Doggin'
White Sands National Monument: Hike With Your Dog On The World's
Largest Gypsum Sand Dunes
Dogs have long been welcome on the mystical white sands of southern
New Mexico. When America's space age began at White Sands Missile
Range with the firing of a Tiny Tim test booster on September
26, 1945, it was important to retrieve small missile parts to
analyze success or failure. These searches routinely wasted countless
man-hours as ground recovery crews scoured vast expanses of desert
for often-buried missile fragments.
That ended in 1961 with the introduction of the Missile Dogs:
Dingo, a Weimaraner, and Count, a German Shorthair. For up to
a year before firing, important components of a missile were
sprayed with squalene, a shark-liver oil that the dogs could
smell from hundreds of feet away.
After a missile firing, Dingo and Count raced among the sands
sniffing out the scent objects. With a 96% recovery rate, the
program was so successful that other military and scientific
agencies requested the services of the original Missile Dogs
of White Sands.
Today you can hike with your dog anywhere in the giant sandbox
that is White Sands National Monument. The world's largest gypsum
sand dunes form when gypsum dissolves in nearby mountains during
rainstorms. Instead of being carried off by a river (this is
an arid environment) wind transports the crystals where they
accumulate in brilliantly white sand dunes.
White Sands offers 6.2 miles of marked dog-friendly trails but
there is no need to limit your explorations. Any dune is open
to a canine hike. Stay alert for reptiles and rodents scampering
on the dunes that have adapted to the white sands and are now
a funny bleached white color.
During the heat of summer, try a night hike - when the moon is
full, the park, located in New Mexico on U.S. Highway 70 between
Alamogordo and Las Cruces, stays open until midnight. The desert
cools off then and the sands are haunting by moonlight.basalt.
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