA) found that concentrations ing down the windows to let the of carbon monoxide (a noxious fresh air in. by-product of internal combustion known to cause headaches, CONTACTS: Ecology Center, dizziness, nausea and fatigue as www.ecocenter.org; ICTA, www. well as being a major asthma trigicta.org; Model Year 2011/2012 ger) may be 10 times higher inside Guide to New Vehicles, www. any given car than outdoors along healthystuff.org/documents/2012_ the roadside. ICTA added that in Cars.pdf. k light of the fact that the average American spends an hour and a EarthTalk is written and edited half driving around each day, inby Roddy Scheer and Doug Moss car air pollution may pose one and is a registered trademark of of the greatest modern threats to E - The Environmental Magazine human health. (www.emagazine.com). Send questions to: earthTo help consumers minimize their exposure, the talk@emagazine.com. Subscribe: www.emagazine. com/subscribe. Free trial issue: www.emagazine. Ecology Center released the fourth version of its com/trial. Consumer Guide to Toxic Chemicals in Cars in
Gail Stamler, C.N.M. 1618 E. Pine St. Silver City, NM 88061 Phone (575) 388-1561 Fax (575) 388-9952 www.cassiehealthcenter.com
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2012, comparing over 200 different cars across the 2010 and 2011 model years. Those scoring the most BODY, MIND & SPIRIT continued on next page kudos in regard to interior air quality include the Honda Civic, Toyota Prius and Honda CR-Z. The Civic scored first by being free of brominebased flame retardants (BFRs) in interior components, utilizing polyvinyl chloride (PVC)-free interior fabrics and trim, and having low levels of heavy metals. Meanwhile, pulling up the rear were Mitsubishis Outlander Sport, the Chrysler 200 SC and the Kia Soul. The Outlander finished in last place due to its use of BFRS as well as antimony-based flame retardants in its interior, chromium treated leather components and excessive amounts of lead in Specializing in seating materials. NAET Allergy Elimination The good news is overall veand Pain Management hicle ratings are improving, re204A W. Market Street ports the Ecology Center, adding Silver City that the top performers have gotten rid of BFRs and PVC altogeth166 Roadrunner Parkway er in their interiors. Today, 17% Las Cruces of new vehicles have PVC-free JoAnne Galbraith 575-654-0788 Doctor of Oriental Medicine interiors and 60% are produced
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Tea: Green, black, white and oolong teas contain antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds that help calm and soothe skin. Green tea extract is used in wrinkle creams to help slow the development of some signs of skin aging and enhance sun protection. Vitamins: Aging skin naturally loses vitamin C, a nutrient that can help fight signs of aging. Use beauty products with this essential nutrient to reduce age spots and boost collagen production for firmer skin. Combined with vitamin E, it can pack a powerful punch in repairing skin damage from both age and sun.
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rotect: Sunscreen is one of the most important ways we can keep younger-looking skin. People who regularly apply sunscreen have 24% fewer signs of skin aging than those who only use sunscreen on occasion, according to a new study published by the journal Annals of Internal Medicine. Avoid sunscreens made with vitamin A (more on that later), estrogen-mimicking oxybenzone, and SPFs higher than 50, which research indicates may not actually provide additional protection. Opt for a mineral-based natural sunscreen that lists micronized zinc and titanium dioxide as active ingredients, at SPF 30. Exfoliate: Because it sloughs away dead skin cells and unclogs oil and dirt from pores, exfoliation is particularly important for aging skin. As our skin ages, the natural exfoliation process slows and dry cells linger longer on the surface. Gently exfoliate mature skin once or twice a week with natural particles such as sugar, nuts or seeds. (Salt is typically too abrasive for facial skin.) Avoid products with plastic microbeads, also known as polymers. These scrubber fragments move through drains and into the ocean, where they have become a concern to marine life. Moisturize: As we age, our top layer of skin can dry and form microscopic cracks that make it more irritable and prone to inflammation. Regular application of moisturizers with natural emollients and ingredients can help: A popular active ingredient in anti-aging moisturizers, coenzyme Q10 can improve skins texture and elasticity, boost collagen production and ward off free radicals. Indian frankincense extract, also known as Boswellia serrata, has antiinflammatory properties and may help reduce wrinkles. Vitamin B3, often called niacin or niacinamide on product labels, boosts hydration and reduces redness.
hopping for anti-aging skin care, you will see many of the same miracle ingredients listed on product after product. Just because theyre popular doesnt mean you should assume theyre effectiveor safe. The laws surrounding labeling on skin-care products arent as stringent as you might think (or hope). Here are a few common anti-aging ingredients that raise concerns. Retinol, a derivative of vitamin A found in skin-care products and sunscreen, is often used to reduce the appearance of wrinkles, boost skin elasticity and encourage skin regeneration. Retinol can also cause itchiness, dryness and peeling. The renewed skin retinol encourages may be more sensitive to sun and susceptible to risks such as sunburns and skin cancer. Studies show that high doses of retinoids (the class retinol is part of) may be harmful to children in utero and nursing infants. Oral retinoid isotretinoin (used in some acne treatments) is known to carry a high risk of birth defects or even loss of pregnancy. Avoid using products with retinol during daytime (especially sunscreen) and do not use them if you are pregnant. Retinol may be listed on labels as retinyl linoleate and retinyl palmitate. Alpha-Hydroxy Acid (AHA) is added to anti-aging products to exfoliate and remove dead skin cells. Unfortunately, this chemical ingredient also increases sensitivity to ultraviolet rays. The FDA has warned consumers about AHA concerns, revealing reports of effects that include burning, dermatitis and swelling. 1,4-Dioxane is used in creams to make harsh ingredients milder. Banned from personal-care products in the European Union, it is associated with headaches, respiratory and skin irritation, and is a probable human carcinogen. You will rarely, if ever, see 1,4-dioxane listed as an ingredient on personalcare products. Instead, look for the ingredients sodium laureth sulfate and chemicals with xynol, ceteareth and oleth in their names1,4-dioxane is a frequent contaminant of these chemicals.
Anna Dye
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esveratrol: Most often associated with defending against heart disease, the antioxidant resveratrol may also fight sun damage when applied to the skin, according to a 2005 study. Look for topical beauty products that contain resveratrol, and consider taking it in supplement form for additional skin benefits.
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Ave., 538-3672. VINYasa FlOw YOGa10 a.m. All levels. First Church of Harmony, 609 Arizona St., Becky Glenn, (404) 2345331. k Send updates to events@desertexposure.com.
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Wednesdays
Mondays
of the SW Desert, 1302 Bennett St. 313-4087. GIla WRITERs2-4 p.m. Silver City Public Library. Trish Heck, trish.heck@ gmail.com, 534-0207. GRaNT COUNTY ROllING STONEs GEm aND MINERal SOcIETY2nd Thurs. 6 p.m. Senior Center, 204 W. Victoria St. Kyle, 538-5706. HaTHa YOGa5:30 p.m. First Church of Harmony, 609 Arizona St. Lori Zitzmann. HIsTORIc MINING DIsTRIcT & TOURIsm MEETINGSecond Thurs. 10 a.m. Bayard Community Center, 290 Hurley Ave., Bayard. 537-3327. KUNDalINI YOGa5:30 p.m. A Daily Practice, 104 N. Texas, 388-2425. NEwcOmERs ClUBThird Thurs. 11 a.m., luncheon noon. Womens Club, Yucca and Silver Heights Blvd. Linda Sylvester, (480) 518-5839, lindasylvester@msn.com. PROGREssIVE PIlaTEs5:30-6:30 p.m., 315 N. Bullard, 2d . 519-8948. TOPS5 p.m. 1st Presbyterian Church, 1915 Swan, 538-9447. WOmENs CaNcER SUPPORT GROUP1st Thurs. 6-7 p.m. GRMC Conference Room, 1313 E. 32nd St. 388-1198, ext. 10. VINYasa FlOw YOGa11:30 a.m First Church of Harmony, 609 Arizona St., Becky Glenn, (404) 234-5331. YOGa classFree class taught by Colleen Stinar. 1-2 p.m. Episcopal Church fellowship hall, 7th and Texas. KUNDalINI YOGaNoon. A Daily Practice, 104 N. Texas St. OVEREaTERs ANONYmOUs6 p.m. Gila Regional Medical Center conference room. 313-9400. SIlVER CITY WOmaNs ClUB2d Fri., 10:30 a.m., lunch 12 p.m. 411 Silver Heights Blvd. 538-3452. TaIZ2d Friday. Service of prayer, songs, scripture readings and quiet contemplation. 6:30 p.m. Episcopal Church of the Good Shepherd, 538-2015. WOODcaRVING ClUB2d and 4th Fridays except holidays. 1 p.m. Senior Center. 313-1518. YOUTH SPacE5:30-10 p.m. Loud music, video games, chill out. Satellite/ Wellness Coalition. AlcOHOlIcs ANONYmOUs BEGINNERs6 p.m. Lions Club, 8th & Bullard (entrance at Big Ditch behind Dominos). Newcomers and seasoned members welcome. AlZHEImERs/DEmENTIa SUPPORT 10 a.m.-noon. Gila Regional Medical Center Conference Room. Margaret, 388-4539. BlOOmING LOTUs MEDITaTION1 p.m. Details: 313-7417, blooming-lotussangha@googlegroups.com. DOUBlE FEaTURE BlOcKBUsTER MEGa HIT MOVIE NIGHT5:30-11 pm. Satellite/Wellness Coalition. EVENING PRaYER IN THE EasTERN ORTHODOX TRaDITION5 p.m. Theotokos Retreat Center, 5202 Hwy. 152, Santa Clara. 537-4839, theotokos@zianet. com. KIDs BIKE RIDE10 a.m., Bikeworks,
815 E. 10th St. Dave Baker, 590-2166. NaRcOTIcs ANONYmOUs6 p.m. New 180 Club, 1661 Hwy. 180 E. SaDHaNa MORNING PRaYER, MEDITaTION, YOGaLast Sat. 5-7 a.m. A Daily Practice, 104 N. Texas, 388-2425. SPINNING GROUP1st Sat., 1-3 p.m. Yada Yada Yarn, 614 N. Bullard, 388-3350. STORYTImEAll ages. 10:30 a.m. Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College
Fridays
Tuesdays
Diana S. Edwards,
Licensed Professional Clinical Mental Health Counselor
Saturdays
Individual and Family Counseling Relationship Problems Adoption and Foster Care Issues Grief and Loss
301 West College St., Suite 14 Silver City, New Mexico
Medicaid Provider
Thursdays
MAGGIE KNOX
Licensed Massage Therapist
Time-Out Massage
526 Hwy 180 West Silver City, NM
575-534-9702
Deep Therapeutic Massage Swedish and Neuromuscular Therapy
Gift Certificates Available
NM Lic# 4096
575-388-8874
WILD WEST BBQ & STEAKHOUSE 388-1367 2138 US 180E Silver City
OPEN FOR LUNCH on SATURDAYS
Reflexology
Professional Foot Massage Profound Relaxation
42
DECEMBER 2013
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(times MST) Dec. 2, 5:22 p.m.New Moon Dec. 6, 12 p.m.Venus greatest illuminated extent Dec. 9, 8:12 a.m.First Quarter Moon Dec. 10, 8 a.m.Jupiter passes 15 minutes-ofarc north of Wassat Dec. 13, 11 p.m.Geminid meteor shower peaks Dec. 17, 2:28 a.m.Full Moon Dec. 20, 1 p.m.Venus stationary Dec. 21, 10:11 a.m.Solstice (winter begins) Dec. 25, 6:48 a.m.Last Quarter Moon Dec. 28, 4 p.m.Mars passes 40 minutes-of-arc south of Porrima glow brightly as lines on the spectrogram. When a star is moving toward you, the bright lines in its spectrum shift toward the blue; if its moving away, the lines shift toward the red. This effect is called a Doppler shift. When observing a star like 51 Peg over a number of days, the spectrum will shift a little toward the blue and then back toward the red and then blue again. This indicates that the star is moving toward us and then away. We see the star do this as the exoplanet orbits it because the two objects orbit around their center of mass, much like an older (bigger) child swinging around a younger (smaller) child; the younger child will move much more than the older, but the older child will still move. In the same way, 51 Peg and 51 Peg b swing around their common center of mass, and we see the spectrum of 51 Peg shift over the 4.2-day orbit of 51 Peg b. Advances in technology have allowed astronomers to take more precise spectrums of the star more frequently to allow the slight red and blue shifting of the parent star to be measured and the exoplanets to be discovered.
any constellations in our sky are hard to make out when standing under the night sky, but a few are blindingly obvious. One of these is almost overhead on December evenings, the constellation Pegasus, the Winged Horse. What makes it most obvious are the four first-magnitude stars that make up the Great Square of Pegasus. These four starsAlpheratz, Scheat, Markab and Algenibactually form a rectangle, but it is close enough to a square that most people just think of it that way. Actually, Alpheratz is not even in Pegasus, but just over the border in Andromeda. Nevertheless, stargazers consider it part of the Great Square of Pegasus. Pegasus represents the famed flying horse of Greek mythology. Since he could fly, he got around and had many adventures. One story is that he used his hooves to start the spring Hippocrene flowing. Anyone who drank the water from Hippocrene was blessed with the gift of being able to write poetry. In another story, Bellerophon, one of the three great heroes (along with Camus and Perseus), was able to capture Pegasus. He used the winged horse to help him kill the Chimera, a creature usually depicted as a lion with the head of a goat coming out of his back and a tail ending in a snakes head. Bellerophons fame grew and so did his hubris. When his children had grown, Bellerophon convinced Pegasus to take him to Olympus. Zeus was angered at Bellerophons presumption and had a gadfly sting Pegasus, causing the winged horse to buck. Bellerophon fell back to Earth, landing in a thorn bush. He lived out his life as a blind, crippled hermit, while Pegasus continued to Olympus to become Zeus bearer, carrying his lightning bolts.
One star in Pegasus is the first to have a planet discovered orbiting it. Many stars are part of a multiple star system; double stars are common, while triples, quadruples and quintuples are less so. But no one had any evidence of a planetary-sized object orbiting a main-sequence star until Oct. 6, 1995, when two Swiss astronomers, Michel Mayor and Didier Queloz, announced the discovery of an exoplanet orbiting the star 51 Pegasi. The planet was unofficially named Bellerophon and officially 51 Pegasi b (51 Peg b). This unprecedented claim was confirmed just six days latter by two California astronomers using the Hamilton Spectrograph at the Lick Observatory near San Jose. 51 Peg b orbits very close to its parent star, just 4.8 million miles away (Mercury orbits 36 million miles from our Sun). This causes 51 Peg b to orbit its star every 4.2 days, and as you can imagine it is a very hot place, with a surface temperature around 2,200 degrees Fahrenheit. It is a large planet, 47% the mass of Jupiter, so astronomers made it the prototype of the class of exoplanets called hot Jupiters. Even so, it is not directly visible from Earth since it does not glow with its own light. The parent star 51 Peg is about 50.9 light-years from Earth. It is spectral class G5V, indicating it is very similar to our Sun, a G2V. This exoplanet, along with many others since, was discovered by the radial-velocity method. This method requires that the star be observed with a spectrograph; in this case it was discovered with a telescope at Observatoire de Haute-Provence in France using the ELODIE spectrograph. A spectrograph spreads the light from the star into its individual colors, like a rainbow, and records it for later analysis. Among the colors are very specific ones belonging to different atoms in the stars hot atmosphere. These colors
DESERT EXPOSURE
DECEMBER 2013
43
Christmas Suggestions
Gift ideas for outdoors-people on your list.
ts time to think about those gifts you would like to get for that special someone who appreciates outdoor activities, and that might even include what to get yourself! The following list features items that I believe can be used for more than one outdoor activity. First up is an item that I consider to be one of the latest-greatest in the outdoor market; it is the trail camera. This gizmo permits the user to just see what wildlife is actually out and about, either at your home or your campsite or your prospective hunting area, on a 24/7 basis. I personally like the Stealthcam brand of camera, but these days they all are of good quality. Look for these main features: compact size, uses AA batteries, the most number of LED lights, and distance that the camera will pick up subjects. I put one in the backyard last year and was startled to see all manner of wildlife come into my watering troughs. By the way, if you plan to use the camera outside of your property, I suggest you also buy a lock-box to put it in or at least a plastic-coated steel cable and padlock. I know of several users who have had the gizmos stolen when not locked up! For some strange reason, the cameras attract both bears and cattle right up to them, and bears are prone to smack the cameras! You will also need memory cards in the 4-16-megabyte range, plus a reader of some sort. You can buy portable readers that allow you to see what is on the cameras there in the field, or buy one that plugs into the computer. Ive used both plus a laptop in the field.
ext on the list is a compact digital camera, the smaller the better, to record those oncein-a-lifetime memories as you hike, camp or whatever. This gadget can also be used to view those photos from your trailcam! You just need the proper connecting cord. Speaking of all of these electronic devices, third on the list is the first stocking stuffer: AA batteries. Buy lots of them. I tried store brands in bulk but their life was not near what good ol Duracell gives. I also like to use rechargeable batteries, and a charger isnt all that expensive. While they wont last as long as Duracells, they can be charged a bunch of times and you will save big bucks! I carry a dozen in the field with me, just in case. Another great item is the doodad that I wrote about earlier this yearSissy Poles, er, I mean trekking poles or walking staffs. Get the best that you can afford. Try for carbon fiber or aluminum with adjustabilty. The better ones come in three segments or two segments for less-sturdy ones. Look to see if they have cork or rubber handles so your hands dont slip off, and wrist straps for the same reason. I dont hike without at least one pole any more, and I prefer two for maximum stability.
very outdoor adventure requires a fanny-pack, to carry all of those outdoor gizmos plus other necessities. I prefer a lightweight nylon pack that wont weigh much when loaded. I usually wear mine with the pack in front where I can reach things handily. That brings up stocking-stuffers to put in the pack: two emergency blankets, a whistle, a fire-starter, 50 feet of 1/8-inch nylon cord, face-wipe moisturizer packets (good for other parts of the anatomy, too). One of the best outdoor accessories is a stout, thick leather belt, 1 1/2 inches wide, to support what you cant carry in a pack. It will give you good back support while holding up your trousers or shorts. For putting on that belt you might buy a water purifier bottle, a quality utility tool, and the optional small handgun, all good gifts. Dont forget a good pair of snug-fitting leather gloves; you/they will need them! Along with those, consider a quality pair of waterproof hiking shoes six inches high for ankle support. Along with those, two more stocking stuffers: two pairs of nylon/polyester/cotton-blend heavy-duty socks. Everyone needs a good soft hat of some kind. I prefer three types in the warmer months: a baseball cap, a wool-felt fedora, or a western cowboy hat. With the fedora and western style, the brim keeps rain and sun off my neck. In the winter, I prefer a baseball cap or a wool watch cap. How about some big, big bandanas? They can be used to keep sun off your neck, the grit out of your mouth, or as a soaker to cool you off, or even as an arm sling or leg wrap in case of injury. Do you/they own a quality headlamp? It frees up the hands for steadiness in the dark, as well as examining injuries or seeing the path or dressing an animal. Also get a couple of inexpensive LED keychain lights; these gizmos throw an amazing amount of light. Theyre god for looking through gear at midnight or checking to see just how far that skunk is ahead of you! ne last item and it aint cheap! Im talking about the new Fat-Tire mountain bikes. The better ones have three-to-five-inch-wide knobby tires, with a rigid frame and 10 speeds on a single front sprocket. There is no need for suspension because the tires are run at a low pressure of 7-10 pounds to facilitate shock and traction. My friend Nils has one and he is an avid mountain biker. He loves his new machine and says that it will take him just about anywhere! The wide, soft tires permit him to go upon sand and snow, mud and hard, rocky terrain, albeit at a slower speed. Look for brand names like Surly Moonlander or Salsa; prices begin at about $1,300 up to $2,500. If you want something inexpensive and one speed, you may look at Cruiser bikes; they feature the same wide tires but no extra gears. They can be had at Wally World or online or the local bike shops, starting at $199. Names to look for are Mountain Cruiser or Pacific Cycle. Thats it! Permit me to wish you all a very Merry Christmas and remember the Reason for the Season. Keep the sun forever at your back, the wind forever in your face, and may The Forever God bless you all! k When not Ramblin Outdoors, Larry Lightner puts up his Christmas tree in Silver City.
Live Music, Father Christmas, Cookies and Fun for All! Thursday, Dec. 12, 5:30 pm to 8:00 pm Free admission and childrens activities! Thanks to
Victorian Christmas
Learn How to Make a Tamal! Saturday, Dec. 7, 10 am adult class and 1 pm childrens class
Current Exhibits Our Saints Among Us: Revisited Ghost Town Diaries
Over 400 years of Hispanic New Mexican devotional art Original photographs of New Mexicos ghost towns by Karl Kernberger Sponsored in part by The Silver City Museum Society
Open Tuesday through Friday 9:00am - 4:30pm Saturday and Sunday 10:00am - 4:00pm
For more information: visit us at 312 West Broadway, Silver City NM, call 575-538-5921, or click www.silvercitymuseum.org
ou can never go wrong in buying a Global Positioning System (GPS), along with a new, plasticcoated National Forest map and a quad-map of the area you will be exploring in the outdoors. The local Forest Service office has both types of map. I prefer the simplest GPS I can use. Basically I want to know where I am at, at any given time, and I am always in the know if I have my map along (which I always do). Cell phones dont work everywhere, which I found out the hard way, but Verizon seems to work in the most places. None works north of the Tadpole Ridge until you get about 15 miles north, and in some deep valleys, the cell phone wont help. But there is the satellite phone that works near everywhere! Trouble is, these puppies cost more than a thousand dollars to own and then the monthly fee is about 60 bucks; thats a chunk of change! But you can rent an outfit by the week for about $130, a far 12/10 better arrangement if you will be 2320 Hwy outdoors for days at a time.
Video Stop
Punchcard Sale
$2.18 per rental!
$5 DVD Sale
44
DECEMBER 2013
www.desertexposure.com
Red or Green
R
Southwest New Mexico s best restaurant guide.
a brief capsule of our review and a notation of which issue it originally appeared in. Stories from all back issues of Desert Exposure from January 2005 on are available on our Web site. Though every effort has been made to make these listings complete and up-to-date, errors and omissions are inevitable and restaurants may make changes after this issue goes to press. Thats why we urge you to help us make Red or Green? even better. Drop a note to Red or Green? c/o Desert Exposure, PO Box 191, Silver City, NM 88062, fax 534-4134, or email updates@red-or-green.com. Remember, these print listings represent only highlights. You can always find the complete, updated Red or Green? guide online at www.desertexposure.com. Bon apptit!
Steakhouse: L D.* RIVER RaNcH MaRKET, 300 S. Bullard, 597-6328. Grass-fed meats, pastured poultry, gluten-free baked goods, to-go soups and stews, cast-iron cooking. Weds.-Sat. * SaBOR, 1700 Mountain View Road, 388-2737. Mexican, sandwiches: B L D. SHEVEK & CO., 602 N. Bullard St., 534-9168. If sampling new types of food is part of the adventure of traveling for you, you only have to go as far as Shevek & Co. Restaurant in Silver City to take a culinary tour around the world. (May 2013) Mediterranean: Fri.-Tues. D.* SIlVER BOwlING CENTER Caf, 2020 Memory Lane, 538-3612. American, Mexican, hamburgers: L D.* SUNRIsE EsPREssO, 1530 N. Hudson, 388-2027. Coffeeshop: Mon.-Sat. B L, early D. SUNRIsE EsPREssO, 1212 E. 32nd St., 534-9565. Coffeeshop, bakery: Mon.Fri. B L, early D, Sat. B L only.* TERRYs ORIGINal BaRBEQUE, Hwy. 180 and Ranch Club Road. Barbeque to go: L D. THREE DOGs COffEEHOUsE, 503 N. Bullard St. Coffeeshop, baked goods, sandwiches, wraps: Mon.-Sun. B L.* TRE ROsaT Caf, 304 N. Bullard St., 654-4919. The dinner menu ranges from humbler (but not humdrum) fare like burgers, pizzas and pastas to daily specials that include more upscale items like grilled salmon and petite sirloin steak. Appetizers include homemade chile relleno poppers, egg rolls (with specialty llings changing from day to day) and the ever-popular, ever delicious bacon-wrapped dates. (August 2012) International eclectic: Mon.-Fri. L, D. Sat. D. Sat. brunch.* VIcKIs EaTERY, 315 N. Texas, 388-5430. Serving hearty breakfasts, sandwiches both cold and grilled, wraps and salads that satisfy in a homey yet sophisticated way. Dont miss the German potato salad. (Dec. 2009) American: Mon.-Sat. B L. Sun. B.* WRaNGlERs BaR & GRIll, 2005 Hwy. 180E, 538-4387. Steak, burgers, appetizers, salads: L D.* YaNKIE CREEK COffEE HOUsE, 112 W. Yankie St. Coffeeshop, coffee, homemade pastries and ice cream, fresh fruit smoothies.* FIDENcIOs TacO SHOP, 1108 Tom Foy Blvd. Mexican: B L D. LITTlE NIsHas, 1101 Tom Foy Blvd., 537-3526. Mexican: Wed.-Sun. B L D. LOs COmPas, 1203 Tom Foy Blvd, 654-4109. Sonoran-style Mexican, hot dogs, portas, menudo: L D. M & A BaYaRD Caf, 1101 N. Central Ave., 537-2251. A down-to-earth, friendly, unpretentious placekind of a cross between a Mexican cantina and a 1950s home-style diner, serving tasty, no-frills Mexican and American food at reasonable prices. (October 2011) Mexican and American: Mon.-Fri. B L D. SPaNIsH Caf, 106 Central Ave., 537-2640. Mexican, tamales and menudo (takeout only): B. SUGaR SHacK, 1102 Tom Foy Blvd., 537-0500. Mexican: Sun.-Fri. B L. PaRKEYs, 8414 Hwy. 180W, 5354000. Coffeeshop: Mon.-Sat.
ed or Green? is Desert Exposures guide to dining in southwest New Mexico. The listings herea sampling of our complete and recently completely updated guide online at www.desertexposure.cominclude some of our favorites and restaurants weve recently reviewed. We emphasize non-national-chain restaurants with sit-down, table service . With each listing, we include a brief categorization of the type of cuisine plus what meals are served: B=Breakfast; L=Lunch; D=Dinner. Unless otherwise noted, restaurants are open seven days a week. Call for exact hours, which change frequently. All phone numbers are area code 575 except as specified. We also note with a star (*) restaurants where you can pick up copies of Desert Exposure. If weve recently reviewed a restaurant, youll find
GRANT COUNTY Silver City
TIRED OF TURKEY?
Come out and try a great German dinner on Saturday 12 to 3pm special items. Reservations appreciated December 28.
www.spiritcanyon.com
HANDICAPPED ACCESSIBLE
575-536-9459
ADOBE SPRINGs Caf, 1617 Silver Heights Blvd., 538-3665. Breakfast items, burgers, sandwiches: Mon.-Thur. B L, Sat. & Sun. B L D.* AlOTTa GElaTO, 619 N. Bullard St., 534-4995. Gelato, desserts and hot drinks: All day.* BIllYs BBQ aND WOOD-FIRED PIZZa, Hwy 180E, 388-1367. A freewheeling mixture of barbequed ribs and brisket, freshly made pasta and pizzas baked in a wood-red oven and featuring a wide range of innovative toppings. (November 2010) Karaoke Fri., live entertainment Sat. Barbecue, steak, pasta, pizza: Tues.-Fri. D. Sat. L D. Italian nights Weds., Sat.* BRYaNs PIT BaRBEcUE, Mimbres Valley Self Storage and RV Park, (660) 247-3151 or (660) 247-3160. Barbecue: L D. Caf OsO AZUl aT BEaR MOUNTaIN LODGE, 60 Bear Mountain Ranch Road, 538-2538. Bear Mountain Lodge blends food, art and natural beauty into a memorable experience that pleases all the senses. The menu changes daily, with entres that are always imaginative and tastycomfort food in a form that most of our mothers would never have thought of producing. (March 2011) Weekend brunch, weekday L by reservation only.* CHINEsE PalacE, 1010 Highway 180E, 538-9300. All the food is cooked to order. This means that not only does every dish arrive at the table freshly cooked and steaming, but also that you can tailor any dish to suit your taste. (October 2012) Chinese: Mon.Fri. L D. COURTYaRD Caf, Gila Regional Medical Center, 538-4094. American: B L, with special brunch Sundays.* CURIOUs KUmQUaT, 111 E. College Ave., 534-0337. A hotspot of modern culinary innovation. Lunch features soups, salads and sandwiches. Dinners are elaborate, imaginative, exotic vecourse culinary creations. Entres always include vegetarian and vegan options plus others determined by what local ranchers have available. (July 2010) Contemporary: Mon. L, Tues.-Sat. L D.* DIaNEs REsTaURaNT, 510 N. Bullard St., 538-8722. Always evolving, always interesting, Dianes has it all. (Sept. 2013) Fine dining (D), steaks, seafood, pasta, sandwiches (L), salads: Tues.-Sat. L D, Sun. D only (family-style), weekend brunch. DIaNEs BaKERY & DElI, The Hub, Suite A, Bullard St., 534-9229. Always evolving, always interesting, Dianes has it all. (Sept. 2013) Artisan breads, sandwiches, deli, baked goods: Mon.Sat. B L early D, Sun. B L.* EaT YOUR HEaRT OUT, 800 W. Market, 313-9005. Take-out meals, catering.* El GallO PINTO, 901 N. Hudson St., 597-4559. Breakfast dishes are served all day, along with all the other traditional Mexican favorites like burritos (with a long list of lling options) plus a vertical grill cooks sizzling chicken and carne al pastor. (October 2013) Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L D, Sun. B L. GIl-A BEaNs, 1304 N. Bennett St. Coffeeshop.*
GOlDEN STaR, 1602 Silver Heights Blvd., 388-2323. Chinese: L D. GRaNDmas Caf, 900 Silver Heights Blvd., 388-2627. American, Mexican: B L.* GRINDER MIll, 403 W. College Ave., 538-3366. Mexican: B L D.* JalIscO Caf, 100 S. Bullard St., 388-2060. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. L D. JaVa THE HUT, 611-A N. Bullard St., 534-4103. Espresso and coffeeshop: Mon.-Sat.* JaValINa COffEE HOUsE, 201 N. Bullard St., 388-1350. Coffeehouse.* KOUNTRY KITcHEN, 1505 N. Hudson St., 388-4512. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L early D, Sun. B only.* La COcINa REsTaURaNT, 201 W. College Ave., 388-8687. Mexican: L D. La FamIlIa, 503 N. Hudson St., 3884600. Mexican: Tues.-Sun. B L D.* La MEXIcaNa, Hwy. 180E and Memory Lane, 534-0142. Carrying on the legacy of unpretentious but tasty and authentic Mexican food established many years ago at the familys restaurant in Chihuahua. (April 2013) Mexican and American: B L, closed Tues. Lions Den, 208 W. Yankie, 654-0353. Coffeeshop. Masa Y Mas TORTIllERIa, Suite C-The Hub Plaza, (505) 670-8775. Tortillas, tacos, chimichangas, burritos, enchiladas, menudo, tamales and more. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L.* MEXIcO VIEJO, Hwy. 90 and Broadway. A remarkably extensive menu for a small roadside food vending stand, and the dishes are not what one normally nds in other Mexican restaurants. (July 2013) Mexican food stand: Mon.-Sat. B L early D. MI CasITa, 2340 Bosworth Dr., 538-5533. New Mexican cuisine: Mon.Thurs. L, Fri. L D. MIllIEs BaKE HOUsE, 215 W. Yankie, 597-2253. The food is ovenfresh and innovative. (November 2012) Soup, salads, sandwiches, baked goods: Tues.-Sat. * NaNcYs SIlVER Caf, 514 N. Bullard St., 388-3480. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L D. THE PaRlOR aT DIaNEs, 510 N. Bullard St., 538-8722. Always evolving, always interesting, Dianes has it all. (Sept. 2013) Burgers, sandwiches, homemade pizzas, paninis: Tues.-Sun. L D. PEacE MEal BURRITO BaR, The Hub, 6th and Bullard, 388-0106. Slow-roasted beef, pork and chicken options in addition to vegetarian and vegan fare with a commitment to provide food that is organic and healthy. (January 2013) Chipotle-style burrito bar: Weds.-Mon. L early D.* PRETTY SwEET EmPORIUm, 312 N. Bullard St., 388-8600. Dessert, ice cream: Mon.-Sat.* Qs SOUTHERN BIsTRO aND BREwERY, 101 E. College Ave., 534-4401. American, steaks, barbecue, brewpub: Mon.-Sat. L D. RED BaRN, 708 Silver Heights Blvd., 538-5666. From the friendly staff to the down-home foodsteaks, of course, plus chicken, seafood, burgers, sandwiches and a sampling of superb Mexican fareyou might be settling in for lunch or dinner at an especially large ranch house. (October 2009)
Bayard
Cliff
DESERT EXPOSURE
GaTEwaY GRIll, 2705 Hwy. 180E, 537-5001. From Friday Steak Night to everyday American and Mexican food, worth hitting Hwy. 180 for. (December 2011) American and Mexican: Sun.Thur. B L, Fri.-Sat. B L D.* LITTlE TOaD CREEK INN & TaVERN, 1122 Hwy. 35, 536-9649. Closed for the season. SPIRIT CaNYON LODGE & Caf, 684 Hwy. 35, 536-9459. For the German sampler, caf customers can choose two meat options from a revolving selection that may include on any given day three or four of the following: bratwurst, roast pork, schnitzel (a thin breaded and fried pork chop), sauerbraten (marinated roast of beef), stuffed cabbage leaves, or roladen (rolled beef with a sausage and onion lling). (July 2011) German specialties, American lunch and dinner entres: Saturday midday D. ElK X-ING Caf, (352) 212-0448. Home-style meals, sandwiches and desserts: B L. MImBREs VallEY Caf, 2964 Hwy. 35, 536-2857. You wont go home hungry from the Mimbres Valley Caf, an oasis of down-home good food in a friendly atmosphere. The menu is simple and hearty, a blend of American and Mexican. (Jan. 2009) Mexican, American, burgers: Mon.-Tues. B L, Wed.-Sun. B L D, with Japanese tempura Wed. D. BUcKHORN SalOON aND OPERa HOUsE, Main Street, 538-9911. Steakhouse, pasta, burgers: Mon.-Sat. D.
DECEMBER 2013
versity Ave., 522-8409. Deli: B L D.* DIcKs Caf, 2305 S. Valley Dr., 524-1360. Mexican, burgers: Sun. B L, Mon.-Sat. B L D. DIONs PIZZa, 3950 E. Lohman, 521-3434. Pizza: L D. DOUBlE EaGlE, 2355 Calle De Guadalupe, 523-6700. All the steaks are aged on the premises in the restaurants own dedicated beef aging room An array of award-winning margaritas and deliciously decadent desserts. (March 2012) Southwestern, steaks, seafood: L D, Sun. champagne brunch buffet. * DUBlIN STREET PUB, 1745 E. University Ave., 522-0932. Irish, American: L D. El AHUUas, 1001 E. University Ave., 556-9484. Mexican: B L D. El PaTRON Caf, 1103 S. Solano Dr. Mexican: Tues.-Thur., Sun. B L, Fri.-Sat. B L early D. El SOmBRERO PaTIO Caf, 363 S. Espina St., 524-9911. Mexican: L D. El TIBURON, 504 E. Amador, 6474233. Mexican, seafood, steak: L D. EmIlIas, 2290 Calle de Parian, 6523007. Burgers, Mexican, soup, sandwiches, pastry, juices, smoothies: L D. EmPIRE BUffET, 510 S. Telshor Blvd., 522-2333. Asian: L D. ENRIQUEs, 830 W. Picacho, 6470240. Mexican: B L D. FaRlEYs, 3499 Foothills Rd., 522-0466. Pizza, burgers, American, Mexican: L D. FIDENcIOs, 800 S. Telshor, 5325624. Mexican: B L D. FORK IN THE ROaD, 202 N. Motel Blvd., 527-7400. Buffet: B L D 24 hrs. GamE BaR & GRIll, 2605 S. Espina, 524-GAME. Sports bar and grill: L D. GaRDUOs, 705 S. Telshor (Hotel Encanto), 522-4300. Mexican: B L D.* GO BURGER DRIVE-IN, 1008 E. Lohman, 524-9251. Burgers, Mexican: Mon.-Fri. B L. GOlDEN STaR CHINEsE FasT FOOD, 1420 El Paseo, 523-2828. Chinese: L D. GOOD LUcK Caf, 1507 S. Solano, 521-3867. Mexican, seafood: B L early D. GRaNDYs COUNTRY COOKING, 1345 El Paseo Rd., 526-4803. American: B L D. GUacamOlEs BaR aND GRIll, 3995 W. Picacho Ave., 525-9115. Burgers, pizza, salads, sandwiches, Hawaiian appetizers: L D. HIEBERTs FINE FOODs, 525 E. Madrid Ave. #7, 524-0451. Mexican, American: B L D. HIGH DEsERT BREwING COmPaNY, 1201 W. Hadley Ave., 525-6752. Brew pub: L D.* INTERNaTIONal DElIGHTs, 1245 El Paseo Rd., 647-5956. Greek and International: B L D. JaPaNEsE KITcHEN, 141 Roadrunner Parkway, 521-3555. Japanese: L D. J.C. TORTas, 1196 W. Picacho Ave., 647-1408. Mexican: L D. JEssEs KaNsas CITY BBQ, 230 S. Church, 522-3662. Barbecue: Mon., Tue., Thurs-Sat. L D. JIREHs, 1445 W. Picacho. Mexican, American: B L early D. JOsE MURPHYs, 1201 E. Amador (inside Ten Pin Alleys), 541-4064. Mexican, American: L D. JOsEPHINas OlD GaTE Caf, 2261 Calle de Guadalupe, 525-2620. A delicious change of pace. There are a variety of classic deli sandwiches to choose from, all served on freshly baked bread, as well as the soup of the day in a cup or bowl, and salads. (October 2008) Pastries, soups, salads, sandwiches: Mon.-Thur. L, Fri.-Sun. B L. KaTaNa TEPPaNYaKI GRIll, 1001 E. University Ave., 522-0526. Japanese: Mon.-Fri. L D, Sat. D. KIm-CHI HOUsE, 1605 S. Solano, 652-4745. Korean: Tues.-Sun. L D. KIVa PaTIO Caf, 600 E. Amador Ave., 527-8206. Mexican, Southwestern, American: B L D. La COcINa, 204 E. Conway Ave., 524-3909. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L. La GUaDalUPaNa, 930 El Paseo Road. 523-5954. Mexican: Tues.-Sat. B L D. Sun. B L. La MEXIcaNa TORTIllERIa, 1300 N. Solano Dr, 541-9617. Mexican: L D. La NUEVa CasITa Caf, 195 N. Mesquite, 523-5434. Mexican and American: B L. La POsTa REsTaURaNT DE MEsIlla, 2410 Calle De San Albino, 524-3524. A restaurant with history hard-wired into the ber of its being. Through building, menu and ownership, its roots extend all the way back to the 1840s. (September 2011) Mexican , steakhouse: L D, Sat.-Sun. and holidays also B. Las TRaNcas, 1008 S. Solano Dr., 524-1430. Mexican, steaks, burgers, fried chicken: L D, Sat.-Sun. also B. LE RENDEZ-VOUs Caf, 2701 W. Picacho Ave. #1, 527-0098. French pastry, deli, sandwiches: Mon.-Sat. B L. LORENZOs PaN Am, 1753 E. University Ave., 521-3505. Italian, pizza: L D. LOs COmPas Caf, 6335 Bataan Memorial W., 382-2025. Mexican: B L D. LOs COmPas Caf, 603 S. Nevarez St., 523-1778. Mexican: B L D. LOs COmPas, 1120 Commerce Dr., 521-6228. Mexican: B L D.* LOs MaRIacHIs, 754 N. Motel Blvd., 523-7058. Mexican: B L D. MaRIas, 1750 N. Solano Dr., 5569571. Mexican: B L D. MEsIlla VallEY KITcHEN, 2001 E. Lohman Ave. #103, 523-9311. American, Mexican: B L.* MEsIlla VallEY PIZZa & SUBs, 3961 E. Lohman Ave. #21, 521-9293. Pizza, sandwiches: Mon.-Sat. L D. MEsON DE MEsIlla, 1803 Avenida de Mesilla, 652-4953. Steaks, barbecue, seafood, sandwiches, salads, pasta: L D. METROPOlITaN DElI, 1001 University Ave., 522-3354. Sandwiches: L D. MIGUEls, 1140 E. Amador Ave., 647-4262. Mexican: B L D. MI PUEBlITO, 1355 E. Idaho Ave., 524-3009. Mexican: Mon.-Fri. B L D, Sat.-Sun. B L. MIlaGRO COffEE Y EsPREssO, 1733 E. University Ave., 532-1042. Coffeehouse: B L D.* MIX PacIfIc RIm CUIsINE aND MIX EXPREss, 1001 E. University Ave. #D4, 532-2042. Asian, Pacic: Mon.-Sat. L D. MOONGaTE Caf, 9395 Bataan Memorial, 382-5744. Coffeeshop, Mexican, American: B L. MOUNTaIN VIEw MaRKET KITcHEN, 120 S. Water St., 556-9856. Sandwiches, bagels, wraps, salads and other healthy fare: Mon.-Sat.: B L early D. * MY BROTHERs PlacE, 334 S. Main St., 523-7681. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. L D. NEllIEs Caf, 1226 W. Hadley
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Lake Roberts
Mimbres
Pinos Altos
ABRaHams BaNK TOwER REsTaU500 S. Main St. #434, 523-5911. American: Mon.-Fri. B L. A DONG, 504 E. Amador Ave., 5279248. Vietnamese: L D. ANDElEs DOG HOUsE, 2184 Avenida de Mesilla, 526-1271. Mexican plus hot dogs, burgers, quesadillas: B L D. ANDElE REsTaURaNTE, 1950 Calle del Norte, 526-9631. Mexican: Mon. B L, Tues.-Sun. B L D. ANTONIOs REsTaURaNT & PIZZERIa, 5195 Bataan Memorial West, 373-0222. Pizza, Italian, Mexican: Tues.-Sun. L D. AQUa REEf, 900-B S. Telshor, 5227333. Asian, sushi: D. ARaBEllas, 1750 Calle de Mercado, 526-1313. Cuban, Italian: D. BaaN THaI KITcHEN, 1605 S. Solano Dr., 521-2630. Thai: Tues.-Sat. L D, Sun. L. THE BaGEl SHOP, 1495 S. Solano Dr., 521-4784. Bagels: Mon.-Sat. B L. THE BEaN, 2011 Avenida de Mesilla, 523-0560. Coffeehouse. A BITE Of BElGIUm, 741 N. Alameda St., 527-2483. Belgian food: Mon.-Fri. B L. BlUE AGaVE Caf, 1765 S. Main St. (inside Best Western Mission Inn), 5248591. Southwestern: B. BlUE MOON, 13060 N. Valley Dr., 647-9524. Bar, burgers: Sat.-Sun. L D. BOBa Caf, 1900 S. Espina, Ste. 8, 647-5900. Sandwiches, salads, casual fare, espresso: Mon.-Sat. L D.* BRaDlEY D aND WIllIam B, 2540 El Paseo Road, 652-3871. American comfort food: L, D. BRaVOs Caf, 3205 S. Main St., 526-8604. Mexican: Tues.-Sun. B L. BREaK AN EGG, 201 S. Solano Dr., 647-3000. Breakfasts, burgers, salads, sandwiches: B L. Caf AGOGO, 1120 Commerce Dr., Suite A, 636-4580. Asian, American, sandwich, salad, rice bowl: Mon.-Sat. L D. Caf DE MEsIlla EN la PlaZa, 2051 Calle de Santiago, 652-3019. Coffeehouse, deli, pastries, soups, sandwiches: B L early D. CaRIllOs Caf, 330 S. Church, 5239913. Mexican, American: Mon.-Sat. L D. CaTTlEmENs STEaKHOUsE, 2375 Bataan Memorial Hwy., 382-9051. Steakhouse: D. DaYs HamBURGERs, Water & Las Cruces St., 523-8665. Burgers: Mon.Sat. L D. DE La VEGas PEcaN GRIll & BREwERY, 500 S. Telshor Blvd., 521-1099. The restaurant uses local produce whenever possible, including the pecan wood pellets used in the smoking and grilling. A lot of the foods and drinks are infused with pecans, and also with green chiles from Hatch, processed on site. They even serve green chile vodka and green chile beer. (February 2010) Pecan-smoked meats, sandwiches, steaks, seafood, craft beers: L D. DElIcIas DEl MaR, 1401 El Paseo, 524-2396. Mexican, seafood: B L D. DGs UNIVERsITY DElI, 1305 E. UniRaNT,
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DECEMBER 2013
www.desertexposure.com
Mimbres Valleys new 3 Questions Coffee House is the answer for delicious breakfasts and lunches.
littletoadcreek.com
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or the past 17 years, the Coffey familys Living Harvest Bakery (Our Daily Bread, April 2008) has been known for its success in using freshly ground whole-wheat flour to produce tasty, nutritious breads and muffins that are considerably lighter in texture than most whole-wheat products. From the beginning, the bakery that Travis and Amy established to support their growing family soon after arriving in the Mimbres Valley has represented not just a way of making a living, but a way of life that seamlessly integrates family, religion, education, service, community, health, nutrition, creativity and reflection. The same can be said of the familys newest venture, the 3 Questions Coffee House, which offers a breakfast buffet Tuesday through Saturday from 7 to 11 a.m. and a lunch buffet from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Both buffets offer a selection of tasty, wholesome, unpretentious food. Both cost $6.50. And both are offered on an All you can enjoy basis. With all-you-can-eat buffets, people tend to stuff themselves to the point of misery, Travis says, explaining the choice of words. We just want to encourage our customers to stop eating before they reach the misery stage. Included in the price of the buffet is a choice of four different kinds of coffee (Columbiana, Hazelnut, Chocolate Pion and Decaf), a large assortment of tea varieties for hot tea, milk, orange juice, and several flavors of half-and-half created in-house (caramel, vanilla, as well as plain). At lunchtime, iced tea and iced coffee are also available. The 3 Questions Coffee House opened for business on Oct. 8, the Tuesday after the Mimbres Valley Harvest Festival. We used the Harvest Festival to spread the word about the opening of the coffee house. That was our only advertisementword of mouth, says 17-yearold Bethany Coffey, who is clearly delighted to be part of the crew at the new eatery. And word of mouth did it, states Travis, with gratitude. The Mimbres Valley community responded immediately. People came from day one.
The Coffey familys buffet crew: (l-r) Bethany, Eliza beth,Travis, Benjamin. (Photo by Peggy Platonos) All the bakerys breads, muffins, cookies, granola and other products are on display and available for purchase at the coffee house counter. A crew of four family members operates the coffee house and takes care of all the baking chores. That crew includes Travis and the three oldest children still at homeBenjamin, Bethany and Elizabeth. The enthusiasm that radiates from each is unmistakable. Its just fun, says Elizabeth, with a shy but radiant grin. It is fun, Bethany agrees. We like it a lot. I particularly like it when there are lots of people here. When its jumpingwith lots of conversation. And when everythings running smoothly, of course. The kids work wherever needed. Bethany, being older, is more confident working with the public, says Travis. So Elizabeth moved into whats leftcooking. Which is the part thats really important, Bethany chimes in, staunchly. Well, weve all done cooking around the house, Elizabeth says, heading off the notion that she has special talent in that direction.
Culturing Vegetables
t is entirely appropriate that the Coffey familys new venture is located in the building known locally for many years as the Rock Church, but constructed originally as the Mimbres Valley Christian Fellowship by the Mennonite group whose lifestyle and religious commitment attracted Travis and Amy Coffey to the Mimbres Valley 17 years ago. It wasnt the climate or the food or the culture that brought us here, Travis says. Our reasons were entirely religious. We were looking for something that was better spiritually. We were looking for down-to-earth real Christianity, Amy explains. The original brochure for the Coffeys Living Harvest Bakery spelled out the kind of Christianity they were looking for: Pure and simple, no taint, no denominations, just tried and true life-giving hope. The Mennonite group moved on quite a few years ago, but the Coffey family remains rooted in the valley. And their 3 Questions Coffee House shows every sign of growing and flourishing, as the bakery has. he dcor in the coffee house is simple, tasteful, restful, thought-provoking and unabashedly reverent without a shred of stuffiness. And the open-kitchen design allows customers to see the entire baking operation in action. The open-kitchen design was pretty much a collective idea. We all love seeing kitchens in action at restaurants, says 19-year-old Benjamin Coffey. He designed and constructed the custom-made tables that are scattered through a small warren of spacious but cozy partially walled compartments. The entire Living Harvest Bakery operation was moved into the Rock Church building back in April, and the baking is done in such a low-key, efficient, low-tech way that its easy to miss it. Its surprising how many people walk up to the counter and have no idea theyre looking at the kitchen where all the baking is actually done, Benjamin comments.
hat cannot be denied is that the food on both the breakfast and lunch buffets is good. Consistently good. The sausage gravy deserves special mention on the breakfast buffet, along with the Fiesta Eggs (scrambled with bits of sausage, diced tomatoes, just a hint of green chiles and Monterey Jack cheese). The pancakes are also exceptional, made with 100% freshground whole-wheat flour but light and almost crepelike in texture and served with a choice of real maple syrup or homemade blueberry or strawberry syrups. The lunch buffet includes a wonderfully nippy jalapeo-laced quesadilla, along with two notable soupscream of potato and a cumin-enhanced Conestoga Stew that reminds me of the East Coast version of beef chili that was all I knew until I came to New Mexico. And one mustnt forget the chicken salad sandwiches or the hand-formed hamburger patties, all served on Living Harvest rolls. A tasty chicken-based green chile stew appears on both the breakfast and lunch buffets. If youre wondering about the name of this new eatery, Benjamin explains, We believe there are three basic questions everyone needs to consider: Where did I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going when I die? So we chose the name 3 Questions Coffee House to make people think about those questions. We arent providing answers, just the questions. The answers are every persons responsibility, Travis agrees. No one else can answer them for you. The three questions are printed in several places in the coffee house, in case you feel like contemplating them while enjoying a tasty, wholesome meal in peaceful surroundings. The 3 Questions Coffee House is closed on Sundays and Mondays. It is located on Hwy. 35 in the Mimbres Valley, about two miles in from the Hwy. 152 intersection. For more information, call (575) 536-3267. k Send Mimbres freelance writer Peggy Platonos tips for restaurant reviews at platonos@gilanet. com or call (575) 536-2997.
DESERT EXPOSURE
DINING GUIDE continued
Ave., 524-9982. Mexican: Tues.-Sat. B L. NOPalITO REsTaURaNT, 2605 Missouri Ave., 522-0440. Mexican: L D. NOPalITO REsTaURaNT, 310 S. Mesquite St., 524-0003. Mexican: Sun.Tues., Thurs.-Sat. L D.* OlD TOwN REsTaURaNT, 1155 S. Valley Dr., 523-4586. Mexican, American: B L.* PaIsaNO Caf, 1740 Calle de Mercado, 524-0211. Mexican: B L D.* PaNcaKE AllEY DINER, 2146 W. Picacho Ave., 647-4836. American: B L, early D. PaRKERs BBQ, 850 E. Madrid Ave., 541-5712. Barbecue carryout: L, early D. PEPPERs Caf ON THE PlaZa (IN THE DOUBlE EaGlE REsTaURaNT), 2355 Calle De Guadalupe, 523-6700. Creative handling of traditional Southwestern dishes. [plus] such non-Mexican entres as Salmon Crepes and Beer Braised Beef Carbonnade. (March 2012). Southwestern: L D. * PHO SaIGON, 1160 El Paseo Road, 652-4326. Vietnamese: L D. PIT STOP Caf, 361 S. Motel Blvd., 527-1993. Mexican, American, steak: Mon.-Sat. B L D. PlaYERs GRIll, 3000 Champions Dr. (NMSU golf course clubhouse), 6462457. American: B L D. PUllaROs ITalIaN REsTaURaNT, 901 W. Picacho Ave., 523-6801. Italian: L D. Qs, 1300 Avenida De Mesilla, 571-4350. Brewhouse with steak and pasta: L D. RaNcHwaY BaRBEQUE, 604 N. Valley Dr., 523-7361. Barbecue, Mexican: Mon.-Fri. B L D, Sat. D. RascOs BBQ, 5580 Bataan Memorial E. (inside Shortys gas station). Barbecued brisket, pulled pork, smoked sausage, ribs. RED BRIcK PIZZa, 2808 N. Telshor Blvd., 521-7300. Pizzas, sandwiches, salads: L D. RENOOs THaI REsTaURaNT, 1445 W. Picacho Ave., 373-3000. Thai: Mon.-Fri. L D, Sat. D. ROBERTOs MEXIcaN FOOD, 908 E. Amador Ave., 523-1851. Mexican: B L D.* ROsIEs Caf DE MEsIlla, 420 Avenida de Mesilla, 526-1256. Breakfast, Mexican, burgers: Sat.-Thurs. B L, Fri. B L D. SaNTORINIs, 1001 E. University Ave., 521-9270. Greek, Mediterranean: Mon.-Sat. L D. SaVOY DE MEsIlla, 1800-B Avenida de Mesilla, 527-2869. If you are adventurous with food and enjoy a ne-dining experience that is genuinely sophisticated, without pretension or snobbishness, you denitely need to check out Savoy de Mesilla. The added attraction is that you can do this without spending a weeks salary on any of the mealsall of which are entertainingly and delectably upscale. (March 2013) American, Continental: B L D. THE SHED, 810 S. Valley Dr., 5252636. American, pizza, Mexican, desserts: Wed.-Sun. B L.* SHEBa GRIll, 2265 S. Main St., 5251100. Indian, Middle Eastern: Mon.Thurs., Sat.-Sun L D, Fri. D. SI ITalIaN BIsTRO, 523 E. Idaho, 523-1572. Wood-red pizzas are the star of the show, along with plenty of authentic pasta dishes. (February 2006) Italian: Mon.-Sat. L D. SImPlY TOasTED Caf, 1702 El Paseo Road, 526-1920. Sandwiches, soups, salads: B L. SI SEOR, 1551 E. Amador Ave., 527-0817. Mexican: L D. SPaNIsH KITcHEN, 2960 N. Main St., 526-4275. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L D. SPIRIT WINDs COffEE BaR, 2260 S. Locust St., 521-1222. Sandwiches, coffee, bakery: B L D.* ST. ClaIR WINERY & BIsTRO, 1720 Avenida de Mesilla, 524-0390. A showcase for St. Clair wines rooted in the same attention to detail, insistence on quality and customer-friendly attitude as the winery. (July 2012) Wine tasting, bistro: L D. SUNsET GRIll, 1274 Golf Club Road (Sonoma Ranch Golf Course clubhouse), 521-1826. American, Southwest, steak, burgers, seafood, pasta: B L D. TERIYaKI BOwl, 2300 N. Main St., 524-2055. Japanese: Mon.-Sat. L D. TERIYaKI CHIcKEN HOUsE, 805 El Paseo Rd., 541-1696. Japanese: Mon.Fri. L D. THaI DElIGHT DE MEsIlla, 2184 Avenida de Mesilla, 525-1900. For the adventurous, there are traditional Thai curries, soups and appetizers to choose from, all of which can be ordered in the degree of heat that suits you. The restaurant is clean, comfortable, casual in a classy sort of way, and totally unpretentious. (January 2011) Thai, salads, sandwiches, seafood, steaks, German: L D.* TIffaNYs PIZZa & GREEK AmERIcaN CUIsINE, 755 S. Telshor Blvd #G1, 532-5002. Pizza, Greek, deli: Tues.-Sat. B L D.* UmP 88 GRIll, 1338 Picacho Hills Dr., 647-1455. An authentic taste of the Emerald Isle in a delightfully authentic pub atmosphere. (December 2008) Irish pub: L D. VallEY GRIll, 1970 N. Valley, 5259000. American: B L D, Friday sh fry. VINTaGE WINEs, 2461 Calle de Principal, 523-WINE. The atmosphere is casual and relaxed, the handful of tables situated snugly as in a real French bistro to encourage conversation. Kick off the evening with wine and tapas inside, or wrap up the night out on the charming, cozy patio with a dessert wine or port. (June 2008) Wine and cigar bar, tapas: L D. WOK-N-WORlD, 5192 E. Boutz, 526-0010. Chinese: Mon.-Sat. L D. ZEffIRO PIZZERIa NaPOlETaNa, 136 N. Water St., 525-6757. Owner Gary Ebert and his very attentive and efcient staff serve up gourmet-style pizza on hand-tossed crusts. (August 2009) Pizza, pasta, also sandwiches at adjoining Popular Artisan Bakery: Mon.-Sat. L D. ZEffIRO NEw YORK PIZZERIa, 101 E. University Ave., 525-6770. Pizza: L D. ERNEsTOs MEXIcaN FOOD, 200 Anthony Dr., 882-3641. Mexican: B L. La COcINITa, 908 W. Main Dr., 5891468. Mexican: L. El BaYO STEaK HOUsE, 417 Chaparral Dr., 824-4749. Steakhouse: Tues.Sun. B L D. TORTIllERIa SUsY, 661 Paloma Blanca Dr., 824-9377. Mexican: Mon.Sat. B L D, Sun. B L.
DECEMBER 2013
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Anthony
Chapparal
ADOBE DElI, 3970 Lewis Flats Road SE, 546-0361. The lunch menu features traditional deli-style sandwiches... The
Millie's is available for all you small catering needs. Time to Order Your Holiday Goodies... Pies, Cookies, Cupcakes 215 W. Yankie St. 575-597-BAKE 575-597-2253 Silver City, NM 88061
Tina Klassen, owner Available
CALL EARLY!
New Mexican Posole either with Roasted Pork or Veggie style served with all the fixings (avocado, red chili flakes, sunflower seeds, monterey jack cheese, cilantro, and lime) served with a hardy romaine salad with dried cranberries andlocal pistachios and artisanal bread Hot apple crisp and whipped cream $25.
NEW YEARS EVE Tuesday, DECEMBER 31 5-8pm Reservations a Must -575-538- 2538
Please Choose Entre and Dessert When Reserving Starter: Mini-Potato Pancakes topped with (or without) Crab and Basil Cream Entree Choices: Roast Beef Encrusted with Mustard , Horseradish, and Pistachios served with Rice Pilaf, Gingered Beets, and Steamed Asparagus or Herbed (inside and out) Roast Chicken served with Rice Pilaf, Gingered Beets, and Steamed Asparagus or Manicotti Stuffed with Roasted Butternut Squash and Homemade Ricotta Cheese with Lemon topped with a Sauce of Fresh Tomatoes, Basil, Red Bell Pepper and Toasted Pistachios All Entrees served with a Caesar Salad and Homemade Bread. Dessert: Lemon Curd Poppy Seed Cake with Lemon Syrup and White Chocolate or Chocolate Raspberry Trifle $42.
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DECEMBER 2013
DINING GUIDE continued
dinner menu is much grander, though some sandwiches are available then, too. Dinner options include let mignon, at iron steak, T-bone, ribeye, New York strip, Porterhouse, barbequed pork ribs, Duck LOrange, Alaska King Crab legs, broiled salmon steak, shrimp scampi, pork chops, osso buco, beef kabobs. (March 2010) Bar, deli, steaks: L D.* BalBOa MOTEl & REsTaURaNT, 708 W. Pine St., 546-6473. Mexican, American: Sun.-Fri. L D. BElsHORE REsTaURaNT, 1030 E. Pine St., 546-6289. Mexican, American: Tues.-Sun. B L. CamPOs REsTaURaNT, 105 S. Silver, 546-0095. Owner Albert Campos prides himself on the authentic Mexican and southwestern food he cooks up, inspired by his home in the Mexican state of Zacatecassuch as the fantastic BBQ Beef Brisket Sandwich, a family recipe. But the restaurant has much more than Mexican fare. (June 2007) Mexican, American, Southwestern: L D.* CaNOs REsTaURaNT, 1200 W. Pine St., 546-3181. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. L D. CHINa REsTaURaNT, 110 E. Pine St., 546-4146. Chinese: L D. DEmING TRUcK TERmINal, 1310 W. Spruce St., 544-2228. Indian food is offered on a separate menu and you have to ask for that menu. The list of dishes is not very long, but the spices and avor of the dishes that are offered are authentically Indian. (November 2013) American, Mexican, Indian: B L D, Sun. L buffet. El CamINO REal, 900 W. Pine St., 546-7421. Mexican, American: B L D. ElIsas HOUsE Of PIEs aND REsTaURaNT, 208 1/2 S. Silver Alley, 494-4639. The southern-style fare is a savory prelude to 35 avors of pie. (April 2012) American, barbecue, sandwiches, pies: Mon.-Sat. L D. * El MIRaDOR, 510 E. Pine St., 5447340. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L D. FORGHEDaBOUDIT PIZZa & wINGs, 2020 Hatch Hwy. 26, 275-3881. Direct from New York City, Bob Yacone and his wife, Kim Duncan, have recreated an authentic-style New York pizza parlor on the outskirts of Deming. (June 2013) Italian, pizza, wings: Mon.-Sat. L D, Sun. D. GOlDEN SUN STaR, 500 E. Cedar St., 544-0689. Chinese: L D. GRaND MOTOR INN & LOUNGE, 1721 E. Pine, 546-2632. Mexican, steak, seafood: B L D. IRmas, 123 S. Silver Ave., 5444580. Mexican, American, seafood: B L D. La FONDa, 601 E. Pine St., 546-0465. Roomy, bright and airy, La Fonda is no mere taco joint. The extensive menu features all the Mexican favorites at bargain prices, plus a wide range of Anglo fare and a breakfast thats worth the drive to Deming. Famous for its fajitas: Choose chicken, beef or both, fajitas for two, or try the unusual stuffed fajita potato or seemingly contradictory fajita burrito. (September 2009) Mexican: B L D.* Las CaZUElas, 108 N. Platinum Ave. (inside El Rey meat market), 544-8432. This gem of a restaurant turns out perfectly cooked steaks and seafood, as well as a full line of Mexican fare. (June 2011) Steaks, seafood, Mexican: Tues.-Sat. L D.* MaNOlOs Caf, 120 N. Granite St., 546-0405. The menu offers breakfast, lunch and dinner choices, and its difcult to convey the immense range of food options available. In every section of the menu, theres a mixture of American-style comfort food items and Southwest-style Mexican dishes which no doubt qualify as Hispanic comfort food. Theres nothing particularly fancy about the food, but its fresh and tasty. And the prices are reasonable. (February 2012) Mexican, American: Mon.-Sat. B L D, Sun. B L. MImBREs VallEY BREwING CO., 200 S. Gold, 544-BREW. Craft beer, burgers, wings, paninis: Mon.-Sat. L D. Palmas ITalIaN GRIll, 110 S. Silver, 544-3100. Even if you think you dont like Italian food, you might want to try this family-run enterprise, with Harold and Palma Richmond at the helm. In addition to the name, Palma brings to the restaurant her Sicilian heritage and recipes that came to the United States with her grandmother. Harold brings training in classic Continental cuisine, along with his familys New England food traditions. (Sept. 2010) Italian: L D. Sat. prime rib, Sun. buffet.* PaTIO Caf, 1521 Columbus Road, 546-5990. Burgers, American: Mon.Sat. L D.* PRImE RIB GRIll (INsIDE HOlIDaY INN), I-10 exit 85, 546-2661. Steak, seafood, Mexican: B D. RaNcHERs GRIll, 316 E. Cedar St., 5468883. Steakhouse, burgers: L D.* SI SEOR, 200 E. Pine St., 5463938. Mexican: Mon.-Sat. B L D, Sun. B L. SUNRIsE KITcHEN, 1409 S. Columbus Road, 544-7795. Good-quality comfort food. Theres nothing on the menu that is really exotic. But all the familiar dishes, both American and Mexican, are done well, and its that care in preparation that lifts the food above the ordinary. This is not a freezer-to-fryer type of restaurant. (September 2012) American, Mexican, breakfasts: Mon.-Thur. B L, Fri. B L D. TacOs MIRasOl, 323 E. Pine St., 544-0646. Mexican: Mon., Wed.-Sat. B L D, Tues. B L. HOmElaNDs REsTaURaNT, I-10. Burgers, ribs, casino-style food: B L D.* PaTIO Caf, 23 Broadway, 531-2495. Burgers, American: B L.* APacHE
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Table Talk
re you a fine food artisan? If so, the Curious Kumquat wants to reward you. The restaurant is offering a $500 cash prize for the best food artisan in Grant County. According to Kumquats Rob Connoley, A food artisan is any person (hobbyist or professional) who produces items that may include but are not limited to: confections, flavored vinegars, pickles and chutneys, salsas, preserves and jams, wines and beers. Submissions will be accepted up until 5 p.m. on Dec. 14 at the restaurant. There is no entry fee; judging will be based on flavor and use of local ingredients. For more information contact info@ CuriousKumquat.com. Curious Kumquat will also be offering a vegetarian Indian cooking class, Dec. 15 at 3 p.m., with instructor Farzana Curmally. Registration is required at $35 per person, which includes a full Indian meal. Call 534-0337 or stop by the restaurant to register. 111 E. College. Caf Oso Azul at Bear Mountain Lodge plans a New Mexico Christmas Eve Dinner, Dec. 24 from 5-8 p.m., featuring traditional fare including pork or vegetarian posole with all the fixings ($25). Reservations are required, as they are for the Lodges special dinners for Christmas, Dec. 25 from 12-5 p.m. ($38), and New Years Eve, Dec. 31 from 5-8 p.m. ($42). 60 Bear Mountain Ranch Road, 538-2538, www.bearmountainlodge.com. Shevek & Co. in downtown Silver City will be celebrating the holidays with traditional holiday fare on Christmas Eve, a buffet on Christmas Day, and dinner and champagne on New Years Eve. Reservations are recommended. 602 N. Bullard, 534-9168, silver-eats.com. Eat Your Heart Out catering is closing as of Dec. 20, with owner Veralee Berg retiring. 800 W. Market, 313-9005. Three Dogs Coffeehouse & Eatery is featuring seasonal latte flavors for the holidays. Note Three Dogs new fall hours: Mon.-Fri. 7 a.m.-3 p.m., Sat. 8 a.m.-2 p.m., Sun. 9 a.m.-1 p.m. 503 N. Bullard.
Akela
Columbus
Compassion
Is a well From which good Springs forth
El CHaRRO REsTaURaNT, 209 S. P Blvd., 5423400. Mexican: B L D. s promised in these pages, Arabellas FIDENcIOs, 604 E. Motel Dr., restaurant is now open in Mesilla, serv542-8989. Mexiing Cuban and Italian immigrant cuisine. can: B L early D. Initially open for dinner only, the restaurant will KRaNBERRYs FamIlY REsTaUeventually also serve lunch. 1750 Calle de MerRaNT, 1405 Main cado, 526-1313. St., 542-9400. The former Dickeys Barbecue at 1660 S. ValMexican, American: B L D. ley Dr. in Las Cruces is being transformed into Mama ROsas a K-Bobs Steakhouse. The regional chain curPIZZa, 1312 Main rently has a half-dozen locations in New Mexico St., 542-8400. Pizza, subs, as well as restaurants in Colorado, Texas and calzones, salads, Oklahoma. k chicken wings, cheeseburgers, shrimp baskets: L D. Send restaurant news to updates@red-orRamONas green.com. Caf, 904 E. Motel Dr., 542-3030. Lordsburgs quit Breakfast, sandwiches, burgers, MexiMexican food can: Sun.-Weds., Fri.-Sat. B L. treasure offers some unusual takes on GOlDEN GIRls Caf, Hwy. 180, 539traditional recipes. (December 2012) 2457. Breakfast: B. Mexican, American: Tues.-Fri. B L D, MaRIOs PIZZa, Hwy. 180, 539Sun. B mid-day D. 2316. Italian: Mon.-Tues., Fri.-Sat. D.
All items collected in December will be donated to Deming Helping Hand Food Pantry
PaNTHER TRacKs Caf, Hwy. 338, 548-2444. Burgers, Mexican, American: Mon.-Fri. B L D RODEO STORE aND Caf. 195 HwY. 80, 557-2295. Coffeeshop food: Mon.Sat. B L. RODEO TaVERN, 557-2229. Shrimp, fried chicken, steaks, burgers, seafood: Weds.-Sat. D.
Animas
Rodeo
PURPlE ONION Caf, Mogollon, 5392710. Seasonal, quirky and way off the beaten path serves eclectic fare and famous pie. (August 2011) Breakfast, burgers, veggie melts, pita pockets, pies: Fri.-Sun., Mon. holidays, May-Oct.: B L. SNUffYs STEaKHOUsE aND SalOON, Quemado Lake, 773-4672. Steakhouse: D (Dec.-April: closed Mon.-Tues.)
Needed Food Pantry Items in High Demand: PEANUT BUTTER - is much in demand Canned or dry mix soups, Hamburger Helper (or similar) boxed dinners, Canned meats & stews including, tuna, Manwich, Spam, Dinty Moore, etc. Spaghetti and other pastas. (Ramen noodles, etc.). Canned cooking sauces such as spaghetti sauce, pasta sauces, etc. Pork & Beans, Packaged dry goods such as rice, stufng, boxed potatoes, baking mixes, etc. Breakfast foods such as cereal, oatmeal, pancake mix, syrup, etc. Juice or fruitdrinks in cans or plastic containers (Ocean Spray, etc.). No perishable food items, produce or pet food. No glass jars or bottles, please.
For more information contact us at: Faywood Hot Springs Resort 165 Highway 61 Faywood, NM 88034 575-536-9663 www.faywood.com
ADOBE Caf, Hwy. 12 & Hwy. 180, 533-6146. Deli, American, Mon. pizza, Sunday BBQ ribs: Sun.-Mon. B L D, Wed.-Fri. B L. BlacK GOlD, 98 Main St., 5336538. Coffeehouse, pastries. CaRmENs, 101 Main St., 533-6990. Mexican, American: B L D. Ellas Caf, 533-6111. American: B L D. UNclE BIlls BaR, 230 N. Main St., 533-6369. Pizza: Mon.-Sat. L D. Alma GRIll, Hwy. 180, 539-2233.
BaRBER SHOP Caf, Main St., 895-5283. American, Mediterranean, sandwiches: Thurs.-Sat. L. HIllsBORO GENERal STORE & Caf, 100 Main St., 895-5306. American and Southwestern: Sun.-Wed., Fri.-Sat. B L. NOTERestaurant hours and meals served vary by day of the week and change frequently; call ahead to make sure. Key to abbreviations: B=Breakfast; L=Lunch; D=Dinner.*=Find copies of Desert Exposure here. Send updates, additions and corrections to: updates@ red-or-green.com. k
Glenwood
DESERT EXPOSURE
DECEMBER 2013
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brought it in, bring it out! k To read more about Linda Ferraras 100-hike challenge, check out her blog at 100hikesinayear. wordpress.com. Look for a new and extended format for her hiking column in our next issue.
The trail along Sheridan Gulch offers amazing views. (Photos by Linda Ferrara) Skunk Johnsons cabin. Enjoy exploring this area of our great wilderness. Notes: You will spend some time picking through the creek bed, so be patient and enjoy it. I spoke with the Reserve Forest Ranger and he said there are no plans to maintain this trail in the near future, so you should expect to climb over dead trees and such. If you want to go to Skunk Johnson cabin, it is a 10.6-mile round-trip hike. Several guide books and websites describe it as difficult. Helpful Hint: If you
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DECEMBER 2013
www.desertexposure.com
DECEMBER
NaRIas
restaurants, shops and galleries. TDelicious Homemade breakfast served daily. 411 W. Broadway Silver City, NM 88061 575-388-5485 www.InnonBroadwayweb.com
Center Student Union, 646-4415, BEl CaNTOAlso Dec. 8. An evening of art song. A Victorian soire, a genteel gathering lled with beautiful music and good conversation. 2:30 p.m. $12, $10 students and seniors over 65. Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Downtown Mall, 523-1223, no-strings.org. CHRIsTmas CaROlThrough Dec. 8. World premiere of the all-new musical version of Charles Dickens classic tale of miserly Ebenezer Scrooge as he confronts the spirits of Christmases past, present, and future. 2 p.m. $10-$17. NMSU Center for the Arts, 1000 E. University Ave., 646-4515, nmsutheatre. com/boxofce.php. Fall STUDIO TOUR10 a.m.-4 p.m. Free. Picacho Corridor, 635-7899, fallstudiotour@gmail.com. GUIDED HIKEsSaturdays and Sundays. Journey through the park on a ranger-led hike. Wear comfortable shoes, bring water and sun protections. Binoculars are always a bonus. 2:30 p.m. Park entrance fee. Mesilla Valley Bosque State Park, 5000 Calle de Norte, 523-4398. HOlIDaY ANTIQUE aND CRafT SHOwSt. Genevieves Parish Hall, 1025 E. Las Cruces Ave., 526-8624. WaDJDaThrough Dec. 5. The deceptively simple story of a girl whos willing to do just about anything to buy her rst bicycle. The lm, which nds a sneakily innocuous way to address the severe constraints placed on women in Saudi society, was also written and directed by a woman, Haifaa Al-Mansour. Arabic with subtitles. Nightly 7:30 p.m., Sat. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $7 regular, $6 seniors and students, $5 MVFS members, children and Weds. Fountain Theatre, 2469 Calle de Guadalupe, 524-8287, mesillavalleylm.org. 8TH ANNUal YUlETIDE IN CHlORIDEThrough Dec. 8. Many of the old buildings in the historic ghost town will be decorated for the holidays. Downtown Chloride. DPAT Jam SEssIONSundays. 2-4 p.m. Free. Morgan Hall, 110 E. Pine, 545-8872, dpat.org. KIwaNIs CHRIsTmas LIGHT PaRaDE6 p.m.
S unday
BROwN BaG PROGRamProgramming and events for 2014. 12-1 p.m. Silver City Museum Annex, 302 W. Broadway, 538-5921, silvercitymuseum.org. MEmORIal TREE LIGHTINGRemember loved ones at the holidays. 5:30-6 p.m. Gila Regional Medical Center front canopy, www.grmc.org. WaRm YOUR HOmE NaTURallY Jean Eisenhower, of Home and Garden Inspiration. Attendees will learn the basics of designing passive solar ovens, water heaters, homes and home renovations. 12-1 p.m. Free. Food Co-OpCommunity Room. 534-0123, homeandgardeninspiration.net. WNMU JaZZ ENsEmBlEA performance of jazz standards that will take you through Bebop, Bossa Novas, Swing and Modern Jazz. With Brandy Bingham, voice; Oliver Perrault, trumpet; Maria Camunez, sax; Joe Chavez, piano; Miguel Narvaez, guitar; Michele Parlee, bass; Nelson Williams, drums. WNMU Parotti Recital Hall, 7:30 p.m. BIG BaND DaNcE ClUBJim Helder Septet. 7-10 p.m. $9, $7 members. Court Youth Center, 402 W. Court St., 526-6504. CHRIsTmas CaROlSee Dec. 1. Through Dec. 8. 7:30 p.m. $10-$17. NMSU Center for the Arts, 1000 E. University Ave., 646-4515, nmsutheatre. com/boxofce.php. JEN EXTENHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752. SPIRITUal PsYcHIc TaROT REaDINGs Linda Marlena Carr. 2-5 p.m. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. TRaDITIONal & SPEcIalTY CHEEsE TasTING10 a.m.-2 p.m. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436.
T hursday
Las Cruces/Mesilla
movie starring Frank Sinatra. 8 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org. CHRIsTmas BaZaaRThrough Dec. 7. Las Cruces Arts Association. Handcrafted art, decorations, prints, cards and many other works of art. 4-7 p.m. Mountain Gallery, 138 W. Mountain Ave. NORaThrough Dec. 15. A minimalist version of the play utilizing ve actors who remain on stage throughout the play. Set on Christmas Eve and Christmas Day, its the story of a young Victorian wife who is trapped by her own kindness and adherence to standards of what a wife must be. 8 p.m. $12, $10 students and seniors over 65. Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Downtown Mall, 523-1223, no-strings.org. STIll MINEThrough Dec. 12. This lm tells the true story of what happened when Canadian farmer Craig Morrisons (James Cromwell) determination to build an easy-to-navigate house for his ailing wife, Irene (Genevive Bujold), ran afoul of the local building commission. Nightly 7:30 p.m., Sat. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $7 regular, $6 seniors and students, $5 MVFS members, children and Weds. Fountain Theatre, 2469 Calle de Guadalupe, 524-8287, mesillavalleylm.org. ART REcEPTIONFour exhibits: Tejido Fronterizo/Border Tapestry by the Juntos Art Association and The Border Artists; Metamorphosis, the artwork of Santa Fe artist Gail Factor; Extended Passage of Time by Gunnar Plake; and GREEN Abundance by Marietta Leis. Through Jan. 18. Reception 5-7 p.m. Museum of Art, 491 N. Main St., 5412137, www.las-cruces.org. TOYs aND DOlls: THE MaY/WaRNER COllEcTIONThrough Jan. 25. Reception 5-7 p.m. Branigan Cultural Center, 501 N. Main St., 541-2154, las-cruces.org/ museums. ACA HEalTH INsURaNcE ENROllmENT AssIsTaNcE11 a.m.-3 p.m. Special Events Center. 534-0248. CHRIsTmas LIGHT PaRaDEMoonlight Madness. New Mexico Special Events Center, 542-8844. S aturday P earl H arbor D ay
NTI RaVITY
Chloride
Silver City/Grant County 6 B S If Theres Squash Bugs in Heaven, I Aint Staying, Learning
OOK IGNING
F riday
Lordsburg
Deming
Fabulous getaway nestled in the tall pines of Pinos Altos Fireplaces Secluded Balconies Porches Telephone & WiFi Satellite TV Barbeque Grill Hot Tub in Cabana Meeting Room Cabins with Kitchens are available
1-888-388-4515 (575) 388-4501 www.bearcreekcabins.com Just 7 miles north of Silver City on HWY 15
TRaNs-SIBERIaN ORcHEsTRaThe Lost Christmas Eve Tour. 7:30 p.m. $33$61.50. Pan Am Center, 646-1420, panam.nmsu.edu. WE SHall WalK IN BEaUTYAuthor and NPR contributor Craig Childs and award-winning Native American musician Randy Granger collaborate for an evening of readings and music. 7-9 p.m. $15 couples, $10, $8 students and seniors. West End Art Depot, 401 N. Mesilla St., 312-9892, we-ad.org.
M onday
ARGENTINE TaNGO DE Las CRUcEs Tuesdays. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $5, NMSU students free with ID. 2251 Calle de Santiago, 620-0377. TRaP, NEUTER & RETURN: FERal CaT CaREJoin nationally recognized expert on feral cat care, Joe Miele, who will explain some simple things we can do to make the feral cat population more comfortable, and learn how to humanely reduce the population by preventing new litters. 6-7:30 p.m. Free. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. ACA HEalTH INsURaNcE ENROllmENT AssIsTaNcE8 a.m.-12 p.m. Elementary School. 534-0248.
T uesday
to Make the Perfect Pie, Sing When You Need To and Find the Way Home with Farmer Evelyn, with author Stacia Spragg-Braude. 2 p.m. Silver City Museum, 312 W. Broadway, 538-5921, silvercitymuseum.org. FEsTIVal Of TREEsThrough Dec. 8. Live decorated and undecorated evergreens, baked goods, handmade holiday decorations, lights, activities. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Guadalupe Montessori, 1731 N. Alabama St., 388-3343, guadalupemontessory.org. GaZEBO LIGHTING aND SING-Off Christmas music, treats and holiday fun for all. Come for the lighting of the gazebo and cheer for your favorite singers from Kiwanis youth groups. 5 p.m. Free. Gough Park. GIla WIlDlIfE REscUEDennis Miller will present a short talk on the raptors in his care this past spring and summer, including the story of a golden eagle that survived a terrible impact with a car and was tracked after release to the north banks of Alaska. Southwest New Mexico Audubon Society. 6-7 p.m. WNMU Harlan Hall, 388-2386. NO ROOm aT THE INNThrough Dec. 7. Nativity display returns. 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m. First United Methodist Church, 300 College St., 538-5754. ROOTsThough Dec. 8. A 5rhythms dance workshop with Visudha de los Santos. Three-day workshop. 6-9 p.m. $155. NM College of Natural Healing Integrative Health and Wellness Center, 310 W. Sixth St., 313-9851, visudhadelossantos.com.
Dec. 6-12 Still Mine (102 min. ) Dec. 13- 19 You Aint Seen Nothin Yet (115 min. French w/Eng Subs) Free for current members Dec. 20-26 Portrait of Wally (90 min.) Theatre Closed December 24th & 25th Dec. 27-Jan. 2 Kill Your Darlings (104 min. )
The Fountain Theatrefeaturing the best independent, foreign and alternative lms in the Southwest. Home of the Mesilla Valley Film Society since 1989!
DECEMBER FILMS
Animas
Vs.
2469 Calle de Guadalupe, Mesilla www.mesillavalleylm.org (575) 524-8287 Shows nightly at 7:30- Sunday Matinee at 2:30.
wnmumustangs.com. TRIVIa NIGHTBring yourself or a team of seven people, max. 7 p.m. Free. Bear Mountain Lodge, 60 Bear Mountain Ranch Road, 538-2538. NMSU MENs BasKETBall
4AWNMUS W U
NGElO TaTE
W ednesday
BasKETBall p.m.
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Vs.
NEw
THE WORlD Of DON QUIXOTEArtist reception. Artwork items related to the classic novel. 5-7 p.m. Rio Grande Theatre. CHRIsTmas CaROlSee Dec. 1. Through Dec. 8. 7:30 p.m. $10-$17. NMSU Center for the Arts, 1000 E. University Ave., 646-4515, nmsutheatre. com/boxofce.php. COmE BlOw YOUR HORNThrough Dec. 22. Neil Simons rst Broadway comedy smash. Alan Baker, a 30-ish swinging bachelor with time, money and women to spare, welcomes rebellious and eager 21-year-old brother Buddy into his den of iniquity while their horried parents can only watch and pray. This farcical 1960s romp became a hit
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Gallery, 214 W. Yankie St., 534-1136. ENcHaNTED CHRIsTmas TREE TOUR Also Dec. 8, 14-15. Over 25 decorated Christmas trees in an historical house with a miniature Christmas village. Ticjets at Alotta Gelato, Ambank, Aunt Judys Attic, at the door. 4-8 p.m. $5, $1 children 12 and under. 615 A St., 538-3216. EsTHER MElVINWalking Going, Journey to the Holy Mountains of Nepal. Book signing. 1-4 p.m. Ravens Nest Boutique, 106 W. Yankie St. FEsTIVal Of TREEsSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 8. 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Guadalupe Montessori, 1731 N. Alabama St., 388-3343, guadalupemontessory.org. NO ROOm aT THE INNSee Dec. 6. 8 a.m.-1 p.m. First United Methodist Church, 300 College St., 538-5754. SOUTHwEsT BIRDsOpening reception. Grant County Art Guild. 1-5 p.m. JW Art Gallery, 99 Cortez Ave., Hurley, 537-0300, www.jwartgallery.com. STUDIO SalEThrough Dec. 8. 33rd Annual Mimbres Hotsprings Ranch. Works by more than two-dozen artists and crafts people include pottery, glass, photography, jewelry, ber arts, cut-paper art, toys, block-printed linens, letterpress prints, watercolor and oil paintings and more. Music will include performances by the Glee Maidens and Bayou Seco on Saturday, Jesi Tallman and Dustin Hamman on Sunday. No pets, please. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Take Hwy. 152 to the Mimbres, Hwy. 61 South to Royal John Mine Road (between mile markers 19 and 20). Follow signs 2 1/2 miles. www.studiosalemimbres.com. THIRD ANNUal Tamal FIEsTa Y MsStroll along decorated streets, visit traditional crafts vendors and eclectic shops and galleries, and enjoy some of the best holiday food in the Americas. Eat tamales right on the spot at the festival, or order a dozen to take home. See story in this issue for detailed schedule. Downtown Silver City, 5381337, tamalestaymas.org.
Silver City/Grant County 7 A G Paula Wittner. Ending reception. 4-6 p.m. Seedboat
DESERT EXPOSURE
HOlZNew
DECEMBER 2013
IlYa YaKUsHEVSee Dec. 7. 3 p.m. NMSU Atkinson Hall, 1075 N. Horseshoe, 646-2421. La Casa ANNUal HOlIDaY BaZaaRSee Dec. 7. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Las Cruces Convention Center, 680 E University Ave., 526-2819. Las CRUcEs MaRaTHONMarathon, half marathon, 5k, and fun run. MEsIlla VallEY CHORalE3 p.m. $10. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. NORaSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 15. 2:30 p.m. $12, $10 students and seniors over 65. Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Downtown Mall, 523-1223, no-strings.org. DPAT Jam SEssIONSundays. 2-4 p.m. Free. Morgan Hall, 110 E. Pine, 545-8872, dpat.org. the period to enjoy the evening. Music: 5:30 p.m. Community Chamber Singers; 6 p.m. Desert Larks; 6:30 p.m. Spare Parts; 7 p.m. Concert Band of the Southwest Brass; 7:30 p.m. Gila Highlanders. 5:30-8 p.m. Free. Silver City Museum, 312 W. Broadway, 538-5921, silvercitymuseum.org. BIG BaND DaNcE ClUBCDs. Mike DArcy DJ. 7-10 p.m. $7.00. Court Youth Center, 402 W. Court St., 5266504. EaT SmaRT LIVE WEllThe holidays can be a hectic time of year, but there are natural ways to relax and release mental and physical tension. 5-6 p.m. $3, members free. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. TIffaNY CHRIsTOPHERHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752. VIRGIN DE GUaDalUPE FEsTIVal Piro-Manso-Tiwa Tribe of Guadalupe Pueblo of Las Cruces. Free. St. Genevieves Parish Hall, 1025 E. Las Cruces Ave., 526-8624.
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THE WIlD LIfE Of JOHN WacHwildlife photos in handcrafted frames, through Dec. 31. Reception 1-4 p.m. Copper Quail Gallery, 211A N. Texas, 388-2646.
AQUaPONIcs WORKsHOPWith Lori Garton. Aquaponics WorkshopInnovative, sustainable growing system where sh and plants are grown together, mutually beneting each other. Learn about this sustainable food system and how to produce vegetables like lettuce, sprouts and herbs in your own urban aquaponics system. 10 a.m.-12 p.m. $20, $15 members. MVM Farm, 2653 Snow Road, 523-0436, mountainviewmarket.coop.. CHRIsTmas CaROlSee Dec. 1. Through Dec. 8. 7:30 p.m. $10-$17. NMSU Center for the Arts, 1000 E. University Ave., 646-4515, nmsutheatre. com/boxofce.php. COmE BlOw YOUR HORNSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 22. 8 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org. DaN LamBERTHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752. IlYa YaKUsHEVAlso Dec. 8. Piano-Classics Three. 7:30 p.m. NMSU Atkinson Hall, 1075 N. Horseshoe, 646-2421. La Casa ANNUal HOlIDaY BaZaaRAlso Dec. 8. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Convention Center, 680 E University Ave., 526-2819. CHRIsTmas BaZaaRSee Dec. 6. 10 a.m.-2 p.m. Mountain Gallery, 138 W. Mountain Ave. NMSU SwImmING aND DIVING Vs NORTHERN ARIZONa11:30 a.m. Pan Am Center, 646-1420, panam.nmsu. edu. NORaSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 15. 8 p.m. $12, $10 students and seniors over 65. Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Downtown Mall, 523-1223, no-strings.org. SaNTa FE OPERa HOlIDaY SHOw79 p.m. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. MIKE MOUTOUXCowboy poet. 2-4
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Deming
CITY/GRaNT COUNTY WIDSERVIcE10:30 a.m. $10 includes lunch. Glad Tidings church, 537-3643. El PasO BRassComposed of key members of the El Paso Symphony Orchestra and other distinguished artists from across the Southwest. Enjoy an all-new half-classical, half-jazz show of favorite seasonal music and songs to get you in the holiday mood. Benets KRWG. 6:30 p.m. $20, $7.50 students 6-18, free under 6. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com.
IlVER OwED ERsONs
9SP
M onday
BasKETBall UNIVERsITY5:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com. WNMU MENs BasKETBall Vs. COlORaDO MEsa UNIVERsITY7:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com.
Vs OlORaDO Esa
13 WNMU W .C M
F riday
the nutrition and improve digestibility of different foods. 12-1 p.m. Silver City CoOp Community Room, 520 N. Bullard St., 388-2343, silvercityfoodcoop.com. PaUl HOTVEDTArtist talk on Representational Painting. 5-6 p.m. Leyba & Ingalls Arts, 315 N. Bullard, 3885725, www.LeybaIngallsARTS.com.
T uesday
ARGENTINE TaNGO DE Las CRUcEsTuesdays. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $5, NMSU students free with ID. 2251 Calle de Santiago, 620-0377. EVERY OTHER TUEsDaY John Oscar. 6:30 p.m. Free. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. GlUTEN-FREE BRUNcH fOR THE HOlIDaYs5-6:30 p.m. Free. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. VIRGIN DE GUaDalUPE Luminaria will ll the plaza in Old Mesilla FEsTIValThrough Dec. 12. on Christmas Eve. Piro-Manso-Tiwa Tribe of Guadalupe Pueblo of Las Cruces. Free. St. Genevieves Parish Hall, p.m. $10, $8 DPAT members. Morgan 1025 E. Las Cruces Ave., 526-8624. Hall, 110 E. Pine, 545-8872, dpat.org. HOlIDaY BaZaaR10 a.m.-2 p.m. Senior Center, 539-2522. CHRIsTmas IN THE FOOTHIllsAnnual holiday arts and crafts festival. 10 a.m.4 p.m. Hillsboro Community Center.
Deming
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Glenwood Hillsboro
ENcHaNTED CHRIsTmas TREE TOUR See Dec. 7. Also Dec. 14, 15. 4-8 p.m. $5, $1 children 12 and under. 4-8 p.m. $5, $1 children 12 and under. 615 A St., 538-3216. FEsTIVal Of TREEsSee Dec. 6. 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Guadalupe Montessori, 1731 N. Alabama St., 388-3343, guadalupemontessory.org. HI LO SIlVERsHoliday concert and sing-along. Singers are directed by Valdeen Wooton and accompanied by Virginia Robertson on piano and Bill Baldwin on bass violin. 3 p.m. Free. First Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall, 1915 N. Swan St. STUDIO SalESee Dec. 7. 33rd Annual Mimbres Hotsprings Ranch. 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Take Hwy. 152 to the Mimbres, Hwy. 61 South to Royal John Mine Road (between mile markers 19 and 20). Follow signs 2 1/2 miles. www. studiosalemimbres.com. BEl CaNTOSee Dec. 1. 7 p.m. $12, $10 students and seniors over 65. Black Box Theatre, 430 N. Downtown Mall, 523-1223, no-strings.org. CHRIsTmas CaROlSee Dec. 1. 2 p.m. $10-17. NMSU Center for the Arts, 1000 E. University Ave., 646-4515, nmsutheatre.com/boxofce.php. COmE BlOw YOUR HORNSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 22. 2 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org.
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BIG BaND HOlIDaY CONcERT Traditional Christmas music arranged in the jazz idiom for the big band. 7 p.m. Unitarian Universalist Church, 2000 S. Solano Dr. VIRGIN DE GUaDalUPE FEsTIVal Through Dec. 12. Free. St. Genevieves Parish Hall, 1025 E. Las Cruces Ave., 526-8624.
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ANNUal CHRIsTmas CONcERT Through Dec. 15. Voz Vaqueros, The Singing Men of Las Cruces. 7 p.m. Trinity Lutheran Church, 2900 Elks Dr., 523-4232. BORDER BaROQUE HOlIDaY CONcERTAlliance of professional musicians dedicated to bringing the masterworks of the Baroque era to contemporary audiences. Ensemble programs are enriched by the occasional addition of works from other musical eras to compare or contrast with the unique and rich musical heritage of the Baroque. 7 p.m. $3. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. CHRIsTmas IN OlD MEsIllaLighting of the Christmas tree. 6-9 p.m. Old Mesilla Plaza, 524-3262, mesillanm. gov/tourism. COmE BlOw YOUR HORNSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 22. 8 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org. YOU AINT SEEN NOTHIN YET Through Dec. 19. Director Alan Resnais depicts a group of players assembled at the remote house of a ctitious playwright. The playwright has left behind a lmed production of Eurydice as enacted by a very young theater troupe. As the old-timers watch in a screening room, they speak the lines and enact the play themselves, taking over from the tyros on screen. In French with subtitles. Nightly 7:30 p.m., Sat. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $7 regular, $6 seniors and students, $5 children and Weds, Free MVFS members. Fountain Theatre, 2469 Calle de Guadalupe, 524-8287, mesillavalleylm.org.
Las Cruces/Mesilla
All classes are Wednesdays at the CATS/KOOT 88.1 FM studio located at 513 N. Bullard Silver City, NM. Classes start at 5:30 PM and last one hour. Spaces are limited, so please call 534-0130 to reserve a spot 24 hours in advance!
December 2013 Classes 12/4/13: Audacity Radio Editing Program with Todd Dennehy! Learn how to record and edit your own KOOT 88.1 FM radio show! 12/11/13: Advanced Movie Maker Video Editing! Learn how the pros do it-add special effects, music and more to your production! 12/18/13: PRO Radio! Wonder how the Pros do it? This class will turn you into a PRO! Taught by KOOT 88.1 FM Pro, Todd Dennehy! January 2014 Classes 1/8/14: Movie Maker! Want to show others your photos, but they arent interested? Learn how to turn your digital photos into a video production! 1/15/14: Audacity Radio Editing Easy, beginner editing class! Great way to get started in radio! 1/22/14: Advanced Movie Maker Editing! Learn how to add special effects, titles and music to your production! Classes are FREE to members! Non-members are charged a $10 fee. Limited seating, so please call 575-534-0130 to sign up 24 hours in advance. Become a CATS/KOOT FM MemberYearly Memberships: Television-$50, Radio-$75, Both-$110
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Free. Silver City Public Library, 515 W. College Ave. CUlTURING VEGETaBlEsSee Dec. 10. 12-1 p.m. Silver City Co-Op Community Room, 520 N. Bullard St., 388-2343, silvercityfoodcoop.com. GRaNT COUNTY ROllING STONEs GEm aND MINERal SOcIETYAnnual holiday party. Enjoy ham and turkey, with potluck side dishes and desserts provided by members; bring serviceware. 6-8 p.m. Senior Center, Victoria St. 534-1393, rollingstonesgms. blogspot.com. GREEN DRINKsThe monthly meeting of the Southwest New Mexico Green Chamber of Commerce and the Silver City Chapter of the New Mexico Solar Energy Association will discuss 2014 legislative platform topics and further implementation of the Buy Local Program. 5:30-7 p.m. Shevek & Co. Restaurant, 602 N. Bullard St. 538-1337, swgreenchamber@gmail.com. 29TH ANNUal VIcTORIaN CHRIsTmasTraditional decorations, music, hot mulled cider and holiday treats, all in the spirit of an old-fashioned community celebration. Visitors are welcome and need not be dressed in clothing from
T hursday
dinner, cash bar. Mimbres Region Arts Council. 7 p.m. $50. Lawley Toyota Showroom, 2750 E Hwy. 180, mimbresarts.org. CRafT ClassChristmas Ornaments. Ages 8 and up. Pre-registration encouraged. 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Silver City Museum, 312 W. Broadway, 538-5921, silvercitymuseum.org. ENcHaNTED CHRIsTmas TREE TOUR See Dec. 7. Through Dec. 15. 3-7 p.m. $5, $1 children 12 and under. 4-8 p.m. $5, $1 children 12 and under. 615 A St., 538-3216. FRIENDs Of THE SIlVER CITY LIBRaRY BOOK SalEHuge variety of gently used books, music CDs, DVDs, recorded books on tape and CD, and videotapes. Funds help support library programs. 9 a.m.-3 p.m. 1510 Market St. GUaRDING AGaINsT IDENTITY THEfTWith Joe Wlosinski. Sponsored by AARP. 1 p.m. Free. Bayard Public Library, 1112 Central Ave. 4TH ANNUal CHRIsTmas BOUTIQUE Through Dec. 15. Presented by Grant County Home Business Network. Crafts, gifts, food, knife sharpening, entertainment and free rafes. Have your child or dogs photo taken with Santa Paws. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Grant County Business and Conference Center, Hwy. 180E. MaRK BOwNMetal art. Artist reception. 3-6 p.m. Ravens Nest Boutique, 106 W. Yankie St. WNMU WOmENs BasKETBall Vs. WEsTERN STaTE COlORaDO UNIVERsITY5:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com.
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Thu 12/5 Fri 12/7 Thu 12/12 Sat 12/14 Thu 12/19 Sat 12/21 Thu 12/26 Sat 12/28
Jen Exten (TorC Singer/Songwriter) Dan Lambert (El Paso Multi-Instrumentalist) Tiffany Christopher (Lady Rocker) K.C. Turner, Roem Baur, and The Welcome Matt (San Francisco Indie Showcase) The Blue Grammas (Bluegrass Townies) Swing Soleil (San Francisco Gypsy Jazz) Bourbon Legend (Uke-rock heroes) Steve Smith (Mando-virtuoso)
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sing-along is Dec. 8 at First Presbyterian Church Fellowship Hall in Silver City. The popular singers are directed by Valdeen Wooton and accompanied by Virginia Robertson on piano and Bill Baldwin on bass violin. In Deming, local favorite cowboy poet Mike Moutoux takes the stage at Historic Morgan Hall on Dec. 7; we expect hell share a few of his Christmas poems. In Las Cruces, A Christmas Carol continues through Dec. 8 at the new NMSU fine arts center. Two Silver City holiday traditions take center stage the following week, with the annual Victorian Christmas at the Silver City Museum, Dec. 12, and the Mimbres Region Arts Councils Black Tie Benet Ball (on the theme of Route 66A Holiday Road Trip), Dec. 14 at Lawley Toyota. In Las Cruces, Voz Vaqueros, the Singing Men of Las Cruces, perform their annual Christmas concert, Dec. 13-15 at three different locations; check our listings for details. Dec. 13 is also the Border Baroque Holiday Concert at the Rio Grande Theatre, featuring an alliance of professional musicians dedicated to bringing the masterworks of the Baroque era to contemporary audiences. Still got gifts to buy? Check out the fourth annual Christmas Boutique at the Grant County Business and Conference Center, Dec. 14-15. But youd better hurry, because were not the only ones making a list and checking it twice this month. k
THE TO DO
LIST
Happy ho-ho-holidays!
A rosemary plant in the Guadalupe Montessori School garden, with decorations by students.
hoever opined that theres no place like home for the holidays must have sneaked a peek at this months must-notmiss list. Its prime time for seasonal spirit throughout Desert Exposure country. Start with the Light Up a Life memorial treelighting ceremony at Gila Regional Medical Center, Dec. 5 at 5:30 p.m. To learn more about how to remember a loved one at the event, see www.grmc. org. Speaking of trees, youll find live trees, both decorated and au naturale, along with holiday goodies and fun at the Festival of Trees at Guadalupe Montessori School in Silver City, Dec. 6-8. Next come lights and carols, which youll find at the Kiwanis Clubs annual Gazebo Lighting and Holiday Sing-Off at Gough Park in Silver City on Dec. 6, featuring singers from Kiwanis youth groups. Then its both lights and trees along the trail of the Enchanted Christmas Tree Tour, sponsored by the Evergreen Garden Club, Dec. 7-8 and 14-15, with 25 decorated trees and a miniature Christmas village, at 615 A St. in Silver City. The Hi Lo Silvers annual holiday concert and
EVENTS continued
WNMU MENs BasKETBall Vs. WEsTERN STaTE COlORaDO UNIVERsITY7:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com. 9TH ANNUal MOTTPOTTs STUDIO SHOwRaku pottery ring demonstrations. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. ITs A WONDERfUl LIfESee Frank Capras iconic 1946 lm, starring Jimmy Stewart and Donna Reed, on the big screen. An angel helps a compassionate but despairingly frustrated businessman by showing what life would have been like if he never existed. Show time TBA. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. ANNUal CHRIsTmas CONcERTSee Dec. 13. Through Dec. 15. Voz Vaqueros, The Singing Men of Las Cruces. 7 p.m. St. Pauls Methodist Church, 225 W. Griggs. 526-6689. CHRIsTmas ON THE HIsTORIcal CamINO REalSanta and Mrs. Claus arrive by stagecoach. 12 p.m. Klein Park. COmE BlOw YOUR HORNSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 22. 8 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org. COmPassION & CHOIcEs12 p.m. Branigan Cultural Center, 501 N. Main St., 541-2154. KC TURNER, ROEm BaUR, aND THE WElcOmE MaTTHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752. HOlIDaY LUmINaRIasFriends of Rockhound. 5-6:30 p.m. Rockhound State Park, Hwy. 143. HOlIDaY BaZaaR10 a.m.-2 p.m. Senior Center, 539-2522.
Las Cruces/Mesilla
$1 children 12 and under. 615 A St., 538-3216. INDIaN COOKINGVegetarian. Farzana Curmally. Includes full Indian meal. 3 p.m. $35. Curious Kumquat, 111 E College Ave., 534-0337. 4TH ANNUal CHRIsTmas BOUTIQUE See Dec. 14. 11 a.m.-4 p.m. Grant County Business and Conference Center, Hwy. 180E. ANNUal CHRIsTmas CONcERTSee Dec. 13. Voz Vaqueros, The Singing Men of Las Cruces. 7 p.m. Good Samaritan Village, 3025 Terrace Dr., 522-1362. COmE BlOw YOUR HORNSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 22. 2 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org. WHITE CHRIsTmasStarring Bing Crosby, Danny Kaye and Rosemary Clooney. Time TBA. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. DPAT Jam SEssIONSundays. 2-4 p.m. Free. Morgan Hall, 110 E. Pine, 545-8872, dpat.org. ANNUal BaKE aND BOOK SalE10 a.m.-3 p.m. Glenwood Community Center.
FaRm aND GaRDEN WORKsHOPs Get tips for hoop house, backyard and community gardening from John Garlisch of NMSU Cooperative Extension Services. These workshops are part of the Hidalgo County Food Coalition Winter Workshop Series. 2 p.m. Lordsburg Fairgrounds, 313-0765.
Lordsburg
Las Cruces/Mesilla
W ednesday
yard and community gardening from John Garlisch of NMSU Cooperative Extension Services. These workshops are part of the Hidalgo County Food Coalition Winter Workshop Series. 6 p.m. Rodeo Community Center, 313-0765.
T hursday
Last Call for great toys this Holiday Season! Shop now-Christmas!
Toy Express
Deming
Glenwood
ers Club of Grant County is seeking the participation of new arrivals to our area, as well as those who are long-standing members of our community. Speakers will discuss various topics during luncheons and will include drawings for GCCC concert tickets. 11 a.m. Red Barn Family Steak House, 708 Silver Heights Blvd., 388-3848.
Deming
Las Cruces / Mesilla 16 E S L W Stress Cooking Class. Attend the correspondaT maRT IVE Ell
M onday
Glenwood
ing Wellness Class the Thursday prior to learn how reduce stress through natural supplements and by eating right. 5-6 p.m. $3, members free. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436.
108 W. Broadway
next to the Palace Hotel Regular store hours: 10-5 Weds-Fri, 10-6 Sat
find us on Facebook at
FORT SElDEN LUmINaRIa TOUREnjoy living history military re-enactors, 1,000 luminarias, free cookies and beverages. 5-9 p.m. Fort Selden, 526-8911.
Radium Springs
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6:30 p.m. Free. WNMU Student Memorial Building, 3rd oor. ARGENTINE TaNGO DE Las CRUcEs Tuesdays. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $5, NMSU students free with ID. 2251 Calle de Santiago, 620-0377.
BIG BaND DaNcE ClUBRon Thielman 10-piece band. Christmas Ball. Semi-formal. Finger food. 7-10 p.m. $9, $7 members. Court Youth Center, 402 W. Court St., 526-6504. SPIRITUal PsYcHIc TaROT REaDINGs Linda Marlena Carr. 2-5 p.m. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. THE GRammasHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752. VEGaN SUPPORT GROUPOpen to vegans and those who are curious about the vegan lifestyle. 7-8 p.m. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436.
Las Cruces/Mesilla
575-388-3343
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F riday
OUR
DESERT EXPOSURE
Jan. 2. Young Allen Ginsberg (Daniel Radcliffe) has ideas about breaking rules but is too meek to do much about it. That is, until he meets the seductive Lucien Carr, who takes him downtown, feeds him drugs and introduces him to the best minds of his generation. Carr, Ginsberg and William Burroughs are vessels just about to burst. And before they can ever get to writing their masterpieces, they have to have life experiences. Nightly 7:30 p.m., Sat. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $7 regular, $6 seniors and students, $5 MVFS members, children and Weds. Fountain Theatre, 2469 Calle de Guadalupe, 524-8287, mesillavalleylm.org.
DECEMBER 2013
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The Big Ditch Crickets, The Fiddle Club, Fiddling Friends and other special guests join Bayou Seco on Jan. 4.
PORTRaIT Of WallYThrough Dec. 26. A documentary about the 1912 Egon Schiele painting Portrait of Wally, which immortalized the Austrian artists then-mistress, which works like a suspense drama and a slippery chronicle of ownership, theft and vaguely unsettling resolution. No showings Dec. 24-25. Nightly 7:30 p.m., Sat. 1:30 and 7:30 p.m., Sun. 2:30 and 7:30 p.m. $7 regular, $6 seniors and students, $5 MVFS members, children and Weds. Fountain Theatre, 2469 Calle de Guadalupe, 524-8287, mesillavalleylm.org. TURNING BacK THE SUNJoin New Mexico State Parks staff, Friends of Leasburg Dam, Astronomical Society of Las Cruces, and members of various Native American communities. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Leasburg Dam State Park, 524-4068.
Radium Springs
EsTHER MElVINWalking Going, Journey to the Holy Mountains of Nepal. Book signing. 10 a.m.-12 p.m. COAS Books, 317 N. Main St. NMSU MENs BasKETBall Vs. SOUTH AlaBama7 p.m. Pan Am Center, 646-1420, panam.nmsu.edu. STEVE SmITHHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752.
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COmmUNITY DaNcEBig Ditch Crickets, The Fiddle Club, Fiddling Friends and other special guests. All ages. Dances taught. 7-10 p.m. $5, free for children under 12. Old Elks Lodge, 315 N. Texas St. WNMU WOmENs BasKETBall Vs. METRO STaTE UNIVERsITY DENVER5:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com. WNMU MENs BasKETBall Vs. METRO STaTE UNIVERsITY DENVER7:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com. BUNNY BUNNY: GIla RaDNER, A SORT Of LOVE STORYSee Jan. 3. 7:30 p.m. Location TBA. 536-9935, www. bunnybunny.freestandingroom.com. FEmmE ScHIsm: WaRRIOR WOmEN PaID LEss?Solo exhibition (18 and up), through Jan. 30. Opening reception. 7 p.m. a)sp.Ae StudioArtGallery, 110 West 7th St. FaRm FUN fOR KIDsYouth ages ve and up are invited to participate in a farm workshop tailored specically for inquisitive minds. The workshop is designed to help kids learn about different aspects of vegetable farming, livestock, worm farming, and composting. 121:30 p.m. $10, $8 members. Mountain View Market Farm, 2653 Snow Road, 523-0436, mountainviewmarket.coop.
S aturday
EVERY OTHER TUEsDaYKim Lyton. 6:30-7:30 p.m. Free. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 5236403, riograndetheatre.com.
T uesday
NMSU MENs BasKETBall Vs. SEaTTlE U7 p.m. Pan Am Center, 6461420, panam.nmsu.edu. k
T hursday
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Send events info by the 20th of the month to: events@ desertexposure.com, fax 534-4134, POBox 191, Silver City, NM 88062 or NEW submit your event online at www.desertexposure.com/ submitevents. BEFOREYOUGO: Note that events listings are subject to change and to human error! Please conrm all locations. dates, times and
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LUmINaRIa & TREE LIGHTING6 p.m. Pancho Villa State Park, S. Columbus Road, 531-2711. DPAT Jam SEssIONSundays. 2-4 p.m. Free. Morgan Hall, 110 E. Pine, 545-8872, dpat.org. T uesday C hristmas E V e
HE RamaIc RaYER Of
Columbus
Deming
COmE BlOw YOUR HORNSee Dec. 6. Through Dec. 22. 8 p.m. Las Cruces Community Theater, 311 N. Main St., lcctnm.org. DEsERT BaBY-WEaRERsLearn about safe and comfortable baby-wearing, practice new methods, try different carriers and meet other baby-wearers at this monthly meeting. 10 a.m.-12 p.m. Free. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. NMSU MENs BasKETBall Vs. NORTHERN NEw MEXIcO7 p.m. Pan Am Center, 646-1420, panam.nmsu. edu. SOUTHwEsT BassOONs HOlIDaY CaROlsSouthwest Bassoons Holiday Carols will feature the holiday spirit this Las Cruces Bassoon group. 12-1:30 p.m. Rio Grande Theatre, 211 N. Downtown Mall, 523-6403, riograndetheatre.com. SwING SOlEIlHigh Desert Brewing, 1201 W. Hadley, 525-6752. TRaDITIONal & SPEcIalTY CHEEsE TasTING12-4 p.m. Mountain View Market, 1300 El Paseo, 523-0436. CaROlYN MaRTIN DUOWestern Swing. 2 p.m. $10, $8 DPAT members. Morgan Hall, 110 E. Pine, 545-8872, dpat.org.
Las Cruces/Mesilla
EsUs
the vibration of Jesus original words in the Lords Prayer. No experience necessary. Live music. 7 p.m. First Church of Harmony, 609 Arizona St.
ARGENTINE TaNGO DE Las CRUcEs Tuesdays. 6:30-9:30 p.m. $5, NMSU students free with ID. 2251 Calle de Santiago, 620-0377. CHRIsTmas CaROls aND LUmINaRIas ON THE PlaZaThe historic village of Old Mesilla is aglow with thousands of luminarias and caroling. 5 p.m. Old Mesilla Plaza, 524-3262, mesillanm. gov/tourism. W ednesday C hristmas D ay
Las Cruces/Mesilla
1
3
W ednesday N ew Y ear s D ay
JANUARY
MEMBER
shops Enjoy music, luminaria, treats and beverages. 4-7 p.m. NIZHONI POTTERY STUDIO SalE Contemporary Navajo Pottery by Romaine Begay. 10 a.m.-4 p.m. 3235 Little Walnut Road.
LaKE LUcERO TOURHike with a ranger to the source of the sands and learn about the formation of the dunes. 10 a.m. $3, $1.50 children. White Sands National Monument, 679-2599 ext. 230, 479-6124 ext. 236, nps.gov/ whsa. T uesday N ew Y ear s E V e
White Sands
Frumpy Fox
Petsitting
LLC
25
Deming
T hursday K wan Z aa
BUNNY BUNNY: GIla RaDNER, A SORT Of LOVE STORYAlso Jan. 4. By Alan Zweibel; a staged adaptation of the book. Directed by Tanner Harvey. Starring Rosaruby Kagan. Tickets at MRAC ofce. 7:30 p.m. Location TBA. 536-9935, www.bunnybunny.freestandingroom.com. WNMU WOmENs BasKETBall Vs. REGIs UNIVERsITY5:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com. WNMU MENs BasKETBall Vs. REGIs UNIVERsITY7:30 p.m. wnmumustangs.com. DOll-MaKINGIn conjunction with Toys and Dolls and the Lincoln: The Constitution and the Civil War exhibitions, a morning of doll-making using traditional materials accessible in the Civil War era. 10-11:30 a.m. Free. Branigan Cultural Center, 501 N. Main St., 541-2154, las-cruces.org/museums.
S unday
Las Cruces/Mesilla
Southwestern Jewelry Rock Hounding gear and books Mineral Specimens Beading supplies Unique gifts
27K
F riday
YOUR DaRlINGsThrough
575.538.9001 royalsceptergems@yahoo.com
Lloyd Studios
306 W. Broadway Silver City, NM
Department 56 Dickens Village over 50 pieces plus accessories Many retired and hard-to-find.
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her right back beside our tree. Still photos are fine for most things, but to see motion and especially to hear a long-gone voice well, it makes it worth wading through the previous 90 minutes of soccer action. How I wish video technology had been a household thing back when my dad was still alive! Seeing our daughter grow up from one Christmas to the next is priceless, too. It turns out she was a drama queen when the camera was on from the very earliest of these videos. (Sorry, sweetie, but its a bit like watching Sunset Boulevard meets Here Comes Honey Boo-Booin, of course, an adorable way.) She grows up, but that Christmas face never changes.
Magnetic Memories
Video visions of holidays past.
y wife, bless her Scandinavian work ethic, has recently taken on the tedious task of transferring all our home movies from tape to digital. She quickly ran into a technological roadblock with the earliest of these tapes, when our last surviving VCR decided to start eating them rather than playing them. Amazingly, it is still possible to buy a new VCR on Amazon, but for the money (for a machine we would never use again) we can have those tapes professionally transferred. So the chore has now focused on the smaller tapes from our most recent video camera, which fits neatly in the hand and was quite high-tech in its day. That day, we were reminded when my wife played the tape still in the camera, apparently ended when our daughter graduated from high school. Our daughter recently turned 30, so its been awhile since we captured, at stupefying length, her tennis lessons, baseball games, soccer practices and school plays and concerts. Since she went to college in another city, we werent around to document her every move (thank goodness, shed probably say). And her wedding last year was extensively (not to mention expensively) recorded in photographs, while we were a little too busy walking her down the aisle and choking up to play Cecil B. DeMille. After her high school graduation, then, our lives dropped off the map, video-wise. (Until, of course, smartphone cameras made it possible to record every moment, no matter how trivial. Would you like to see an adorable iPhone video of our cat helping to make the bed? Adorable, I tell you!) But luckily our video-camera ownership and passion for using it at interminable length, complete with shaky handheld shots and way-too-fast, urp-inducing pans, coincided with a period in our lives when our daughter was growing up and three of her grandparents were still alive.
trip to New England (probably just as well, as our daughter spent most of that trip pining for her teenaged pals), Orlando and out West, which was our first time in New Mexico. (Insert fateful foreshadowing music here.) Theres way too much scenery, too little of loved ones. Oh, theres plenty of our daughterand a bevy of nowforgotten teammatesin the feature-length footage of her various sports endeavors. But shes necessarily at a distance in these videos, since we lacked that overhead-camera-on-a-wire gizmo that brings the NFL into such close focus. Tiny figures make patterns across a soccer field, ho-hum. And lets be honest, soccer finishes just above paint drying for visual excitement, anyway, even when played expertly by professionals. Mowing the field before the game has more action. What were we thinking? Who would want to watch these games again? We made it through the first, in-person viewing only because of parental duty! (At least we didnt videotape every single soccer game, as certain maniacal soccer moms and dads did. Then theyd make their kids watch the game film, as if they were NFL players whod performed poorly the previous Sunday.) School plays and band concerts were similarly recorded ad nauseum for an uncaring posterity. Its fun to see a snippet of our daughter performing in costume or playing her (long since abandoned) saxophone, sure. But that initial flush of nostalgic delight soon fades, leaving you wishing you had a dentists appointment to go to instead of watching the rest.
nluckily, as I realize far too late, peeking over my wifes shoulder as our past unspools on her computer screen, we spent far too much footage on the scenery of that span of our lives and too little on the people. I videotaped a lovely trip to the zoo in my hometown, for example, with my mom and our daughter. If you want to see what the animals in the Great Plains Zoo looked like in the early 1990s, settle in with some popcorn for a complete tour. If you want to see my mom and our daughter as she looked back then, however, youll be mostly disappointed. Why would I think wed ever want to relive that trip in such detail? Why did it not occur to me to mostly focus the camera on my mom together with her granddaughter? The same pattern recurs, more or less, in the videos of our
he happy exceptions are videos involving our pets and (you knew I was getting to this eventually) holidays, especially Christmas. What a joy it is to see and remember our furry friends when they were just kittens and a puppy. How tiny they were and how frighteningly energetic! Could that really be our cats, Peaches and Frodo, whom we lately recall from their dotage as lazily settled furballs, skittering around the house like Tasmanian devils on Red Bull? When did our daughter do that charming day in the life video of Peaches, whom I still miss daily? What a find! And our first cat, whom I feared we hadnt taken enough photos of despite her 13 years with us, comes alive again on video in scene after scene. Many of those scenes seem to be of us trying to make the cat wear a Santa hat or open her Christmas presents, when shed really rather be playing with the ribbon on the packages. We hauled out the camera for the holidays not only to capture Christmas for our own later viewing but also to share, transferred to VHS tapes, with family not present for the presentopening. Thus the overacting and mugging for the camera: A waffle iron! Just what I wanted! Thanks! And the feigned excitement over gifts we couldnt quite decipher: Wow, what a surprise! Ive never seen one of these before. Itll go great in the kitchen? TV room? When family members did visit, it was usually my mom, so we have her gentle presence on one holiday video after another. Oh, thats so sweet, she says, or You made it yourself? when inspecting some school project gifted by our daughter. She never betrays on film that, for example, she really wished wed stop giving her those little bird figurines. (Dangit, mom, youre hard to buy for! Start a collection!) Shes been gone for 11 Christmases now, but these videos put
ong after the toys have been forgotten, its those faces and voices that make Christmas special. (Did we really buy that air-hockey table? What was in our heads? Whatever became of it?) Oh, sure, you can say that its the memories that matter, not some collection of magnetic bits on an old videotape. Well always have the memories, even if technological progress makes the movies impossible to play anymore. But memories fade, of course, sometimes even faster than old video tapes. And arent there days when you wish you could step back into your memories, if only for an hour or so? That long-ago Christmas with the dated haircuts and the now-discarded gifts flickers to life on the screen and there you are again. Everyone is laughing as the cat tries to shake off her little Santa hat and Id forgotten about that old sofa and that lamp! The gauzy-rainbowed glow of the tree casts across the faces that look so young, the hair not yet gray. Another Christmas video shows the magic snow boot-prints on the mat by the front door, where Santa must have entered (that house having no chimney). The cat inspects the mystery, then hustles off before someone tries to stick a red hat on her head. Shes already been captured on a Polaroid by a certain rosy-cheeked elfin visitor, who also made quick work of the milk and cookies. Its Christmas morning and the stockings are full. Pajama-clad and inadequately caffeinated, parents and grandmother wait at the bottom of the stairs. The video camera whirrs, dutifully capturing wintersunlit moments we wont view again until grandmother is gone, daughter grown and married. Down the stairs our daughter comes, and for an instant the eternal light with which childhood fills the world suffuses the screen. Play it again. k David A. Fryxell hangs his stocking at Desert Exposure World Headquarters.
DESERT EXPOSURE
DECEMBER 2013
55
Desert Desperadoes: The Banditti of Southwestern New Mexico by Bob Alexander ($21.95)
Award-winning author Bob Alexander traces the areas Old West outlaws across Las Cruces and the Mesilla Valley, Silver City and Grant County, Deming and Columbus, Lordsburg and Shakespeare, into the Gila and even to El Paso and southeastern Arizona. Besides such well-known desperadoes as Billy the Kid and Johnny Ringo, the book colorfully recounts the careers of characters including Bronco Bill Walters, Curly Bill Brocius, Kit Joy, Three-Fingered Jack Dunlap, Pony Diehl, Black Jack Christian, Six-Shooter Smith and John Kinney, King of the Rustlers. Among those seeking to bring the books banditti to justice are Pat Garrett, Dangerous Dan Tucker and Harvey Whitehill. Illustrated with more than 80 rare historical photographs, plus a cover by noted Western artist Donald Yena.
Available locally at: Silver City Museum OKeefes Bookstore in Silver City Log Cabin Curio Shop in Pinos Altos Mesilla Book Center
BOOKS
GILA
56
DECEMBER 2013
www.desertexposure.com
HAPPY HOLIDAYS!
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Stilton Bleu Cheeses from England Green Chile Pork Sausage Oregons Central Coast Creamery fabulous cheeses:
Holy Cow Goat Gouda Goat Cheddar
(We smoke them with Apple & Hickory right here at River Ranch Market)