Doggin'
El Paso: 14 Cool Things To See When You Hike With Your Dog
"If your dog is fat," the old saying goes, "you
aren't getting enough exercise." But walking the dog need
not be just about a little exercise. Here are 14 cool things
you can see in greater El Paso, Texas while you hike with your
dog.
AIRPLANES.
Part of the hike through Box Canyon borders Las Cruces City Airport
where you can observe vintage bi-planes and two-seaters droning
past.
ARTWORK.
The lined paths and grassy areas of Chamizal National Memorial
are a delight for dog walkers, as is Our Heritage, the mural
painted on the outside wall of the Chamizal. It is a fine representative
of Chicano/Hispanic art, and is one of the better preserved murals
in the city. It depicts the historical blending of cultures along
the United States and Mexico border.
BALD EAGLES.
Caballo Lake is a great spot to scan the skies for Bald and Golden
eagles while your dog enjoys a rare desert doggie dip.
BEACH.
One of the most spectacular beaches in America is hundreds of
miles from any ocean or lake. The white gypsum sand dunes at
White Sands National Monument are the largest in the world. Visit
at night in the summer when sand is cooler to the paw and the
dunes are hauntingly beautiful.
DAMS.
The movement to build a dam on the Rio Grande started as early
as 1896 but the plan was fraught with difficulty, not the least
of which was the international implication of diverting water
from Mexico. A water rights treaty was worked out on both sides
of the border in 1906 and the Elephant Butte Dam, now a state
park near Truth or Consequences, was completed a decade later.
The concrete dam is one of the earliest and most important linchpins
in the Bureau of Reclamation's overall plan for water in the
West. Not as ornate, but a few years older, is the Leasburg Dam.
FORTS.
Camp Furlong, in the border town of Columbus, New Mexico, was
the staging ground for General John "Black Jack" Pershing
and his 10,000-man Punitive Expedition to hunt down Mexican revolutionary
Pancho Villa in 1916. Pershing invaded 400 miles intoMexico but
never caught Villa. Several buildings remain from Camp Furlong
in Pancho Villa State Park: a rec hall, camp headquarters and
the judge advocate's office among them.
FOSSILS.
The Robdelo Mountains contain an abundance of well-preserved
vertebrate and invertebrate tracks from the Early Permian age
286 million years ago. Marine fossils are common on Crazy Cat
Mountain trails.
GRAVES.
Concordia Cemetery contains 65,000 of them and you are welcome
to tour this historic ground with your dog. The most famous gravesite,
of Texas gunslinger John Wesley Hardin, wasn't even marked until
1965 - 70 years after his death.
HISTORIC BUILDINGS.
The entire town of Lincoln, New Mexico is listed on the National
Register of Historic Places, a survivor of the bloody Lincoln
County Wars. You and the dog can trace the events that turned
an ordinary, unimpressive 17-year old William Bonney into the
immortal "Billy the Kid."
OLD MINES.
The only tin mines on the North American continent can be found
in Franklin Mountain State Park. You and the dog will stand and
peer into these historic treasure troves. More dangerous are
the abandoned mines on the east side of Bishop Cap.
RELIGIOUS ICONS.
Mt. Cristo Rey is the spot where two countries and three states
come together and the summit is graced with the largest limestone
cross in America, carved painstakingly for a year on the top
of the mountain.
ROCKS.
Rockhound State Park encourages you to collect and keep samples
of rock you discover on your canine hikes here. This includes
an abundance of beautiful red Jasper, a form of fine-grained
quartz. You may be lucky enough to find white Opal, Agate, quartz
crystals or thunder-eggs, which may be cut open to reveal spectacular
minerals and formations inside. There is a fifteen-pound limit
for rock fishermen here.
TELESCOPES.
A hike to the top of Tortugas Mountain in Las Cruces will bring
you and the dog to a 61-centimeter telescope reflector in use
for the last 25 years, creating one of the largest planetary
archives available in the U.S. It is currently being used to
monitor storm systems on Jupiter.
VOLCANOES.
Hunts Hole and Kilbourne Hole are "maar volcanoes."
They formed as a result of volcanic explosions, resulting from
hot magma coming into contact with ground water or shallow surface
water. This contact changed the surface water into steam, causing
an explosion that blew volcanic glass and other material out
of the ground. The black rock you see as you hike around the
rim or descend into the crater is lava rock called Afton basalt.
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