Monday morning we didn't hang around, but caught an early flight to Albuquerque, and from there drove to Santa Fe. Santa Fe is a gorgeous little city, tucked under the chin of the Sangre de Cristo mountains.
One of the things that makes Santa Fe so appealing is that they instituted building codes before the eras (like the 70s) when awful architecture was so endemic. All buildings must be in Santa Fe style. This leads to some interesting details, like the Santa Fe style ATM:
We walked around window shopping and admiring the public art. Santa Fe has more art per square mile than any place I've ever seen. It's on the rooftops:
Along the streets:
In front of the stores and galleries:
And in the parks.
There seems to be kind of a Santa Fe 'thing' for art that looks like it's rising out of the ground. Really, where else can you find a pod of whales rising out of the ground, hundreds of miles from the nearest ocean.
One of the most striking crafts is the amazing pottery. We struck up a conversation with a woman outside one shop- she commented on my husband's sweatshirt (he was wearing a shirt from a library in western Massachusetts). We started chatting, and when she found out we were both engineers, she asked us if we could help her with a minor tech question. It was an easy, but not obvious problem- she was extravagantly grateful, however and insisted on calling my husband's mother to tell her what a terrific son she had. Some further conversation and we wound up setting up a pottery lesson with her.
Heidi Loewen offers instruction in her studio- they do all the annoying prep work and the students get some hands-on experience in throwing pottery on the wheel. Here's Heidi demonstrating to my husband how much pressure to use on the pot.
The deal is that they will fire and glaze the pottery- we got to pick the colors for the glazes- and when they're done, they'll ship the pieces to us. It's a fairly lengthy process- we probably won't see the results until sometime in May. It was terrific fun, and made me even more appreciative of the skill and work that goes into the fabulous art pottery we saw all over Santa Fe.
We took one afternoon and walked up out of the city into the hills. There is outstanding hiking within walking distance of the city center.
As you get up higher, there are great views of the city.
We went to museums- the New Mexico history museum, and the Museum of Indian Arts and Culture. Another day we drove up to Taos, and walked around. It was a lovely several days. We ate lots of southwestern food and enjoyed the sun and relatively warm temperatures.
On Thursday we went back to Albuquerque and flew to San Jose, California. We'd been invited to be guests at a science fiction folk music ('filk') convention in Milpitas. Before the convention started there was a little time, so we went out with friends to the Computer History Museum in Mountain View. An excellent museum, with very well-presented exhibits. We were particularly interested in seeing the live demonstration of Babbage's Difference Engine No. 2- it's a mechanical computer which was designed in the late 1800s but not built until the late 1990s. Extremely cool stuff.
Then we headed back to the hotel for the opening of the convention. It was a fun weekend- we did a concert, we heard lots of other people, and we did a whole lot of group singing. We got to hang out with a whole bunch of cool people- a few we had already known and some new. There was also a charity auction for Interfilk- which is a group that sends musicians to other parts of the country- they're the folks who invited us to be guests at the convention. We brought some things to donate, and I included a skein of hand-dyed yarn -and if the person who bought the yarn wanted, I offered to turn it into hand-knit socks in their size and ship it to them. Which is exactly what happened. Pretty cool, since I get to donate the yarn and knit it too. I'll post photos when I cast it on.
In addition to the musical events, we had a craft circle on Sunday. A whole bunch of awesome crafty people came- we had knitting, crochet, tatting, beading, sewing and embroidery. And I could have missed a craft or three...there was a lot of creativity there.
A fantastic weekend, but it didn't stop there. After we left the convention, we went to visit my sister-in-law and her family. We stayed a couple more days, visiting and enjoying the lovely warm sunny weather. We got home Wednesday, and it was there the trouble began. But that's another story.
Who knew Santa Fe has so much art? That's cool!
ReplyDeleteOh my goodness! What a great adventure!!!! I love it!
ReplyDeleteSounds like a terrific trip so far!
ReplyDelete