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Taos and the SANTA FE TRAIL COUNTRY
May 16-22, 2010
Location: Northeast New Mexico
The old trail wound its way south from Independence, Missouri, crossing the
rolling plains of Kansas, the dry Panhandle of Oklahoma, through the lands of
the Comanche and the Kiowa, and into the waving grasslands of northeast New
Mexico and the muddy and dangerous crossings of the Sapello, Mora, Pecos,
Cimarron and Canadian. As the journey neared its end, the cavalry outpost of
Fort Union and villages like Cimarron, Wagon Mound, and Las Vegas offered
sanctuary and comfort to the weary travelers before their final push to the
vibrant Spanish American towns of Santa Fe and Taos.

As early as 1821, this was a trail of commerce more than settlement, and
traffic was heavy from the 1840’s to the 1860’s as manufactured goods from
the U.S. rolled west and burros, fur, gold, horses, silver, and gay colored
materials from the Spanish-Mexican-Indian cultures moved east. And Green Horn
and his Comanche warriors waited in ambush for travelers from either direction.
History, legend, and imagination built upon each other as the ruts grew deeper
along 900 miles of one of the country’s earliest and most famous “Western
Roads”
Then came the cattlemen, then the settlers, then the
trains, then the towns, and the land was settled. The ruts of the “Road to
Santa Fe” began to fade as did the lively towns and forts along its path. Time
moved on and has left northeast New Mexico a sparsely settled land, rich in
history and culture, resting easily in a time somewhere between then and now. A
land where the pace of life is more like that of the rural America we remember
with nostalgia. A land where people still have time to live.

From Taos and the vibrant native culture of Taos Pueblo to the
collapsing homestead on the rolling plains, its empty windows staring blankly at
the rusted out skeleton of a car in the front yard and the vine-entwined tractor
that died long ago trying to turn this tough ground, this is a land of
opportunity for the photographer who feels a connection to and sees the
opportunities in the simple beauty of these fading images of our country’s
past. “Need help” asked the old farmer as he brought his battered old Ford
truck to a stop in the middle of the dusty road and looked inquisitively at me
from beneath his old straw hat. “Nope, just taking a picture” I
replied. Looking over the battered old windmill silently guarding its rusted
water tank full of tumbleweeds and the endless landscape beyond that he had
looked over for so many years, he asked with a knowing smile “What in the
world would anyone want to take a picture of around here?” I was deeply aware
of the simple beauty of this stark, lonely land, but I have no doubt that the
old farmer was far more aware than I.

Cost: $1,385/Single Supplement: $75
To register, please fill out the tour application and payment
options forms. You may reserve a space (50%
deposit or full payment) with your credit card or Pay Pal account or send a check to: Branson Reynolds, POB 3471, Durango,Co 81301
Arrival/Departure Point: Taos, New Mexico
Nearest Large Airport: Albuquerque, New Mexico
Frequently asked Questions: Details on lodging,
transportation, and other questions relating to this trip.

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