After months of anticipation, the girls and I met up and headed for Geronimo Trail Guest Ranch in New Mexico. What a great time! We rented a 4-Runner and stayed in Old Town Albuquerque. Before we drove out to the ranch (a four hour drive), we shopped for turquoise jewelry. Then we went up on the Sandia Tram for dinner and beautiful views. Our tram guide explained that "sandia" was Spanish for "watermelon", which describes the color of the rocks along the way. We had a great dinner and the views were spectacular. On top, the temperature changed from the 90s to the 60s and it was spitting rain and the wind was blowing. All week long we had beautiful weather--lots of thunder and lightning off to the distance and the temperature was in the 80s to low 90s. The sky in New Mexico is big and color was a deep turquoise blue; we saw lots of stars at night (even a shooting star) and beautiful cloud formations all day. It was as if our hosts had ordered up the perfect weather just for us.
Day 1
Getting to know our horses.
Shirley & Lips (dark chocolate bay)
Alisa & Blue (blue roan)
Lynn & Smokey (small bay with attitude)
Me & Jasper (red line back dun)
Met our fellow campers: Norby, from Switzerland (riding
Rooster) & Anna, originally from Poland, but has lived in Chicago for 12
years (riding Casey) and the cats: Scaredy, Garfield, and Clementine.
Horses (the ones I remember!):
Johnny, big bay colored draft horse
Rio, big Appaloosa
Strawberry Shortcake, pony
Buffalo Gal, paint movie star
Red, small sorrel Morgan
Ned, the old guy
Shadow, big black
Lightning, a paint
Toto, a sorrel
Bucky, a buckskin
Hank, sorrel
Emmett, a blue roan who lost a shoe
First we went on a short ride out of the ranch to the east
with Meris & Kelly. Saw Mimbre cliff dwellings, cows, a rabbit. (On drive
here we saw 2 antelope, a herd of elk, and a cattle drive; Lynn and Alisa went
into a swoon over a cute cowboy in the wash.) Meris explained that the Basque
people, who were sheepherders, came along after the Mimbre people left and
lived in the cliff dwellings. They changed them a little by adding wood and
rock structures.
In the afternoon we went out with Seth and Kelly and turned
left and then went south. We went up on "top of the world" to two
overlooks. The first one was a sneak peek at our ride for day two. It
looked down on Taylor Creek. The second one, Seth said we could see AZ and 365
degrees around was the Gila National Forest—approximately 3.3 million acres.
That night we played Uno with Meris and Kelly; Shirley made
Lynn draw tons of cards. I won one, Alisa won one, Anna (pronounced Onna) won
two, and Kelly two. We ate quail for dinner—a first for me.
Day 2
All the wranglers went on a picnic ride with us (all day).
We went south west and rode all through Taylor Creek and The Narrows to Beaver
Creek which is the Gila River headwaters. This was the playground of Geronimo.
He was born near here and grew up around here. It was fun going through all the
water. It rained on us, but we dried off during lunch. We looked at more sunken
Native homes and saw more pottery shards. It was an awesome ride. At the picnic spot, one of the trees had been recently struck by lightning and was all twisted and broken. We saw a huge carp in the swimming hole.
On the way out that morning, she asked us if we wanted to trot and lope.
I definitely want to work on loping and getting the feel, so I emphatically
said, “yes!” We loped along the road toward the trail; to keep the horses from
competing and going really fast, we stayed in a single file line. Jasper is
tall and Shirley’s horse, Lips, was way slower than him, so we did not lope as
far as I had hoped we would. Jasper had to slow down and just trot behind Lips.
In the evening, Norby played his flutes—one made out of a small pvc pipe,
one beautiful dual Native flute he had ordered and just bought from his AZ
Native friend—and a digeridoo he made from a pvc pipe at the campfire. The coyotes
howled and came closer to our campfire! We loved it.
Day 3
We rode into Taylor Creek and Cox Canyon. We went up over a ridge
where we could see Black Mountain and the Mogollon Mountains (Meris pronounced
it Moggyowin). We saw more Mimbre cliff dwellings and Basque dwellings. We went
into a big one where it had a bed frame, fireplace, and table. The floor was
deep silt and the air was cool. Alisa and the others cooled off in the creek in
their clothes, including their jeans. Even Shirley waded in. Lynn and I did
not. However, we took off our tank tops and dipped them. We left at 10:30 and
did not get back into the cabin until 6:00. Today, we loped along the trail. Jasper
loped really nice and when he felt me become a little unbalanced, he went into
his trot until I was comfortable and then loped some more. It was fun.
After dinner, we ate s'mores and sang campfire songs until 10.
Day 4
I asked Shirley if she was having fun; she’s been so quiet.
She said she was just glad she got to come and be with us girls. She said this
was the best thing. Her horse was no Star or Buster--he was a "ground
pounder" in her words, but she also said (in front of her!) that Lynn was
like her right arm—she needed her in order to feel whole. J
She said she had always wanted a daughter so she would have a best friend and
someone to share the things she loved. Pretty cool—tough to get her to say it
out loud, and especially TO Lynn—but, definitely a heartwarming, cool
statement.
Jasper mostly trotted today--we only loped a little; I think
he was a little lazy and really just wanted to stay at the ranch. We went to
Beaver Canyon today for our picnic. Although we went along Taylor Creek, we
were high above it before dropping down to where the two come together.
Unfortunately Hank (or was it Toto?) threw a shoe and Seth had to walk back to
camp from there. He had to walk through our favorite part--the narrows--afoot. Lots
of water in his cowboy boots!
We saw a large herd of mule deer heading up the mountain and lots of cows today; including a red bull that was blocking our path. Meris said he has challenged her twice. He does not belong to the family who owns the property we crossed over and they had come to look for him yesterday, so his rightful owner could take home and get him off their property. We had cows bellowing for their calves and we had to stop to let one loud, insistent, and long horned cow by us and then one cow who was following her put on a bucking show. What fun! I love cows. There were more Mimbre and Basque cliff dwellings, tin mine markers, and the Keeper of the Canyon's face to look at today.
We played Apples to Apples with Meris & Kelly that
night. It was a hoot. They are both so fun to be with.
Day 5
Leaving the ranch was kind of sad—everyone hugged and it
felt like we were leaving family. I do hope we see them again. Along the way,
we stopped at the Winston store—more shopping! The doorbell was the sound of an
elk. Later, we accidentally took a wrong road which dead ended at Monticello.
We lost some time, but saw two road runners.
Upon arriving in Old Town Albuquerque, we shopped some more.
Everyone bought jewelry and gifts for the people at home (especially the dogs’
babysitters!). Lynn bought a new suitcase to carry all our new stuff, and then
we went to bed. Not too much sleeping happened and then it was 2 am and time to
get up.
Shirley gave us a scare at the airport and needed a wheelchair,
I got flustered and couldn't unlock my suitcase to remove my extra 2 pounds,
but we had easy flights and Gordy was Mr. On-The-Spot and we set off for
Quincy.
Shirley slept most of day in the car--poor thing had her
head hanging and probably had a painful crook in it the next day, but she wouldn't
admit she was sleeping and just prop her head more comfortably.
Happy poodles met us at all three houses and after I loaded
Shirley's luggage on the 4-wheeler and she sped off, I am sure she was met by a
wagging Happy.
What a great vacation! I love being with those three women
more than anything and getting to ride in new country is priceless! I will be
ready to do it again next summer and every summer thereafter. J
From June 23 to July 1st every thing just clicked and could not have been better. Norby put it over the top for me with his flute playing in the canyons, and at the campfire in the darkness. WOW. Could not imagine doing this trip with out Alisa and Vicki. What a great time and good memories for a life time.
ReplyDeleteSitting here thinking about our trip. Thank you all for making it so much fun. :)
ReplyDeleteWhat a great time, Had so much fun with my BFF. I wish we could do something like this every year. Could not have asked for a better vacation and any better friends, I think about our trip all the time. And thanks to Lynn for setting it up and thanks to Vicki for doing all the driving.
ReplyDelete