deserteagle56
Member
Were you around when Salt Wells had a thriving business next to Highway 50? 40+ years ago.Salt Wells Flats in the background.
Were you around when Salt Wells had a thriving business next to Highway 50? 40+ years ago.Salt Wells Flats in the background.
Were you around when Salt Wells had a thriving business next to Highway 50? 40+ years ago.
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Mt. Lemmon AZ. Made it to the top in 2 wheel drive. Need to work this Transfer Case thing out.
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Never ate at the saw mill. Plan was Rice Peak, but then I lost 4x4.We went up the highway and down the control road at the end of June. We were kind of bummed at all the fire and drought damage. Next time I want to go up the control road and down on the highway. Did you eat at the Sawmill Run?
Never ate at the saw mill. Plan was Rice Peak, but then I lost 4x4.
Did you do the hill climb halfway?
TJs in beautiful places:
... a mini travelogue for your viewing pleasure — time to Zen-It-Up.
Spent yesterday in the northern New Mexico wilderness — traveling on the 18-mile gravel backcountry road through one of the most uniquely-grandiose preserves in the United States. As too often, photos and vids don't do it justice — I'll give it a try;
Valles Caldera National Preserve is one of those rare places on Earth where the immensity of creation elevates consciousness, humbles the psyche;
Imagine if you will a 14-mile-wide circular depression formed when a super volcano erupted 1.2 million years ago and its magma chamber collapsed — now dormant (not extinct) — reborn into a breathtaking sanctuary of life;
Surrounding the caldera, the 89,000-acre Jemez Mountains preserve begins at 8,000' and rises like a pyrogenic cathedral to 11000’+, crowned by ridges and forests of Ponderosa pine;
Before you stretches a boundless sea of grasslands and hills, rolling and golden — home to Rocky Mountain elk herds, mountain lions (Puma concolor), Mexican gray wolves (rare), black bear, mountain cottontail rabbits, coyotes — red-tail hawks, eagles, Great Blue Herons, song birds... a wildly-diverse bird species collective, many of conservation concern — and countless prairie dogs...
... meandering streams through the savanna tout brown and the scarce native Rio Grande cutthroat trout (flyrod... high priority!), all beneath a sky so limitless and blue it seems to hold eternity in its hands.
The air? Pristine. The stillness? Resounding.
Ooooh, more than a landscape I assure — it's a reminder that beauty this vast belongs not just to the earth, but to the soul that beholds it.
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TJs in beautiful places:
... a mini travelogue for your viewing pleasure — time to Zen-It-Up.
Spent yesterday in the northern New Mexico wilderness — traveling on the 18-mile gravel backcountry road through one of the most uniquely-grandiose preserves in the United States. As too often, photos and vids don't do it justice — I'll give it a try;
Valles Caldera National Preserve is one of those rare places on Earth where the immensity of creation elevates consciousness, humbles the psyche;
Imagine if you will a 14-mile-wide circular depression formed when a super volcano erupted 1.2 million years ago and its magma chamber collapsed — now dormant (not extinct) — reborn into a breathtaking sanctuary of life;
Surrounding the caldera, the 89,000-acre Jemez Mountains preserve begins at 8,000' and rises like a pyrogenic cathedral to 11000’+, crowned by ridges and forests of Ponderosa pine;
Before you stretches a boundless sea of grasslands and hills, rolling and golden — home to Rocky Mountain elk herds, mountain lions (Puma concolor), Mexican gray wolves (rare), black bear, mountain cottontail rabbits, coyotes — red-tail hawks, eagles, Great Blue Herons, song birds... a wildly-diverse bird species collective, many of conservation concern — and countless prairie dogs...
... meandering streams through the savanna tout brown and the scarce native Rio Grande cutthroat trout (flyrod... high priority!), all beneath a sky so limitless and blue it seems to hold eternity in its hands.
The air? Pristine. The stillness? Resounding.
Ooooh, more than a landscape I assure — it's a reminder that beauty this vast belongs not just to the earth, but to the soul that beholds it.
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