Road Trip, First Day, more...
There are probably more different
Indian Reservations around Albuquerque than anywhere else in the world. I
counted over a dozen… Hopi, Zuni, Isleta, Navajo, Jicarrilla, and others. And
they all touted with big neon signs their casinos.
I thought it was a shame I didn’t have time to stop at the numerous bookstores inAlbuquerque and Santa Fe , not to mention the other smaller
towns. Surely some of them would take an interest in stocking my book with such
local significance. But there just wasn’t time. It would take weeks to do that.
I’d have to try through correspondence for that.
The first thing I saw was a wide spot in the road with a wooden sign that proclaimed “Apache Canyoncito”. Once again, my flesh chilled with goose bumps as I got out of the car. This is where Major Chivington had destroyed the Confederate supply train, wresting a Union defeat into a victory. This is where he had made his devilish charge through the gauntlet of withering musket and cannon fire.
I knew that there was a ranger station nearby, and that was where I needed to go to try to sell my book. As I drove on, my heart nearly skipped a beat when I saw a small road sign that said, “Pigeon’sRanch Road ”. That
was where the main battle had taken place! I had to get up there!
I so desperately wanted to see the place where so many hundreds ofUnion and Rebel soldiers had fallen. I wanted
to walk the hallowed grounds for myself. I wanted to see the place where Mace
had nearly killed Captain Rawlings during the heat of battle.
Nope. The place was locked up and no one was around. The sign on the door said they would open at 10:00 the next morning.
I was crushed. Besides wanting to tour the battlefield, this was the most important tourist center to try to get my book stocked. The Battle of Glorieta Pass is integral to my book, and needed to be sold here. This was one of my main reasons for making the trip… to get my book stocked in this particular gift shop.
My trip was on a fairly tight schedule. I knew I had over a thousand miles to drive before it was over. Did I dare stay over to the next day? In a moment, I made my decision. God knows if I’ll ever be here again. I have to stay and do what I can. Tomorrow, I reasoned, it will all turn out all right.
As I looked around at the pine covered slopes, and smelled the clean mountain air, the shadowy sounds of shouting men, screaming horses, and cannon fire echoed through my mind.
...to be continued...
I thought it was a shame I didn’t have time to stop at the numerous bookstores in
When I reached Glorieta Pass , I’d left the desert behind for pine
covered mountains. The interstate followed the old Santa Fe
Trail exactly. Reaching the summit, I saw the historic marker sign
that gave directions to my goal.
The first thing I saw was a wide spot in the road with a wooden sign that proclaimed “Apache Canyoncito”. Once again, my flesh chilled with goose bumps as I got out of the car. This is where Major Chivington had destroyed the Confederate supply train, wresting a Union defeat into a victory. This is where he had made his devilish charge through the gauntlet of withering musket and cannon fire.
As I took pictures of the pine covered slopes of the canyon, I could visualize
Mace, Tom, George, and Louie up there, firing down on this spot. Looking around
the canyon floor, I could see the old Texas veteran Walsh as he was captured by
Chivington’s men. I kept telling my self over and over again… this is where it
really happened! I felt a certain satisfaction in knowing that my book’s
description fit exactly with the real environs of the countryside.
I drove a few miles on a secondary road until I reached the site of the Battle
of Glorieta Pass. There was yet another historical marker along the side of the
road explaining the significance of the spot, but it also said that the main
battlefield area was some distance north of there, where “Pigeon’s Ranch”
was.
I knew that there was a ranger station nearby, and that was where I needed to go to try to sell my book. As I drove on, my heart nearly skipped a beat when I saw a small road sign that said, “Pigeon’s
But the road looked impassable. Strewn with boulders and ruts, I knew it would
take a 4 wheel drive vehicle to get there. I also knew from my research, that
ranger guided tours are given there, so I needed to get with them to get up that
road.
I so desperately wanted to see the place where so many hundreds of
But it was not to be. I found the ranger station all right, but had failed to
take into account that it was Labor Day… a Federal Holiday. Surely, even so, a
tourist oriented place like this would be open, holiday or not.
Nope. The place was locked up and no one was around. The sign on the door said they would open at 10:00 the next morning.
I was crushed. Besides wanting to tour the battlefield, this was the most important tourist center to try to get my book stocked. The Battle of Glorieta Pass is integral to my book, and needed to be sold here. This was one of my main reasons for making the trip… to get my book stocked in this particular gift shop.
My trip was on a fairly tight schedule. I knew I had over a thousand miles to drive before it was over. Did I dare stay over to the next day? In a moment, I made my decision. God knows if I’ll ever be here again. I have to stay and do what I can. Tomorrow, I reasoned, it will all turn out all right.
As I looked around at the pine covered slopes, and smelled the clean mountain air, the shadowy sounds of shouting men, screaming horses, and cannon fire echoed through my mind.
...to be continued...

