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Taos Area
Information
Angel Fire Information

Towns in Taos
County
Incorporated with 2003 populations
Taos (5,008), Questa (1,927), Red River (489), Taos Ski
Valley (56)
Unincorporated Amalia,Costilla, Ojo Caliente, Pilar,
Pe-asco, Ranchos de Taos, Talpa, Tres Piedras, Valdez
Elevation
Town: 6,967 feet.
Taos Ski Valley: 9,207 feet. Wheeler Peak: 13,161 feet.
Angel Fire: 8,382 feet.
Acreage
1,444,480 acres (22,257 square miles) in county; 50%
federally controlled; 6.7% state-owned; 4.3% Native
American land; 38.2% privately owned.
Environment
Semi-arid continental climate.
Annual precipitation in town of Taos, 12 inches.
Sunshine 70 percent of possible hours annually.
Daytime during warmest month averages in 80s.
Low winter temperatures average near 10 degrees.
Average annual snowfall:
Taos Ski Valley: 321 inches
Town of Taos: 35 inches
Angel Fire: 140 inches
Agriculture
Number of full-time farms: 1,122 Irrigated land in
production: 35,900 acres Median size of farm: 15 acres
Market value of agricultural products sold: $9,000,000
Crop sales: 50% Livestock Sales: 50%.
Source: Taos County Extension Agency
|
TEMPERATURES (F)
AND PRECIPITATION |
|
High |
Low |
Inches |
|
|
January |
40 |
10 |
0.83 |
|
February |
45 |
15 |
0.72 |
|
March |
53 |
22 |
0.79 |
|
April |
64 |
29 |
0.92 |
|
May |
73 |
37 |
1.21 |
|
June |
83 |
44 |
0.75 |
|
July |
87 |
50 |
1.58 |
|
August |
88 |
55 |
1.77 |
|
September |
79 |
42 |
1.11 |
|
October |
67 |
32 |
1.13 |
|
November |
52 |
18 |
0.71 |
|
December |
43 |
12 |
0.57 |
|
Average: |
64 |
30 |
1.0 |
|
Source: National Climate Data
Center |
Town of
Taos
Property owners
in the town of
Taos
can walk to The Historic Taos Plaza, Art Galleries,
Museums and Shopping. Architecture varies quite a bit in
Town: From large Adobe Haciendas, to Conventional Homes,
to Small Pueblo Style Condominiums, to Cracker Box
Fixer-Uppers. Building Lots are often 1/3 of an acre to
an acre, but some larger lots are available.
Taos Ski Valley
Condominiums, Mountain Homes and Building
Lots
Ask
any real skier what Taos Ski Valley is like, and without
a doubt they will quickly inform you that it's one of
the best Mountains in the world. Taos Ski Valley has the
#1 rated Ski School in the Country and it's light powder
(base elevation: 9400 ft) and great weather (304 annual
days of sun) are legendary. The scenery is out of this
world and the base village is small and charming with a
strong European feel. Unlike Town, the architecture is
much more conventional: Swiss Chalets, Mountain Cabins,
Large Homes, Condominium Complexes, and Small Ski
Hotels. Everything is very tastefully done. All private
property in the Ski Valley is within walking distance to
the lifts. The summer months are gorgeous, renting your
property in the winter can produce some nice income, and
real estate is surprisingly affordable.
North of Town
Homes and Land
Between Town and The Ski Valley (Blueberry Hill, Des
Montes, Valdez, El Salto, Arroyo Hondo, San Cristobal,
etc.) are some of the most breathtaking areas in the
county. Varying dramatically in their topography; from
Sagebrush Mesa's, to Lush Pastures, to Pine and Juniper
Foothills. Small, old, beautiful villages sprinkle these
areas and the architecture is diverse: Predominately
Pueblo Style, but Territorial, Solar, and Conventional
also share space. A very Taos-like phenomenon is to see
all types of homes and price ranges side-by-side.
Property owners generally have more room to roam than
those in Town and they are still relatively close to The
Plaza (10 to 20 minutes). One acre of land would be
considered small, three to five would be more the norm,
and six to ten is common.
South of Town
Talpa, Ranchos and The Taos Country Club
Immediately
south of Town are two of the oldest communities in New
Mexico: Ranchos and Talpa. Both are very varied in
Architecture and feel; Pastoral Valleys, Sagebrush
Mesas, Old Neighborhoods and New, Adobes, Mobile Homes,
Conventional Homes, and Farm Houses. Southern Taos is
very eclectic. In the rolling Sage to the Southwest of
Ranchos de Taos is the new Taos Country Club and Golf
Course. An oasis of green, this is a championship 18
hole golf course with a big future. Architecture is
Pueblo Style only, and it's all gorgeous. University of
New Mexico has begun construction on a Taos Campus
(Undergraduate Studies - 3,000+ students) which will
over-look the course and should be in operation soon.
East of Town
Kit Carson Road heads east from Taos Plaza,
this portion of The Enchanted Circle abandons the bustle
of "city life" for the open meadows and pine-covered
hillsides of Cañon. Following the rapid waters of the
Rio Fernando, the road climbs through the richly
forested slopes of Taos Canyon. The well-maintained
highway takes a few twists and turns before reaching the
summit, rewarding its travelers with high-mountain
vistas of the Moreno Valley. The budding mountain
community of Canon Heights offers suburb views along the
canyon's sweeping ridges. A number of upscale homes now
enjoy its commanding prospects, wooded terrain and
convenience to town.
Away from Town
Less expensive, less developed: Tres Piedres, Carson,
Questa, Costilla and Penasco are just a few of this
county's towns that have stories and beauty of their
own, but don't have the density of and price tags of
Taos. Amenities are harder to come by, but price is less
and that far-away feeling is greater.
Angel Fire:
Angel Fire is located in the majestic Moreno Valley in
Colfax County, NM, 23 miles east of Taos via US Highway
64, and 152 miles northeast of Albuquerque. The Moreno
Valley is a 15-mile long, 3-mile wide, high alpine
valley.
FULL ANGEL FIRE AREA DETAILS.
Taos Chamber of Commerce:
The
Taos County Chamber of Commerce Website provides:
Taos - A Brief History
Situated where the western flank of the Sangre de Cristo
range meets the semiarid high desert of the upper Rio
Grande Valley, Taos combines nature and culture, history
and progress. There's a much less artificial atmosphere
here than at the state capital: Though the architecture
might not be as aesthetically pleasing, it somehow seems
more appropriate to the rough-and-ready setting.
Located
just 40 miles south of the Colorado border, about 70
miles north of Santa Fe, and approximately 130 miles
from Albuquerque, Taos is best known for its thriving
art colony, its historic Native American pueblo, and its
nearby ski area, one of the most highly regarded in the
Rockies. It also has several fine museums and a wide
choice of accommodations and restaurants for visitors.
About 5,000 people consider themselves Taosenos
(permanent residents of Taos) today. They carry on a
legacy of habitation that may have begun as long as
5,000 years ago; prehistoric ruins more than a
millennium old exist throughout the Taos valley.
The Spanish first visited in 1540 and colonized the area
in 1598, putting down three rebellions at the Taos
Pueblo in the last two decades of the 17th century.
Through the 18th and 19th centuries Taos was an
important trade center: New Mexico's annual caravan to
Chihuahua, Mexico, couldn't leave until after the annual
midsummer Taos Fiesta. French trappers began attending
the Fiesta in 1739. Plains tribes, even though they
often attacked the Pueblos at other times, also attended
the market festivals under a temporary annual truce. By
the early 1800s Taos had become a headquarters for
American "mountain men," the most famous of whom, Kit
Carson, made his home in Taos from 1826 to 1868.
Taos, firmly Hispanic, stayed loyal to Mexico during the
Mexican War of 1846. The city rebelled against its new
U.S. landlord in 1847, killing newly appointed Gov.
Charles Bent in his Taos home. Nevertheless it became a
part of the Territory of New Mexico in 1850. It fell
into Confederate hands for just six weeks during the
Civil War, at the end of which time Carson and two other
statesmen raised the Union flag over Taos Plaza and
guarded it day and night. Since then Taos has had the
honor of flying the flag 24 hours a day.
When the railroad bypassed Taos for Santa Fe, the
population dwindled. But in 1898 two eastern artists -
Ernest Bumenshein and Bert Phillips - discovered the
dramatic light changes in the Taos valley and put them
on canvas. By 1912 the Taos Society of Artists had
placed the town on the international cultural map.
Today, by some estimates, more than 10% of the
population are painters, sculptors, writers, musicians,
or people who otherwise earn income from an artistic
pursuit.
The town of Taos is merely the focal point of rugged
2,200-square-mile Taos County. Two features dominate
this sparsely populated region: the high desert mesa,
split in two by the 650-foot-deep chasm of the Rio
Grande; and the Sangre de Cristo range, which tops out
at 13,161-foot Wheeler Peak, New Mexico's highest
mountain...
- From Frommer's Comprehensive Travel Guide - Sante
Fe, Taos & Albuquerque '93-'94
Angel
Fire Information

Angel Fire is located in the majestic Moreno Valley in
Colfax County, NM, 23 miles east of Taos via US Highway
64, and 152 miles northeast of Albuquerque. The Moreno
Valley is a 15-mile long, 3-mile wide, high alpine
valley.
ELEVATION
8,382 feet at base of valley. Surrounding mountains
range from 11,086-foot Agua Fria Peak on the south end
of the valley to 12,441-foot Baldy Peak at the north end
of the valley. Wheeler Peak, the highest mountain in the
state, at 13,161 feet, forms the northwest boundary of
the valley. Latitude N36 degrees 25.24 minutes;
Longitude W105 degrees 17.40 minutes.
The
incorporated Village of Angel Fire covers an area of
18,450 acres. 80 miles of improved and accepted roads; 8
miles paved and chip-sealed; 30 miles unpaved. Average
lot size is .726 to .786 acre. Population: 1,048
year-round, according to the 2002 census, plus more
than 600 seasonal residents.
CLIMATE
Winter temperatures are generally moderate, averaging
mid-30s daytime to mid-teens in the early morning.
Average annual snowfall is 140 inches in the valley and
more than 210 inches at the ski area. Average annual
precipitation in spring and summer is 7 inches with
moderate temperatures, varying from early morning lows
in the mid-40s to mid-afternoon highs of 75 degrees with
very low humidity levels.
TOURISM
Tourism is the principal year-round industry in Angel
Fire. Summer activities:
PGA-rated golf course, tennis, horseback riding,
fishing, scenic chairlift rides, mountain biking, hiking
4-wheeling, climbing wall and eurobungy. Special events
are listed on the Angel Fire Chamber's Web site:
www.AngelFireChamber.org. 575-377-6661.
Winter activities are dominated by skiing and
snowboarding at Angel Fire Resort Ski area, the third
largest in New Mexico. 73 trails on over 550 acres of
private land and a vertical drop of 2,077 feet. 26
percent of the trails are for beginners, 50 percent of
intermediate, and 24 percent for experts. Snowmobiling
is also a popular sport, with guided tours available on
private land as well as in the Carson National Forest
bordering the village.
|
TEMPERATURES (F)
AND PRECIPITATION |
|
Month |
High |
Low |
Inches |
|
January |
44 |
-10 |
20.2 |
|
February |
40 |
5 |
22.2 |
|
March |
50 |
15 |
30.8 |
|
April |
55 |
18 |
16.1 |
|
May |
60 |
30 |
7.0 |
|
June |
70 |
35 |
.75 |
|
July |
78 |
45 |
4.75 |
|
August |
78 |
45 |
1.25 |
|
September |
72 |
30 |
.25 |
|
October |
65 |
25 |
8.7 |
|
November |
50 |
20 |
15.3 |
|
December |
45 |
15 |
20.0 |
Angel Fire Chamber of Commerce:
Toll Free: 800-446-8117
Local: 575-377-6661
PO Box 547
Angel Fire, NM 87710
askus@AngelFireChamber.org |