Top 10 reasons NOT to move to New Mexico. It has some of the worst towns in America.
Top 10 reasons NOT to move to New Mexico. It has some of the worst towns in America.
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Thanks for stopping by The channel, my name is Briggs and I make lists. Not just lists of random stuff, I make them about states, cities, towns and other places in the United States. I post 3 times a week and sometimes live stream, so please subscribe and enjoy.
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Chimayo, New Mexico | Camp & Sites
The views are breathtaking and the scenery is diverse. We camp at Santa Cruz Lake Overlook Campground. We see amazing bluff views and visit El Santuario de Chimayo.
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Exploring the Bisti Badlands in New Mexico
See my full blog post on the Bisti -
If you love photographing bizarre landscapes, desert hiking and boondocking off the beaten path then the Bisti Badland Wilderness in north west New Mexico is for you.
The place is full of interesting sandstone formations and the unique terrain at times seems like a different planet.
In this video I'll show you some highlights of our hikes in to the Bisti Badlands and a view of our free camping spot in the parking area.
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Bisti Dinosaurs
Explore how fossils were created and why they are in Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness. To find more info, photos, or videos about the Bisti/De-Na-Zin Wilderness, please visit
STRANGE PHENOMENON CAUGHT ON NEW MEXICO!!! | Weather update series #10
A strange phenomenon was caught on New Mexico today! People say this could be just missile testings or even UFOS But with all the chemtrailing and HARRP usage and the strange light reflections were saying in the skies, Highly confirms this is Planet X/Wormwood.
Check out This Amazing YouTuber! Sky Watcher Matt Rogers!
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Travel Guide New Mexico Bloomfield New Mexico
Bloomfield, New Mexico
We invite you to come and fish for trout in our world renowned quality waters or to enjoy water sports on Navajo Lake. Come visit to delight in skiing, biking, hiking, Jeeping and golfing while marveling at the architecture of the Ancient Ones at Chaco Canyon.
The town of Bloomfield is located in the heart of the Four Corners area near Farmington NM. Bloomfield sits on the banks of the San Juan River, just 25 miles downstream from Navajo Lake. The area has an abundance of natural gas and is home to installations by Conoco, El Paso Natural Gas, Williams Field Services and Burlington Resources.
Bloomfield offers: A temperate and dry climate... Rural setting Excellent city services... Moderate cost of living.. Close to many diverse cultural and recreational activities
Bloomfield is an ideal community to raise your family with a wide range of employment, career and educational opportunities. Retired individuals will find Bloomfield a small town with accessible services and options for lifestyle choices.
Visit us and see why New Mexico is The Land of Enchantment.
Balloon Fiesta Park -- Best Tourist Attraction - New Mexico 2013
From a small gathering of 13 balloons in 1972, the Albuquerque International Balloon Fiesta has grown to become the largest balloon event in the world. Held each year during the first week in October, the Balloon Fiesta now attracts more than 700 balloons and 1000 pilots.
Travel Guide New Mexico tm Chaco Canyon & Aztec Ruins Bloomfield New Mexico
Aztec Ruins National Monument
Follow ancient passageways to a distant time. Explore West Ruin, a center of ancestral Pueblo society that once housed over 500 masonry rooms. Look up and see original timbers holding up the roof. Search for the fingerprints of ancient workers in the stucco walls. Listen for an echo of ritual drums in the reconstructed Great Kiva. Adventure into the past.
Chaco Canyon
From AD 850 to 1250, Chaco was a hub of ceremony, trade, and administration for the prehistoric Four Corners area--unlike anything before or since. Chaco is remarkable for its multi-storied public buildings, ceremonial buildings, and distinctive architecture. These structures required considerable planning, designing, organizing of labor, and engineering to construct. The Chacoan people combined many elements: pre-planned architectural designs, astronomical alignments, geometry, landscaping, and engineering to create an ancient urban center of spectacular public architecture--one that still awes and inspires us a thousand years later.
Travel Guide New Mexico tm, Chama, New Mexico
In February 1880, the Denver and Rio Grande Railroad began construction of the San Juan extension, a route that went from Alamosa, Colorado to Silverton, Colorado by way of Cumbres Pass, Chama and Durango. Railroad service to Chama began in February, 1881 and facilities for servicing railroad equipment, a depot, warehouses and stockyards were set up along the route surveyed for the railroad
The brief period of construction from 1880-1881 was one of the most exciting episodes in the areas history and Chama almost immediately became a boomtown. The possibilities for development attracted both industrious and disreputable characters from all around. Individuals interested in developing the coal mines in Monero rapidly appeared on the scene as did representatives of the lumber industry, laborers, engineers and contractors to build the railroad and buildings required to accommodate the mass of people attracted to the booming railroad town of Chama
For many years Chama remained a rowdy and exciting place to be. It was a very prosperous town with plenty of work and a great deal of entertainment in the forms of saloons, gambling houses, moonshine stills, etc. Groceries were expensive and outlaws, such as the Clay Allison gang, regularly held up the railroad pay car construction camps with large payrolls, saloons and gambling houses
In the past, the main industries of the area were logging, mining and sheep and cattle ranching. Before the logging industry clear-cut much of the timber, the vast grasslands one now sees, were hundreds of square miles of forest. In pre-logging days the forest was so thick that it was difficult for a man on horseback to negotiate his way through the trees. The sheep industry operated on a grand scale until the depression and the terrible winter of 1931-32 combined to nearly wipe out the sheep industry
Chama, New Mexico offers a unique blend of cultures. In the shops and cafes you will hear a mix of English, Spanish and Native languages, often used in concert. And youll hear a lot of laughter. Serious conversations often turn to the environment and politics, as big changes are again underway. The local economy, once fueled by agriculture, is increasingly fed by tourism and new businesses started by transplants from more congested urban areas.
Window Rock - New Mexico
This was one the more scenic rest stop on our cross country trek.