New Mexico
11 Best Small Towns To Visit In New Mexico
New Mexico’s small towns each carry a different angle on the Southwest. Truth or Consequences took its name from a 1950 radio show. Los Alamos built the first atomic weapons during the Manhattan Project. Roswell remembers a 1947 UFO incident. The eleven stops below stretch across the state with their own anchors, between Spanish-grant towns along the Rio Grande and ranching outposts on the Comanche plains.
Truth Or Consequences
Truth or Consequences shed its original name of Hot Springs in March 1950 after radio host Ralph Edwards offered to broadcast his show from any town that adopted the title. The town agreed, and Edwards returned every year for the rest of his life for the annual Fiesta. Around a dozen commercial bathhouses sit within walking distance of downtown, drawing on the same geothermal aquifer that ran the original spa economy from the 1880s forward. Elephant Butte Lake State Park sits five miles north for fishing, boating, and the largest reservoir in the state. The Geronimo Springs Museum runs the local history through the era of the Apache Wars, mining, and the Edwards broadcasts.
Los Alamos
Los Alamos served as the headquarters of the Manhattan Project during World War II, where physicists led by Robert Oppenheimer designed the first atomic weapons. The Manhattan Project National Historical Park preserves several of the original buildings including Oppenheimer’s house, the Fuller Lodge, and the V-Site assembly buildings. The Bradbury Science Museum operates as the public face of the still-active Los Alamos National Laboratory with exhibits on weapons history and current basic-science research. Bandelier National Monument sits twelve miles south of town with ancestral Puebloan cliff dwellings carved into volcanic tuff and a 33,000-acre canyon system to hike. Pajarito Mountain Ski Area runs the lifts about ten minutes from downtown during winter.
Chama
Chama sits in north-central New Mexico at the foot of the southern Rocky Mountains, just shy of the Colorado border. The Cumbres and Toltec Scenic Railroad anchors the town as a narrow-gauge steam railroad with National Historic Landmark designation, running the original 1881 Denver and Rio Grande line over Cumbres Pass into Antonito, Colorado. The route crosses the Toltec Gorge at 800 feet above the river below. El Vado Lake and Heron Lake State Parks sit a short drive south for boating and fishing. Elk herds move through the meadows around town in fall when temperatures drop and aspen turn yellow on the surrounding peaks.
Jemez Springs
Jemez Springs sits along the Jemez Mountain Trail National Scenic Byway about an hour northwest of Albuquerque. The commercial hot springs and bathhouses cluster along NM-4 through the village, ranging from soaking tubs at the historic Jemez Springs Bath House to the Giggling Springs Hot Springs along the river. Free natural hot springs require some hiking to reach. Spence Hot Springs takes a half-mile climb to terraced pools above the Jemez River, and McCauley Warm Springs requires a longer two-mile hike from Battleship Rock in the Santa Fe National Forest. The Jemez Historic Site at the south end of the village preserves the 17th-century ruins of San José de los Jémez Mission alongside the ancestral Puebloan settlement of Giusewa.
Santa Rosa
Santa Rosa calls itself the Scuba Diving Capital of the Southwest, which sounds improbable until you see the Blue Hole. The natural artesian spring runs 80 feet straight down through limestone with a constant temperature of 62°F and visibility regularly past 80 feet, supporting casual swimmers and open-water dive certification at the same site. The town sits on Route 66 in Guadalupe County, with Park Lake, Tres Lagunas, and Perch Lake also drawing weekend visitors. Joseph’s Bar and Grill, established 1956 along the old Route 66 alignment, serves green-chile enchiladas to passing travelers. Puerto de Luna twelve miles south preserves a Spanish colonial village along the Pecos River with one of the oldest continuously inhabited parishes in New Mexico.
Mesilla
Mesilla preserves the look of a mid-1800s New Mexico town with adobe storefronts wrapping a central plaza two miles southwest of Las Cruces. The Butterfield Overland Mail stagecoaches stopped here between 1858 and 1861 on the long route connecting eastern American cities to California. La Posta de Mesilla operates as a restaurant in one of the original adobe buildings from that era. The Basilica of San Albino faces the north side of the plaza, designated a minor basilica in 2008 and built on the foundations of an 1851 adobe church. Billy the Kid stood trial in the Mesilla courthouse in 1881 for the killing of Sheriff William Brady, with the conviction and death sentence later voided when he escaped custody in Lincoln County two weeks later.
Taos
Taos lies at 7,000 feet in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, north-central New Mexico, with the Rio Grande Gorge cutting the western edge of the valley. The Taos Pueblo holds UNESCO World Heritage status as one of the oldest continuously inhabited communities in North America, with multi-story adobe structures built between roughly 1000 and 1450 AD. The artist colony established in the early 1900s drew Georgia O’Keeffe, Ansel Adams, DH Lawrence, and Mabel Dodge Luhan to the area, and the legacy continues through more than 80 active galleries today. Taos Ski Valley operates 60 minutes northeast in the mountains as one of the steepest lift-served terrains in North America. The Rio Grande Gorge Bridge spans the canyon at 565 feet above the river, the seventh-highest bridge in the country.
Chimayó
Chimayó sits along the High Road to Taos Scenic Byway about an hour north of Santa Fe. El Santuario de Chimayó, built between 1813 and 1816, draws roughly 300,000 visitors annually for the small back chapel where the floor exposes a hole of consecrated earth that pilgrims collect for its reputed healing properties. The shrine holds National Historic Landmark status from 1970 and remains an active parish. Trampas Lane runs east from the village past family weaving shops including Centinela Traditional Arts and Ortega’s Weaving Shop, both operating Spanish-colonial Rio Grande weaving traditions across multiple generations. Rancho de Chimayó serves the town’s most established restaurant with carne adovada and sopaipillas in an 1880s hacienda kitchen converted to a dining room in 1965.
Aztec
Aztec carries a name based on a 19th-century misidentification. Early settlers and visitors saw the nearby ruins and assumed they had been built by the Aztec civilization of central Mexico. The ruins were actually constructed by Ancestral Puebloan people between 1110 and 1280 AD as part of the larger Chaco regional system. Aztec Ruins National Monument preserves the site at the north end of town with the only completely restored Great Kiva in the country, a 50-foot-diameter ceremonial chamber rebuilt in 1934 over its original walls. The downtown historic district along Main Avenue carries 19th-century commercial buildings on the National Register. Navajo Lake State Park sits 30 minutes east for boating, fishing, and cold tailwater fly-fishing on the San Juan River below the dam.
Alamogordo
Alamogordo sits at the base of the Sacramento Mountains in Otero County with what locals advertise as 287 sunny days each year. White Sands National Park lies fifteen miles southwest, where 275 square miles of pure gypsum dunes shift across the Tularosa Basin. The site was redesignated a National Park in December 2019 after eighty-six years as a National Monument. The New Mexico Museum of Space History rides the foothills above town with exhibits on the early rocket program at White Sands Missile Range, including the V-2 testing of the late 1940s. Holloman Air Force Base east of town houses the F-16 Aggressor squadron training mission alongside its static aircraft displays. McGinn’s Pistachio Tree Ranch sits along US-54 with the world’s largest pistachio statue, a 30-foot fiberglass nut commemorating the local pistachio industry that took root in the 1980s.
Roswell
Roswell turns its 1947 UFO incident into a permanent festival. The July 1947 reports from a ranch outside town set off a controversy that the government’s weather-balloon explanations have never fully closed, and the International UFO Museum and Research Center documents the entire timeline through declassified files and witness affidavits. The annual UFO Festival each July draws between 30,000 and 40,000 visitors for costume contests, lectures, and an alien-themed light parade. Beyond the alien angle, the Anderson Museum of Contemporary Art houses works from the Roswell Artist-in-Residence Program that has hosted painters and sculptors since 1967. Bottomless Lakes State Park sits a short drive east with karst sinkhole lakes formed in the Permian gypsum bedrock.
The Small Towns of New Mexico
The eleven towns above each commit fully to a single defining hook. Truth or Consequences keeps the radio-show name. Los Alamos owns the Manhattan Project. Chimayó draws pilgrims to a back chapel of consecrated earth. Roswell sells aliens. Aztec interprets its Ancestral Puebloan ruins. Across the state, each anchor pulls a different traveler, and most of these towns are within two hours of one of the others.
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New Mexico
McCauley Springs Fire Reaches 100% Containment
The McCauley Springs Fire in the Jemez Ranger District, east of Battleship Rock, is 100% contained at 712 acres.
The fire was reported on Wednesday, June 24, 2026. The Northern New Mexico Zone Type 3 Incident Management Team (IMT), led by Incident Commander Luke McLarty, initially managed the fire before the Southwest Area Incident Management Team 3, under Incident Commander Matt Rau, took over. From June 26 to July 4, this team handled operations, after which command returned to the Jemez Ranger District. Under a Type 4 organization, firefighters worked to cool remaining hot spots and secure firelines, reaching full containment on July 13.
Although the fire is fully contained, visitors should remain aware that burned areas can present hazards. When visiting fire-affected areas, watch for changing conditions, hazard trees, unstable terrain, and other post-fire hazards. Suppression repair work may continue in some locations, and the public is asked to use caution around personnel and equipment and provide crews with plenty of space to work.
A temporary closure order for the burned area remains in place through August 11, 2026. The full order and map can be found on the Santa Fe National Forest website under Alerts. Battleship Rock, Jemez Falls Campground and Group Area, the Jemez Falls Trailhead, San Diego Overlook, and the East Fork Trail from Battleship Rock to Highway 4 will remain closed until further notice for public safety.
A multi-disciplinary Burned Area Emergency Response (BAER) team evaluated the burned area to identify risks to human life, property, and critical resources. Over 80% of the fire was mapped as low soil burn severity, meaning most tree canopies and ground cover remain intact, reducing the risk of erosion and runoff. About 12% of the area showed moderate burn severity, with patchy ground cover loss and some water-repellent soils. Less than 1% was classified as high burn severity, where vegetation and soil were heavily impacted. The full summary can be found on the Santa Fe National Forest website.
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New Mexico
New Mexico’s multi-million dollar blunder ends up a pile of rubble
NEW MEXICO (KRQE) – Some call the multi-million-dollar El Camino Real Heritage Center an architectural masterpiece. Others, however, call it one of New Mexico’s most expensive blunders. In 2021, former Speaker of the House Don Tripp weighed in on the project, “As far as benefit, it really didn’t have any benefit to anybody.”
Taxpayers paid more than $4,000,000 to build it, a few million dollars more to operate it and, now, a half million to tear it down.
The El Camino Real Heritage Center is a history museum dedicated to the historic ‘Royal Road of the Interior’. Established by Spanish conquistadores in 1598, the historic byway extended from Mexico City to north of Santa Fe. Armed with $4,000,000 from the state legislature and the Bureau of Land Management, consultants were hired to find the best place to build the new museum. After studying various locations, they chose a remote spot on the prairie 37 miles south of Socorro.

The experts said, ‘build halfway between Socorro and Truth or Consequences,’ and the museum will draw 100,000 visitors a year, bring in $10,000,000 to the region, and create 174 new jobs. Back in 2004, no one raised a red flag about putting a tourist attraction in an out-of-the-way location. It was only after construction was complete that officials learned the so-called experts were dead wrong. The project was doomed to fail before it even opened its doors. “Who the heck thought it was a good idea to build it where they built it?” State Rep. Gail Armstrong told KRQE News 13 last year.
The state’s newest museum opened in 2005. An estimated crowd of 2000 turned out for the dedication ceremony. Socorro Mayor Ravi Bhasker was there. “We had Bill Richardson out there cutting the ribbon, and then we had the Vice President of Spain come down here with his beautiful wife, and we had dignitaries everywhere. It was exciting,” Mayor Bhasker said.
But the excitement was short-lived. Where the historic El Camino Real trail was in use for three centuries, the museum with its namesake lasted just eleven years. The remote location meant few visitors, meager revenue, inadequate staffing, expensive utilities, and maintenance.
In 2016, New Mexico’s Cultural Affairs Department pulled the plug on the El Camino Real Heritage Center, padlocked the doors, and permanently closed the museum. The parking lot is deserted, tourists are gone, artifacts are packed away, display cases vacant, exhibits dismantled, interpretive panels removed, and the gift shop is bare. All there is to show for millions of tax dollars is an abandoned building on the prairie.
“Eleven years is disgraceful. There was a real failure in this particular project,” the late State Senator John Arthur Smith said in a 2021 interview. We asked the retired Senate Finance Committee Chair, when the history of this project is written, what will it say? “They’re going to shake their head and (use this as) another example of government waste,” the retired Senator Smith said in 2021.
So what do you do with a $4,000,000 deserted building in the middle of nowhere? Time and vandals have taken a toll. The museum was closed and boarded up in 2016, and then state officials abandoned the site. Because little effort was made to secure the empty building, it is no longer habitable. Copper wiring has been stolen. There is significant structural damage, mold, a rodent infestation, and no electricity or lights. Most of the HVAC, electrical, plumbing, water, and septic systems are either obsolete or inoperable.
Faced with a whopping $3.5 million repair bill, the Museum of New Mexico’s Board of Regents made the difficult decision last year to demolish the building. Board of Regent’s President, Dr. George Goldstein, calls the building, “A loss, a huge loss.”
“What a complete waste of taxpayer dollars,” says State Rep. Gail Armstrong who’s District 49 includes the museum site. And what did taxpayers get for their $4,000,000 investment? “Nothing. It just cost them a ton of money. Nothing,” Representative Armstrong said.
This week, a state-hired demolition crew began the task of tearing down the museum complex. Tons of concrete, steel, and glass will be hauled away. The parking lot and nearby caretaker’s house will also be ripped out. The prairie will be graded, reseeded with native plants, and returned to the Bureau of Land Management in restored, pristine condition. The demolition project is expected to take four months.
The El Camino Real museum was planned and built during the Governor Bill Richardson administration. All of the State Legislators involved in the funding of the museum project have since left government service.
Soon, the El Camino Real International Heritage Center will be just a bitter memory. All clues to the existence of a pricey government blunder will have been erased. Pay a visit to the remote spot south of Socorro later this fall, and all you will find will be desert creosote, prairie dogs, and a few rattlesnakes.
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