San Lorenzo Canyon

San Lorenzo Canyon
San Lorenzo Canyon is a seldom used recreation area located just north of Socorro, New Mexico. It consists of one long canyon that is fed by a number of smaller canyons. visitors can expect to see slot canyons, caves, hoodoos, and other geographical oddities. This visit was timed to coincide with peak foliage season for the few cottonwoods and oaks that grow on the floor of the main canyon.
To see more of San Lorenzo Canyon, click HERE
The Santa Fe Trail: Fort Union

Adobe Wall, Ft. Union
The storied Santa Fe Trail is the stuff of myth and legend, the telling of which could fill a thousand-foot bookshelf. Kit Carson, Wild Bill Hickock, Annie Oakley, “Uncle” Dick Wootton, and Bat Masterson rode up and down this trail and into the history of dime novels and moving pictures and the popular consciousness of a nation. Along the way, they, and many a soldier, fur trapper, trader, and roustabout passed within sight of these walls at Fort Union, on the vast plains of northern New Mexico, near the Cimarron Valley and the Sangre de Cristos Mountains. To see more Fort Union photos, CLICK HERE.
To browse additional photos of the American Southwest, including some available for purchase as fine art prints, GO THERE.

Mesa Verde National Park
The Trail of the Ancients is a national scenic byway that takes travelers through four states and across millenia to visit ancient sites of pre-colombian splendor and mystery that were built upon and made one with the austere landscape of the southwest plains and the near vertical escarpments of the San Juan Mountains and the Colorado Plateau. Of the many exciting and beautiful locations along the trail, Mesa Verde, with its 4,000 total archaeological sites and 600 cliff dwellings, may rightly be considered the jewel in the crown. To see more Mesa Verde photos, GO HERE.
To browse additional photos, including photos available for purchase as fine art prints, GO THERE.

Monument Valley Navajo Tribal Park

The Ghost Ranch was a favorite hangout of leading American artists and writers of the early to mid-twentieth century. It was made famous by Georgia O’Keefe, whose painting entitled “Ram’s Head, White Hollyhock and Little Hills” now serves as the icon for the Ghost Ranch and undoubtedly inspired the placement of this skull atop a shaman’s pole near one of the conference centers that was in use by Lynn V. Andrews . To see more Ghost Ranch Photos, go here!
.
To browse additional photos, including photos available for purchase as fine art prints, GO THERE.