Skip to main content

Albuquerque, NM to Gallup, NM


This morning we left Albuquerque

Crossroads with Rte 66 going in all directions. 

and headed west towards Gallup. Our drive twisted and turned across colourful landscapes with towering bluffs and through quiet villages and ghost towns before reaching the old, tarnished mining town of Grants.


We drove along between the railroad and the Interstate for many miles. We had never seen freight trains so long - 120 wagons on some of them!



We reached Gallup and checked into our hotel - El Rancho Hotel which was built in the 1930s and has been lovingly restored. Many film stars stayed there while filming in the countryside and the rooms in the old wing are all named after he stars who stayed in them - John Wayne, Ronald Reagan, Katharine Hepburn etc. We stayed in the James Cagney room.



Comments

  1. Hi Sylvia, greetings from the 'ladies who lunch'. I am really enjoying the blog and very impressed with the photography and the driving of course !! Hope the rest of the trip goes well, see you soon.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Therese, Love the landscape and the blue skies. I can almost hear the country music!! The hotel is quite something. We have seen so much TV and old Westerns that the places almost look familiar, it must be hard to believe that you are actually there!
    Rosaleen

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

Holbrook, AZ to Peach Springs, AZ

We left Holbrook in bright sunshine and continued our drive along Rte 66 which once again had us driving on the Interstate at times. Our first stop was in Winslow made famous when The Eagles recorded "Take It Easy" whose second verse starts with "Standin' on a corner in Winslow Arizona". We then drove on to Flagstaff but didn't stop in the city. Flagstaff has a beautiful forested location high up on the Colorado Plateau and it was a change to be driving on roads lined with tall ponderosa pine trees. We had a picnic lunch off the beaten track in Buckskinner Park, Williams, AZ. We followed a dirt trail to the picnic area which really tested our car's tyres.  They survived, thankfully. We soon found ourselves in Seligman (pronounced Sligman), a sleepy town which maintains a lot of its historic character together with a few unexpected twists - eg Santa in a Chevvy outside the wacky Snow Cap Drive-in. Our destination for the night was th

Seattle, WA

  We left Everett on Sunday morning and headed south to Seattle, our final stop on this trip. We drove to our hotel and dropped off our cases before we headed to SeaTac to return our car.  After the brief stop at the hotel we drove to Kubota Garden, a 20-acre Japanese garden in one of Seattle’s southern neighbourhoods. It was started in 1927 by Fijitaro Kubota, a Japanese immigrant. It is an urban oasis  with Japanese and native trees and plants, ponds and waterfalls. It was beautiful with its fall colours.  The following morning we headed down to the waterfront to the historic Pike Place Market where Starbucks first opened its doors to the public in 1971.  Then we wandered through the market which opened in 1907 and strolled by the numerous stalls of seafood, fresh produce, crafts and flowers.  On Tuesday we took the monorail, which was the first commercial monorail in the USA and built in 1962 as an attraction for the 1962 World’s Fair. It still uses the original cars.  The monorail

Volcanic Country

  On Wednesday morning after breakfast, we headed back to the airport to pick up our car. We got a very nice car, a Ford Edge, fairly large for what is described as a small SUV. Then it was off on the road trip part of the holiday. Our first stop was in a cabin in Ashford, a very small town near the entrance to the Mount Rainier National Park.  Thursday morning saw us head to Mount Rainier NP. Mount Rainier at 14,410 ft is the tallest mountain in Washington State. It is an active volcano and is the most glaciated peak in the lower 48 states. We drove up to Paradise which at an elevation of 5,420 ft. is famous for its stunning views.  We then walked to Myrtle Falls and the views all round us were just stunning.  After lunch we drove to Reflection Lakes along a road with hairpin bends and precipitous drops to the side.  While in Ashford, we ate at the quaint Copper Creek Restaurant which opened in 1946 and is the oldest, continuously operating restaurant in Washington State.