Showing posts with label alamogordo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label alamogordo. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 14, 2015

Alamogordo, NM: The Disappearing (and Appearing) Mountains Revisited


In 2013, when I was living in Alamogordo, New Mexico, it was like magic to witness how the Sacramento Mountains - so close! - could appear and disappear depending on clouds, rain, or dust conditions.

In March 2013, I published the post below. But I added the second video only a few days ago, as it had been lost somewhere in my archives. Both show me driving east on Indian Wells in Alamogordo - once on a clear day, and another time on a day during a dust-wind storm.

ALAMOGORDO: THE DISAPPEARING MOUNTAINS

I live perhaps half a mile - maybe less! I will clock it - from a front line of the Sacramento Mountains.

My apartment is oriented north-south, and I'm near the easternmost edge of town, and whether I look out my front window or back window, I see the mountains right there, so very close.

Alamogordo, New Mexico, 2013

The constancy of their presence is pleasing. I like to see how a day's changing light creates shadows on the mountain planes, shifting colors and depths in interesting ways.

Alamogordo, New Mexico, 2013

Some days the mountains disappear.


Alamogordo, New Mexico, 2013
Could be dust or snow or fog. It's uncanny.

The other day, I took the video below going east on Indian Wells to show how a dust-wind can completely obscure the Sacramento Mountains. You're looking right at the mountains in this video - but you can't see them, not til about 1:24.



Below is a video of the exact same route on a clear day. Mountains!





Wednesday, April 2, 2014

New Mexico Loose End: A Monsoon Day in the Neighborhood


The other night we had a wicked thunderstorm in Lafayette.


The storm the other night reminded me of the start of monsoon season in New Mexico. And specifically of this one day in July 2013, outside my apartment:




A rainy, windy day doesn't draw much comment in other parts of the country, but in the high desert, after years of drought, it's something of note.


Thursday, February 27, 2014

Alamogordo, New Mexico: Tree Life


"Yucca palm" [sic], Alamogordo, New Mexico



Although I left New Mexico in September 2013, there's more to say about it. Here's one of those things.


There are a number of plants in New Mexico that I admire for their hardiness in an adverse climate and their hospitality to other living things.

The soaptree yucca is one of them. I love those guys. They are stand-up soldiers, waving to passers-by alongside the roads, never whining, always at the ready to provide some sustenance to their fellow biota.


The "yucca palm" seems similar. It's a thick-bodied tree with a crown of dense foliage. It can support a village of small birds within. Unfortunately, I can't confirm exactly what this tree really is, though I've tried several times. "Yucca palm" appears to be the lazy-ass name, but it may be neither a palm nor a yucca.  


"Yucca palm" [sic], Alamogordo, New Mexico


There were a lot of "yucca palms" in my Alamogordo neighborhood. They teemed with small birds year-round.



 

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

New Mexico: White Sands: 365


White Sands, Alamogordo, New Mexico


I read here that an Alamogordo photographer, Rachel Telles, has produced a book on photos from White Sands.

She kept a blog of her year's work: 365 Ways to See White Sands.

It's nice that I have a recorded memory of a drive one evening through White Sands, accompanied by Aster Aweke:






  

Tuesday, November 26, 2013

Louisiana and New Mexico: Sun v. Shade



As I settle into Lafayette, the contrast with Alamogordo is marked, with one exception.

The differences

Alamogordo --> Sun, light, aridity. The Sacramento Mountains on one side, the brilliant White Sands on the other, and the San Andres further west. Two sunrises, two sunsets. A sense of openness, expanse, far-away horizons.

From my apartment, I saw the Sacramento Mountains so close it felt I could almost touch them. The sounds of doves.

Lafayette --> Shade trees, their long, curvy limbs reaching across residential roads toward their sisters on the other side. Moist air. Fat rain droplets perch on the windshield like dew on grass. Dense traffic, narrow lanes, hurry.

From my new apartment, on the second floor, I see rooftops and trees. There is a spectacular tropical plant in the yard next door. The sounds of squirrels. 

Lafayette, Louisiana


A similarity

Since I’ve moved in, it has been cloudy in Lafayette. The cloud cover is close in, so much so that when I saw a plane rise from the Lafayette airport nearby, and then watched it disappear ghostlike, I couldn’t believe how completely the clouds obscured the plane’s body. Just like how the mist and clouds obscure the Sacramento Mountains.

Saturday, October 19, 2013

New Mexico: Unidentified Effluvia


Soon after I moved to Alamogordo, I visited the Alamogordo Primate Facility.

I saw these two (?) samples of poop on the sidewalk outside the facility.

Have yet to identify it (them). But it still intrigues.

Unidentified poop, Alamogordo, New Mexico. 


A loose end.




Wednesday, October 16, 2013

New Mexico: A Drive Home


Highway 82, between High Rolls and Alamogordo, New Mexico. October 2012.


Whenever I drove home to Alamogordo down from Cloudroft or other parts east on Highway 82, I'd think, when I got to this spot: Wow, I live here.

Highway 82, between High Rolls and Alamogordo, New Mexico. October 2012.


It was always uplifting to see the White Sands. 

Monday, September 30, 2013

New Mexico: The Sonic Boom Count


Being based in Alamogordo for my year in New Mexico, I heard a number of sonic booms.

Some were more exciting than others, the exciting ones making me jump and exclaim, "Holy shit!"

In all, I heard 46 sonic booms between September 25, 2012, and September 29, 2013, my last day in New Mexico.

The booms tended to come in spurts, thus I might hear a few one day and then none for several weeks. Then maybe one boom on one day and another on the following day.

Here is a re-post of what I wrote in October 2012:


BOOM!!

It startled the heck out of me, and then I remembered where I was, Alamogordo, which is only 10 miles from the Holloman Air Force Base and the White Sands Missile Range (Army). Right. Sonic boom. Cool.


BOOM!!

And a few moments later, again.

A video on sonic booms:  




Monday, September 23, 2013

Alamogordo: Balloon Invitational


Alamogordo Balloon Invitational 2013, New Mexico


The Alamogordo Balloon Invitational was a good almost-last hurrah for my time in New Mexico.


Alamogordo Balloon Invitational 2013, New Mexico



It was as if the balloons were being hatched and delivered unto the sky like a flock of tropical birds.



Alamogordo Balloon Invitational 2013, New Mexico


I like when we humans create beauty.


Fly away pretty bird:






A slide show:

#30

Saturday, September 14, 2013

New Mexico: This is Where I Came In


Fiesta de la Familia 2013, Immaculate Conception Church, Alamogordo, New Mexico



I was driving down First Street the other day when I saw it.

The big sign advertising the Fiesta de la Familia, the first weekend in October, hosted by the Immaculate Conception Church in Alamogordo.

First thought: Flash back to when I arrived in Alamogordo last September. What a happy feeling.

Second thought: I won't be in New Mexico the first weekend in October. What a bittersweet feeling.

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

New Mexico: Bataan Death March

Some of the men who went to the Phillippines. Credit: Wilma Ticer Bull and NMSU


When I first arrived in New Mexico, Alamogordo specifically, I learned about the Bataan Memorial Death March. I wasn't clear on why - kind of in the middle of nowhere - there was this annual commemorative hike. I did some desultory research, but nothing New Mexico-specific jumped out at me, and I moved on to other things. It remained puzzling. 

But recently I read Oliver La Farge's essay in The Spell of New Mexico, and this caught me:  
... a whole regiment of New Mexico men, out of the Spanish-speaking hill villages, from the country of the drawling cowhands, from the deserts and mountains of the Indians, a whole regiment of them, .... lost on Bataan. 

Every spring participants in the Bataan Memorial Death March hike up to 26.2 miles through the White Sands Missile Range. Alas, the official memorial march page devotes only one sentence to the New Mexicans in Bataan:  Among those seized were members of the 200th Coast Artillery, New Mexico National Guard.

Of the 1,816 men in the 200th & 515th Coast Artillery (New Mexican units), 829 died in battle, while prisoners, or immediately after liberation.  There were 987 survivors.

From New Mexico State University:
In the 1930s, the men of the New Mexico National Guard were brothers, cousins, friends, and compadres. Some were part of a tradition -- their fathers, uncles, and grandfathers had also been members of the Guard.....

The New Mexico National Guard likes to remind other guard troops that they are the oldest militia in the United States. They trace their roots to the early 1600s, when a Spanish militia fought hostile Indians in the northern part of the state.....

The men of the 111th were ranch hands, miners, farmers, postal workers, students, professors, lawyers, and doctors. They knew each other from football teams, scout troops, or neighborhoods. They were friends or cousins, or members of the same tribe. ....

They represented New Mexico -- Anglos, Mexican Americans, Native Americans, and anyone else who cared to join. They were from nearly every tribe and every county in the state.


I would point you to a PBS (!) documentary on the 70th anniversary of the Bataan Death March, with an emphasis on the New Mexican units, except that this documentary seems primarily to be a vehicle for political self-aggrandizement by Senator Tom Udall and others. Ick.

Instead, here's a story from one survivor - Lorenzo Banegas.

Over 1800 New Mexican soldiers went to the Phillippines, and only half returned.

I don't know if this is true or not, but I read where New Mexico at the time of the war, only had about half a million residents, and that each was related to or knew at least one soldier caught up in the Bataan death march. 

A few years ago, I read Tears in the Darkness: The Story of the Bataan Death March and its Aftermath. Diligently researched, well told, and unsparing in its descriptions of the physical, mental, and emotional tortures before, during, and after the death march.



Saturday, July 27, 2013

Alamogordo: Curly bean plant


I don't know what this is, but I like it.

Curly pod plant, Desert Foothills Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico

Update: May be a honey mesquite.


Wednesday, July 24, 2013

Alamogordo: Rushing Waters


When I moved to Alamogordo last September, I took these photos of dry canals near my residence.

Canal, Alamogordo, New Mexico


Canal, Alamogordo, New Mexico



I looked forward to the day when I would see this:




That day was today.

Canal, Alamogordo, New Mexico


Flooded street, Alamogordo, New Mexico 


It was fun to watch this rushing water today.


An hour later, the street above was wet, but not flooded, and the water in the canal had already lowered in depth and in intensity.

In 2006, though, this same neighborhood suffered greatly from a flash flood, leaving some houses with four feet of water. Since 2006, a spillway was built to capture water cascading from the mountain slope,  and the water you see above was the overflow from that tank.



Thursday, July 11, 2013

Alamogordo: Founders Park and a Side of Controversy



Founders Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico


Alamogordo's Founders' Park recognizes those who molded Alamogordo's early years. On the corner of White Sands Boulevard and 10th Street, the park is catty-corner from the Alamogordo Zoo.



Founders Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico




Founders Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico



Founders Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico



As in many communities, there is a constant tension in Alamogordo between progress - howsoever you choose to define progress - and preservation.

(In the movie, 180 Degrees South, one of the principals says: “People say you can’t go back but what happens if you get to the cliff and you take one step forward. Or you turn 180 degrees and take one step forward…. Which is progress?”)


Next to Founders Park is an historic (depending on how you define historic) building called the Plaza Pub. There has been considerable controversy about what to do with this building and its adjacent property.

This was the take in 2012 by a city commissioner, as printed in the Alamogordo Daily News:

The Plaza Pub at 10th Street and White Sands Boulevard has been the source of great contention and duress the past couple months. There is much misinformation -- and even disinformation -- in the community. I believe you should understand the truth.

The Plaza Pub was built in 1937 and is not the oldest or an original building in Alamogordo. The city has been approached by a real estate company that represents CVS pharmacy. They have offered $350,000 for the building. This is $33,500 more than its current appraised value. The potential project includes all of the properties from 10th to 11th streets, and from White Sands Boulevard to New York Avenue. It is the entire block.

Many property owners have been offered a price that is in excess of appraised value and have indicated they are willing to sell. I understand this to be the situation, however I cannot confirm it, nor do I pretend to speak for owners. The most notable holdout being the property that was once Gibson's (circa 1960).

CVS is considering taking the entire block and investing millions of dollars in Alamogordo. They would create 30 to 50 jobs along with downtown parking. ...

Remember the plan to turn New York from 10th to 9th streets into a covered, cobblestone, walking mall? Parking might make that possible.

The Plaza Pub was bought in December 2006 with New Mexico taxpayer dollars -- $299,214.23 to be exact. Taxpayer dollars meant that it had to be in government hands and could not be given away. Alamogordo, as the government entity, was saddled with it. New Mexico has a very strong anti-donation law and it applies in this case.

The Tularosa Basin Historical Society was given lease to take, repair and use this building. The cost of this lease, as required by the anti-donation law, was $2,000 per month. This payment could be made in legal tender or in-kind service. To my knowledge, the historical society had never made a payment or documented in-kind service. Alamogordo may well stand in violation of state law.

After the original capital outlay of taxpayer money, two additional outlays totaling $270, 494 were made available by the state in May 2007 and July 2008. Ten thousand dollars was spent for an asbestos/lead study. Bid tabulations for repair of the building from Lancon Inc. and White Sands Construction Inc. averaged $725,000 on Feb. 6, 2008. After a revised scope of work was issued, a low bid of 339,000 was received with $260,000 available in November 2008 -- a shortfall of $79,000. 

Community Development met with the apparent low bidder to discuss further revisions to scope of work to match available funding, but was unsuccessful.

During the period from November 2008 to May 2009, through the course of several meetings with TBHS representatives, it became clear that the city and TBHS were not in agreement on how to proceed with the available funding; the city advocated the use of available funds to re-roof the facility and secure the building while TBHS wanted to fully develop the building as a museum.

Does it make sense to put a quarter of a million taxpayer dollars into a public building before it is made rain tight? 

In June 2009, about the time I was elected to serve District 3, the issue was brought before the City Commission for direction. The City Commission indicated that staff should go forward with the funding available to make the facility weather tight and secure. As the fiscal agent, we needed to be first concerned with the general overall condition of the building -- starting with the roof. At that point, TBHS served notice that it was canceling the operating agreement for the museum between the city and itself, and canceling the insurance coverage on the Plaza Pub building.

In August 2009, Gov. Bill Richardson figured out that he and the Legislature were spending the state into bankruptcy. .....The city was put on notice by the state that grant funds were being flagged for reversion due to the state's financial situation. Further work on the project was not advised until a final decision was made on the availability of grant funds.

The historical society had control of this building for three years, five (their lease) if they wanted it. I do not remember any fundraisers, donation drives or other means of trying to do anything with this building. If TBHS had worked with the city, or even considered putting in $80,000 for the revised scope of work in November 2008, we would not be having this conversation. 

In February 2012, the city refunded a quality of life General Obligation Bond at a reduced interest rate. The city offered to buy the old Ink Well or the old Public Defenders building for the Alamogordo Museum of History (as the Pub was to be known) to be operated by TBHS. We had $350,000 for the purchase of the building and $200,000 to renovate it. In retrospect, the anti-donation law may negate this.

I believed the old Public Defenders Building was the perfect place. This is the building directly south of the Founders Park across 10th Street from the pub. There is a large city-owned parking lot immediately to the south of this building. The city was planning to put money into rejuvenating this lot that would include some type of architectural wall or planters that someone would design and be pleasing in the Southwest flavor. This building has three sets of ADA bathrooms and a door that opens toward Founders Park.

The building is nearly 8,000 square feet, has room outside for historical displays. This would fix up Alamogordo, front and center, from Ninth to 10th streets and on White Sands Boulevard. We might have been able to get some people looking through Founders Park. 

... (Former) Commissioner Aaron Rance and I attend a meeting with Elisabeth Padilla and TBHS. They wanted no part of this plan and instead asked if they can take a year to get a $10,000 grant to study the structure of the pub.

Beginning in March to the present day, TBHS came to the commission requesting the time for the study grant. This request balloons to getting any and all grants possible to rejuvenate the pub. This request is approved by a 4 to 3 vote on the condition that the city will be able to accept offers on the building. TBHS decided that the commission gave them permission to list the building as a historical building, but we did not due of concern for doubling construction costs. The society is attempting it anyway.

CVS's offer for $350,000 -- $33,500 more than the September 2011 appraisal -- comes to the next commission meeting. The society came out in force to hiss and boo at any reasonable discussion. An Otero County commissioner came to our podium and called the Alamogordo City Commission "dirty and underhanded" because we had discussed the potential disposal of the pub in executive session, as is common practice with any land exchange, disposal or litigation. It was then brought to the next public meeting for discussion as an agenda item.

.... I am a businessman and I believe in economic development as the way to the future. I do not believe government should or can do everything. I do not believe Alamogordo should ask the state to do what we will not do for ourselves in a case of public want verses public need. 
If the society wants this, let them pull themselves up by their bootstraps and figure out how to do it without taxpayer money. There is at least one holdout (the old Gibson's property), therefore the society has their year. 

I suggest they use it. ....

And it looks as if the Tularosa Basin Historical Society has, indeed, used this last year, as per this April 2013 article in the Alamogordo Daily News:


... The TBHS hosted an "Open Door" reception Friday with a live and silent auction to raise funds to renovate the historical building.
The historical society recently qualified to receive $525,000 in capital-outlay funds from the state to renovate the Plaza Pub into a museum.
District 51 State Representative Yvette Herrell, helped the TBHS receive the funding from the state. "When I'm trying to allocate my capital-outlay money, I think of using the money in places where the most people will benefit from it," Yvette said.
Yvette said when the state considers funding projects, that the projects have to be considered shovel-ready. Yvette said the money the state provides has to either complete the project or bring it close to completion. "You might think that $525,000 sounds like a lot of money, but it's about half of what they (the TBHS) really need to get started here," Otero County District 3 Commissioner Ronny Rardin said.
Ronny said 100 percent of the money earned from the auction would go to restoring the building.
Many people in the community came out to show their support of the Plaza. ..
Josette worked to get the Plaza on the historical registry and accomplished doing so in June of last year. ....
"... roughly $35,000 was made from the auction before the time of the Daily News deadline. Heckert said when the museum is finished, it will serve as a cultural and historical hub for the city.
"This building is a treasure for our community," local citizen Sharon Hodges said. "It's in the pre-restoration stages, but you can see how beautiful this building is. You know it means a lot to a lot of people. I'm just so glad that the county stepped up to save it."




Thursday, July 4, 2013

4th of July in New Mexico


The smell of sulfur saturated the air from so many personal fireworks having been deployed.



4th of July fireworks, Alamogordo, New Mexico


I took a walk down Scenic Boulevard at dusk. Many families had put out lawn chairs in their front yards in readiness for the city fireworks display to come. 



4th of July fireworks, Alamogordo, New Mexico


Children threw down poppers on the sidewalk for their mini explosions.


4th of July fireworks, Alamogordo, New Mexico


I returned to my apartment and carried a chair around the corner of my building to get a good view for myself.


4th of July fireworks, Alamogordo, New Mexico


A neighbor down the street had the radio on loud to hear the music that accompanied the display.


4th of July fireworks, Alamogordo, New Mexico

It was good to sit outside. The breeze that had started out warm turned a little fresher, which was pleasant.

Earlier in the day, I attended the Mescalero Maiden Ceremonials. The Ga'an dancers wore garments with the American flag on them. American flags that lined the ceremonial arena were at half mast to honor the Arizona firefighters who died a few days ago.  Out in the parking lot, there was an American flag with an image of Geronimo imprinted over the stripes. 

When the Alamogordo fireworks ended, it was so nice to fold up my chair and walk around the corner to my apartment. 



Wednesday, July 3, 2013

Clouds Over Alamogordo

Magnificent.

End of First Street, Alamogordo, New Mexico

End of First Street, Alamogordo, New Mexico

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

Alamogordo: The Wine and Beer Aisle


Wine and beer for the dead. Eh?



Wine for the dead, Alamogordo, New Mexico

Beer for the dead, Alamogordo, New Mexico


And not to forget New Mexico's famous chiles for those of us who are undead .... 



Chile wine for the not-yet-dead, Alamogordo, New Mexico







Monday, July 1, 2013

The Rain Came

Lady in the mountain, Alamogordo, New Mexico. A rainy day in July.



Until today, it had been hot, hot, hot in Alamogordo. And then the rains came. First to the mountains and then the Tularosa Basin.

The rain brought cool air.

I was up in Cloudcroft in the morning. On my way back to Alamogordo in the afternoon, it was so good to be in the rain. The air was sharp with the scent of pine.




The above video is Highway 82 east and west of the tunnel in Lincoln National Forest. You can see how the White Sands gleam in the distance about :57. It's days in New Mexico like this when I am amazed: I live here.

Driving into Alamogordo, the rain continued.




Delicious.

Monday, May 27, 2013

A Bug's Tail Tale






Beetle in a sotol, Oliver Lee Memorial State Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico


Beetle in a sotol. Butt out.

Oliver Lee Memorial State Park, Alamogordo, New Mexico. 

Saturday, May 11, 2013

Silence of the Doves

Yesterday morning I noticed what I wasn't hearing.

I wasn't hearing the constant song of the white-winged dove, a sound I'm accustomed to hearing every day, all day in Alamogordo. 

I know I saw one of the doves yesterday, but no song. 

Where are they?

White-winged dove. Credit: wikicommons