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Access to the Dale Ball trail system can be made via dedicated trailheads or adjoining trails. The Cerro Gordo trailhead is located at the intersection of Upper Canyon and Cerro Gordo road. It has limited parking, and gives direct access to the Central and South Sections as well as the Nature Conservancy’s Santa Fe Canyon Preserve Trail. The ...
Note: Per consensus and convention, most route-map templates are used in a single article in order to separate their complex and fragile syntax from normal article wikitext. See these discussions , for more information. Not all bridges included; most bridges within the city of Santa Fe are listed.
The site of the 1881 dam, Two-Mile Dam, upstream of Santa Fe, is now part of the 190-acre (0.77 km 2) Santa Fe Canyon Preserve, [2] a trailhead for the 20-mile (32 km) Dale Ball Foothill Trail System. The Santa Fe River Watershed is 285 square miles (740 km 2), ranging in elevations between 12,408 ft (3,782 m) to 5,220 ft (1,590 m).
The Santa Fe City Council, after a string of hourslong meetings, approved a zoning change for a 9.5-acre property at Old Pecos Trail and West Zia Road in early 2023 at the recommendation of the ...
The Santa Fe River in New Mexico is fed by an extensive network of tributary arroyos; these define much of the landscape of Santa Fe, New Mexico and surrounding areas. [1] Together, the river, arroyos and aquifer they supply through infiltration comprise the Santa Fe River watershed .
New Mexico State Road 4 (NM 4) is a 67.946-mile-long (109.348 km) state highway in Sandoval, Los Alamos, and Santa Fe counties in New Mexico, United States.It is significant as the main access route (in conjunction with NM 501 and NM 502) connecting the remote town of Los Alamos, Los Alamos National Laboratory, and Bandelier National Monument to other, more major highways in New Mexico.
Roughly bounded by the Old Santa Fe Trail, Paseo de Peralta, Don Cubero and Houghton 35°40′42″N 105°56′28″W / 35.678333°N 105.941111°W / 35.678333; -105.941111 ( Don Gaspar Historic
Santa Fe, New Mexico Santa Fe National Forest Southern Rocky Mountains: Trailheads: Saint John's College Dorothy Stewart Wilderness Gate: Use: Hiking Trail running Mountain biking: Elevation gain/loss: 1,774 feet (541 m) gain approximately [2] Highest point: Atalaya Mountain, 9,125 ft (2,781 m) Lowest point: Arroyo de los Chamisos, 7,352.4 ft ...