Northeastern New Mexico

We’ve compiled the best of the best in Northeastern New Mexico - browse our top choices for the top things to see or do during your stay.

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  • 1. La Cueva Historic District

    As you head south on NM 518 toward Las Vegas, be sure to stop in the La Cueva Historic District. Among the buildings here, which date to the 1850s, is a stone-walled mill that supplied flour to the soldiers of Fort Union. Pioneer rancher Vicente Romero's mill also supplied power to the area until 1950; at what is now called the Salman Ranch, you can pick raspberries mid-August to mid-October, or buy fresh berries, raspberry jam and vinegar, and dried flowers and herbs at the original La Cueva Ranch Store. Brilliantly colored wildflower gardens, and homemade tamales, burgers, and raspberry sundaes served at the café draw families during "U Pick" raspberry season. The historic district's San Rafael Church, dating from the 1870s, is also worth a look.

    NM 518 at NM 442, La Cueva, New Mexico, 87712, USA
    575-387–2900

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Store Jan.–June, Thurs.–Mon. 9–4; July–Dec., daily 9–5; café mid-Aug.–mid-Oct., Tues.–Sat. 11–4; U Pick field, mid-Aug.–mid-Oct., Tues.–Sun. 10–4.
  • 2. NM 72

    To reach Capulin from Raton, skip U.S. 64 and instead take NM 72 past Sugarite Canyon State Park, a stunning road that climbs up over Johnson Mesa, from which you have amazing 100-mi views north over the mesa into the plains of eastern Colorado. It's bare and flat up here, as though you're driving across a table straddling the Colorado–New Mexico border. About halfway across the mesa (15 miles from Raton), note the old stone church to your right, which was built by the early farmsteaders and has since been abandoned—it's a beautiful, lonely little building with a presence that illustrates the life of solitude the mesa's settlers must have endured. Farther along on the right, a historical marker details the 1908 discovery of Folsom Man by George McJunkin, which established the existence of indigenous inhabitants in the area dating back some 10,000 years. The road trails down the eastern side of the mesa and leads into tiny Folsom. Here make a right turn south on NM 325 to reach Capulin Volcano, 6 miles away.

    Raton, New Mexico, USA
  • 3. Shuler Theater

    More retro 1930s and '40s than Victorian, 2nd Street—Raton's main commercial drag—also has a number of handsome old buildings. The pride and joy of the neighborhood is the Shuler Theater, a 1915 European rococo–style structure whose lobby contains WPA murals depicting local history. The Shuler is one of the few remaining stages where all sets, curtains, and scenery are hand-operated with hemp rope and wooden pulleys. On weekdays between 10 and 5 the staff will happily take you on a free tour.

    131 N. 2nd St., Raton, New Mexico, 87740, USA
    575-445–4746

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Tours free, By tour only, weekdays between 10 and 5
  • 4. Sugarite Canyon State Park

    Park (National/State/Provincial)

    Sugarite Canyon State Park, a gem of a park near the Colorado state line, has some of the state's best hiking, camping, wildflower viewing, fishing, and bird-watching ("sugarite" is a corruption of the Comanche word chicorica, meaning "an abundance of birds," and is pronounced shug-ur-eet). The road to Sugarite twists and turns high up into the canyon to Lake Maloya, a trout-stocked body of water from which a spillway carries overflow down into the canyon. From its 7,800-foot elevation hills rise up the eastern and western canyon walls where miners once dug for ore; you can still see gray slag heaps and remnants of the coal camp, which thrived here from 1910 to 1940, along portions of the park road near the visitor center (the former coal-camp post office) and down near the base of the canyon. The center contains exhibits on the mining legacy, and from here you can hike 1½ mi to the original camp. Hikes elsewhere in the park range from the easy ½-mi Grande Vista Nature Trail to the pleasant 4-mi jaunt around Lake Maloya to the challenging Opportunity Trail. "Caprock" is the name given to the park's striking basaltic rock columns, which were formed millions of years ago when hot lava from a nearby volcano created the 10- to 100-foot-thick rocks. Climbing is permitted on these sheer cliffs, although it's not recommended for the faint of heart.

    NM 526, 7 mi northeast of Raton via NM 72, Raton, New Mexico, 87740, USA
    575-445–5607

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5 per vehicle
  • 5. Abourezk Building

    Garlands and female figureheads adorn the 1906 Abourezk Building, originally a drugstore, later a dry-goods and grocery store, and now the home of the Heirloom Shop.

    132 S. 1st St., Raton, New Mexico, 87740, USA
  • Recommended Fodor’s Video

  • 6. Capulin Volcano National Monument

    Memorial/Monument/Tomb

    From the crest of Capulin Volcano National Monument, elevation 8,182 feet, you can see four states: Colorado, New Mexico, Texas, and Oklahoma. To the southeast is the vast section of the Santa Fe Trail that includes the Cimarron Cutoff; to the west are the snowcapped Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Unlike much of the dry surrounding territory, Capulin has enough water to support an oasis of trees, shrubs, and wildflowers. A narrow 2-mi paved road leads to the rim of the volcano; from there you can walk the final 0.2 mi into the extinct, and not especially dramatic, crater vent. (An easy-to-hike 1-mi trail circles the rim, so you can see it from different angles.) The cone of Capulin (the word is Spanish for "chokecherry"; these bushes are scattered across the area) rises more than 1,300 feet from its base. The visitor center has books, a brief video about the site, and interpretive exhibits.

    To reach Capulin via scenic NM 72 and NM 325, allow about an hour and 15 minutes; it's a quicker 40-minute drive from Raton if you drive here by way of U.S. 64/87, which passes through ranch country underneath the biggest, bluest skies imaginable. Antelope herds graze alongside cattle. This is the classic West, with old windmills jutting into the sky of the rimrock country. The first 30 mi west fr
    575-278–2201

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5 per vehicle
  • 7. Cimarron Canyon State Park

    Scenic Drive

    One of the most breathtaking stretches of highway in the state is U.S. 64 west from Cimarron through Cimarron Canyon State Park, which is actually just one small part of the immense 33,000-acre Colin Neblett Wildlife Area. The road passes through a steep and lush canyon banked by 400-foot crenellated granite palisades. Paralleling the road is the sparkling Cimarron River, which is known for its superb trout fishing. Wildlife (including elk, deer, and bear), granite cliff formations, a natural spring, an abandoned mine, and a visitor center are also draws. There's a campground beneath the pines, too, with spaces for RVs (no hookups) and tents, picnic tables, and pit toilets.

    Cimarron, New Mexico, USA
    575-377–6271

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5 per vehicle
  • 8. Cleveland Roller Mill Museum

    Museum/Gallery

    At the junction of NM 434 and NM 518, make a right and head a couple of miles north to Cleveland Roller Mill Museum, a fixture in Mora Valley, which served as the region's main flour mill in the late 1800s. Milling demonstrations are held over the Labor Day Millfest, and in summer you can visit the artists' cooperative, where local artisans sell their sculpture, weaving, jewelry, and other crafts. The museum is run by the proprietors of surrounding Cassidy Farms, a nursery specializing in native conifers and shrubs.

    NM 518, La Cueva, New Mexico, 87712, USA
    575-387–2645

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $2
  • 9. Coyote Creek State Park

    Park (National/State/Provincial)

    The Rincon Mountains rise to 9,500 feet to the west of NM 434, and to the east (a left turn off the highway) you can stop for a ramble at Coyote Creek State Park, which also has exceptionally good trout fishing and some campsites.

    Cimarron, New Mexico, USA
    575-387–2328

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5
  • 10. Dinosaur Trackway at Clayton Lake State Park

    Ruins

    You can view more than 500 fossilized dinosaur tracks along the ½-mi wooden Dinosaur Trackway at Clayton Lake State Park, making this one of the few sites of its kind in the world. The tracks, estimated to be 100 million years old, were made when the area was the shore of a prehistoric sea. Eight species of dinosaurs, vegetarian and carnivorous, lived here. The sparkling lake that gives the state park its name is ideal for camping, hiking, and fishing.

    NM 370, 12 mi north of Clayton, Clayton, New Mexico, 87740, USA
    575-374–8808

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $5 per vehicle
  • 11. Dorsey Mansion

    Historic Home

    In the middle of nowhere (about 35 mi northeast of Springer) stands this curious 36-room log-and-masonry castle built in 1880 by Stephen Dorsey, a U.S. senator from Arkansas. It was once a social gathering place for the rich and powerful. The career of the ambitious senator, who owned the mansion for 15 years, dissolved in a mail-fraud scandal. It's not open to the public, but history buffs may want to drive by.

    Off U.S. 56, 25 mi east of Springer; turn north (left) at rest stop at mile marker 24 and take dirt road 12 mi, Springer, New Mexico, 87747, USA
    575-375–2222
  • 12. Eagle Nest Lake

    Viewpoint

    West of Cimarron Canyon State Park, U.S. 64 passes over a high bald ridge, from which you'll be awarded a magnificent view over Eagle Nest Lake, the Moreno Valley, and the eastern slope of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains in the distance. Continue down through Eagle Nest Lake village toward Angel Fire. Then make a left turn (south) onto NM 434, which passes little Black Lake and offers one final view of the valley before narrowing sharply and plummeting into dark, deep, ponderosa pine–shrouded Guadalupita Canyon. Drive slowly: the road twists and turns and crosses several one-lane bridges over Coyote Creek.

    Cimarron, New Mexico, USA
  • 13. Eklund Hotel Dining Room & Saloon

    The 1892 Eklund Hotel Dining Room & Saloon, whose splendid Victorian dining room has crystal chandeliers, apricot tufted-velvet booths, gilt-flocked wallpaper, and marble fireplaces, is quite a draw in Clayton. The hunting-lodge atmosphere in the saloon is quite different but no less authentic, with a large raw-rock fireplace, wooden booths, mounted game heads, and historic photos and clippings of Clayton's past. The town's most famous historical character, the notorious train robber Black Jack Ketchum, was hanged just out front in 1901. His last words were "I had breakfast in Clayton, but I'll have dinner in hell!" Put your boot up on the brass rail at the bar (won in a poker game) and order a cold one.

    15 Main St., Clayton, New Mexico, 88415, USA
    877-355–8631
  • 14. El Turquillo

    Town/Village

    South of Coyote Creek State Park on NM 434, you'll pass through tiny, insular El Turquillo. Here the highway widens as it opens into a broad sunny valley—to the east you'll spy the red-rock cliffs that form the face of Black Mesa, the land barrier between here and the eastern grasslands.

    Cimarron, New Mexico, USA
  • 15. Kiowa and Rita Blanca National Grasslands

    There are few better places in New Mexico to soak in wide-open prairie vistas, clear skies, and fresh air than in the 230,000-acre Kiowa and Rita Blanca National Grasslands. One section of the grasslands is near Clayton and spreads east into Oklahoma and Texas. Another prominent one is about 80 mi west of Clayton, closer to Springer, south of U.S. 56. In the section near Clayton, if you look carefully, you can see ruts made by the wagons that crossed on the Old Santa Fe Trail. The land was drought-stricken during the Dust Bowl of the 1920s and '30s, when homesteaders abandoned their farms. After that, the government purchased the land and rehabilitated it to demonstrate that it could be returned to the tall grassland native to the region. For an enjoyable loop drive through the grasslands, head east out of Clayton on U.S. 56; at NM 406 head north to just past Seneca, to where NM 406 makes a sharp turn to the east. Take the county gravel road west 3 mi and north 1 mi, noting the interpretive sign about the Santa Fe Trail. Continue a little farther north to the green gate that leads to the trail (following the limestone markers), where you can see ancient wagon ruts. Except for the occasional house or windmill, the view from the trail is not much different from what the pioneers saw.

    Clayton, New Mexico, 87740, USA
    575-374–9652

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free.
  • 16. Kit Carson Museum

    Museum/Gallery

    Costumed reenactments at Kit Carson Museum demonstrate 19th-century life on what was then the Maxwell Land Grant, but is now part of the incredible Philmont Ranch. Exhibits include a working horno (oven), blacksmith shop, and the Maxwell Trading Post—stocked as it might have been during Santa Fe Trail days. Period crafts are also demonstrated, and free tours are given.

    NM 21, 11 mi south of Cimarron, Rayado, New Mexico, 87714, USA
    575-376–1136

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free
  • 17. Maxwell National Wildlife Refuge

    More than 215 species of migratory waterfowl, including many geese and ducks in fall and winter, stop for a spell at this little-visited 3,700-acre prairie refuge 12 mi northwest of Springer. Sightings of great blue herons are not uncommon in midwinter, and bald eagles are fairly plentiful at this time. Sandhill cranes usually drop by in early fall, Canada geese around December. Deer, prairie dogs, long-tail weasels, jackrabbits, coyotes, bears, and elk live here. The fishing season (Lake 13 is stocked occasionally with rainbows) is between March and October. You can camp (no fee, no facilities) near the fishing areas.

    Springer, New Mexico, 87747, USA
    575-375–2331

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: Free, Daily
  • 18. Mission Santa Fe Depot

    In the early 20th century the Mission Santa Fe Depot, a 1903 Spanish Mission Revival structure, serviced several dozen trains daily (Amtrak still stops here).

    1st St. and Cook Ave., Raton, New Mexico, 87740, USA
  • 19. Old Mill Museum

    The workers who toiled inside the sturdy, steep-roofed stone building that holds the Old Mill Museum once processed 300 barrels of flour a day for the Maxwell Ranch and the Jicarilla Apache reservation. Now the mill houses four floors of vintage photos, clothing, tools, and memorabilia depicting life in Colfax County from the 1860s into the 20th century.

    220 W. 17th St., Cimarron, New Mexico, 87119, USA
    575-376–2417

    Sight Details

    Rate Includes: $2, Late May–early Sept., hrs vary; call ahead
  • 20. Old Pass Gallery

    Museum/Gallery

    The building houses both the Raton Arts & Humanities Council and the Old Pass Gallery, which presents exhibits of regional art, books, and jewelry.

    Raton, New Mexico, USA
    575-445–2052

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