Albuquerque Journal

Food for the deer, FEAST FOR THE EYES

Northern NM offers many options for viewing brightly hued leaves of autumn

- BY KARL MOFFATT

There may be no better time to take a drive than when New Mexico’s aspen and cottonwood trees are ablaze with fall colors. One of the best Albuquerqu­e area road trips for seeing fall foliage is to Jemez Springs after the leaves of stream-side cottonwood trees turn a deep orange.

It’s just a little over an hour’s drive from Albuquerqu­e to Jemez Springs on U.S. 550 and N.M. 4, and the trip offers visitors great fall scenery amid towering red cliffs topped by stunning blue skies.

The village also boasts several good places to eat and drink, a hot spring bathhouse and the Jemez Historic Site, featuring the stone ruins of a prehistori­c Indian pueblo and San José de los Jemez Mission.

Travelers can enjoy even more spectacula­r scenery in the surroundin­g national forest by continuing up N.M. 4 to N.M. 126. The road spans 40 miles between La Cueva and Cuba and is a typical graded gravel forest road for much of the way.

Check with the Santa Fe National Forest’s Jemez Ranger District Office at 575-829-3535 for current fall foliage and road conditions.

Another easy drive for Albuquerqu­e residents is up into the mountains above Santa Fe to see the fall colors from the ski area chairlift. Rides are available 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on weekends in September and every day during Balloon Fiesta, Oct. 6-14. Visit skisantafe.com for details.

Travelers returning from the ski area also can enjoy an extended tour of the woods by taking Forest Road 102 down to Pacheco Canyon Road to emerge near Tesuque.

Another great fall drive is to take the High Road to Taos and return along the Rio Grande. Take U.S. 84/285 north to the Nambé turnoff at N.M. 503 and follow that road to the Chimayó turnoff at Santa Fe County Road 98. Drive through the village of Chimayó to N.M. 76 and then head up the mountain past Truchas over to Peñasco and on to Ranchos de Taos for the return trip along the Rio Grande on N.M. 68.

But probably the best drive in northern New Mexico to view the fall colors is a 50-mile jaunt on U.S. 64 from Tierra Amarilla over the mountains and through the Carson National Forest to Tres Piedras.

The highway climbs into the high country past the impressive Brazos Cliffs and offers plenty of unmarred scenic beauty, including bright yellow aspen groves and stands of brilliant red oak trees.

Travelers heading to Tres Piedras on U.S. 84 will see over 90 miles of spectacula­r scenery, including the stunning red rock cliffs near Abiquiu Lake. While returning on U.S. 285 from Tres Piedras, travelers will pass by a lengthy cottonwood bosque between Los Ojos and Española and could see even more brilliant fall colors.

 ?? EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL ?? Mule deer nibble aspen leaves along Hyde Park Road near Ski Santa Fe on Tuesday. Dozens of people were out to see the colorful leaves. For suggestion­s on where to find fall colors,
EDDIE MOORE/JOURNAL Mule deer nibble aspen leaves along Hyde Park Road near Ski Santa Fe on Tuesday. Dozens of people were out to see the colorful leaves. For suggestion­s on where to find fall colors,
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