february 2014 enchantment magazine

23
The Lost Cemetery of Las Vegas The Voice of New Mexico’s Rural Electric Cooperatives enchantment

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February 2014 enchantment magazine

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The Lost Cemeteryof Las Vegas

The Voice of New Mexico’s Rural Electric Cooperatives

enchantment

2 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

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enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 3

DEPARTMENTSCo-op Newswire 4

View from enchantment 5

Hale To The Stars 6

Los Antepasados 6

On The Menu 8

Energy Sense 10

Book Chat 14

Vecinos 16

Enchanted Journeys 18

Trading Post 20

Youth Art 23

Your Co-op Page 24

FEATURESThe Lost Cemetery of Las Vegas 12A quarry dig unearths the lost and forgotten.

Restored and Protected, the Lucy Cemetery 13A spunky 84-year-old woman enlists the help of others to revitalize her hometown cemetery.

On the CoverArea near the quarry and cemetery site in 2013. Cover story and photo by Ellen Rippel.

8

23

18

16enchantmentFebruary 1, 2014 • Vol. 66, No. 2 USPS 175-880 • ISSN 0046-1946 Circulation 124,607

enchantment (ISSN 0046-1946) is published monthly by the New Mexico Rural Electric Cooperative Association, 614 Don Gaspar Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87505. enchantment provides reliable, helpful information on rural living and energy use to electric cooperative members and customers.

Nearly 125,000 families and businesses receive enchantment Magazine as electric cooperative members. Non-member subscriptions are available at $8 per year or $13 for two years, payable to NMRECA. Allow four to eight weeks for delivery.

Periodical Postage paid at Santa Fe, NM 87501-9998 and additional mailing offices.

CHANGE OF ADDRESSPostmaster: Send address changes to 614 Don Gaspar Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87505-4428.

Readers who receive the publication through their electric cooperative membership should report address changes to their local electric cooperative office.

THE NEW MEXICO RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION provides legislative and educational services for the 18 cooperatives that deliver electric power to New Mexico’s rural areas and small communities. Each cooperative has a representative on the association’s board of directors, which controls the editorial content and advertising policy of enchantment through its Publications Committee.

OFFICERS OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORSCharles Pinson, President, Central Valley Electric Cooperative, ArtesiaGeorge Biel, Vice President, Sierra Electric Cooperative, Elephant ButteJerry Smith, Secretary-Treasurer, Kit Carson Electric Cooperative, Taos

BOARD OF DIRECTORS Leandro Abeyta, Central New Mexico Electric Cooperative, Mountainair William C. Miller, Jr., Columbus Electric Cooperative, Deming Arsenio Salazar, Continental Divide Electric Cooperative, Grants Lance R. Adkins, Farmers’ Electric Cooperative, Clovis Johnny E. Jaramillo, Jemez Mountains Electric Cooperative, Española Robert Caudle, Lea County Electric Cooperative, Lovington Virginia Mondragon, Mora-San Miguel Electric Cooperative, Mora Tomas G. Rivas, Northern Río Arriba Electric Cooperative, Chama Preston Stone, Otero County Electric Cooperative, Cloudcroft Jerry W. Partin, Roosevelt County Electric Cooperative, Portales Joseph Herrera, Socorro Electric Cooperative, Socorro Gary Rinker, Southwestern Electric Cooperative, Clayton Paul Costa, Springer Electric Cooperative, Springer Wayne Connell, Tri-State G&T Association, Westminster, Colorado Charles G. Wagner, Western Farmers Electric Cooperative, Oklahoma

NATIONAL DIRECTOR David Spradlin, Springer Electric Cooperative, Springer

MEMBERS OF THE PUBLICATIONS COMMITTEE William C. Miller, Jr., Columbus Electric Cooperative Lance R. Adkins, Farmers’ Electric Cooperative Johnny E. Jaramillo, Jemez Mountains Electric Cooperative Virginia Mondragon, Mora-San Miguel Electric Cooperative

NEW MEXICO RURAL ELECTRIC COOPERATIVE ASSOCIATION 614 Don Gaspar Avenue Phone: 505-982-4671 Santa Fe, NM 87505 Fax: 505-982-0153 www.nmelectric.coop www.enchantment.coop

Keven J. Groenewold, Executive Vice President, [email protected] M. Espinoza, Editor, [email protected] Tom Condit, Assistant Editor, [email protected]

ADVERTISINGRates available upon request. Cooperative members and New Mexico advertisers, call Robert Adams at 505-982-4671 or e-mail at [email protected]. National representative: The Weiss Group, 915-533-5394.

Advertisements in enchantment are paid solicitations and are not endorsed by the publisher or the electric cooperatives of New Mexico. PRODUCT SATISFACTION AND DELIVERY RESPONSIBILITY LIE SOLELY WITH THE ADVERTISER.

Copyright ©2014, New Mexico Rural Electric Cooperative Association, Inc. Reproduction prohibited without written permission of the publisher.

4 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

Are You a Past Youth Tour Participant?Have you completed your freshman year of college or received academic

credits equal to at least one year of college? Then, you have the

opportunity to apply for a $10,000 scholarship.

The Glenn English National Cooperative Leadership Foundation will award one $10,000 scholarship (distributed in two $5,000 installments) to a student

working on their first bachelor’s degree program.To be eligible, an applicant must: be a U.S. Citizen; have participated in the

Youth Tour; and have completed freshman year of college or received academic credits equal to at least one year of college. Applicants will be judged on the following criteria: cumulative GPA; internships; civic, volunteer and political activities; leadership skills; and involvement in cooperative-based programs and activities. As part of the application process, a video statement is required.

A tireless consumer advocate, Glenn English spent his career championing the cooperative business model and fighting to improve the quality of life for all Americans. In 1994, Mr. English became the fourth Chief Executive Officer

of the National Rural Electric Cooperative Association (NRECA). He vigorously defended the nation’s electric cooperatives and promoted the “Cooperative Way” as a solution to many of the nation’s problems. Never forgetting the driving spirit of rural electrification and the power of cooperation, he continually kept lawmak-ers and regulators focused on “putting consumers first” and keeping electric bills affordable during the nearly two decades of congressional debate over energy and environmental policy.

During his tenure at NRECA, Mr. English was a passionate advocate of the Electric Cooperative Youth Tour and Youth Leadership Council (YLC) programs. He encouraged these young leaders to never lose sight of the seven cooperative principles and focus on their responsibilities as citizens—to be well informed and engaged in the political process.

In May 2010, Mr. English was inducted into the Cooperative Hall of Fame. Mr. English retired from NRECA in March 2013 after serving as Chief Executive Officer of NRECA for 19 years.

For more information on this scholarship opportunity, visit www.nreca.coop Select: What We Do • Youth-Programs

Glenn English National Cooperative Leadership Foundation

Co-op Newswire

What Exactly is the Assistant Editor taking a photo of?

Visit www.enchantment.coop to find out.

This will also be the theme for our annual Photo Contest published in June.

Hello Co-op Members:

Let’s stay inside; it’s cold out there!! Things you will need for this month.1) Ruler 18-inch 3) Gloves and knee pads 5) Pen and paper2) Face Mask 4) Flashlight

First, let’s find out what kind of insulation you have. If it is bat insulation (rolled kind), I say get it out. If it is blown in, measure it. Here is a link to the Energy Star website to help you find the R-Value you need, and the amount you will need to add to reach the perfect R-value: www.energystar.gov/index.cfm?c=home_sealing.hm_improvement_insulation_table

In my opinion, the best is a cellulose base blown-in insulation. You can rent a machine to install this type of insulation from your local hardware store for you do-it-yourselfer’s.

Before you do that, make sure you have enough airflow in your attic. Rule of thumb: for every 150-square feet of attic space, you need 1-square foot of venting. For example, if you have 1,500 square feet of attic space, you need 10-square feet of vents.

Follow the guidelines from Energy Star and you will be nice and toasty. Until next month. If you have any questions, send me an e-mail at [email protected]

Straight 2 the Point — Energy Saving$ with Robert Adams

Certified Building Analyst Professional

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 5

View from enchantment

Keven J. Groenewold. P.E. Executive Vice President and General Manager New Mexico Rural Electric Cooperative Association

The New Year started with little or no moisture around New Mexico. For most of

the state, 2014 follows many years of poor rainfall. Some parts fared a little better than others, but even-tually the drought hit with a ven-geance throughout the entire state.

There was that brief reprieve last September—but, once again, anemic mountain snowpacks are damaging everything from recre-ation to the fortunes of farmers who rely on empty reservoirs to irrigate their crops. Piñon forests are again under siege just as they begin to recover from the bark beetle blight of a few years ago. Even the hardier desert plants like the cholla cactus and the yucca are falling victim to the drought.

The desert southwest is a dry place in the best of years, which we apparently enjoyed in the 80s and early 90s. In bad years we rely on stored reserves in underground lakes and above ground reservoirs to carry us into a new season with, hopefully, renewed rainfall. For cen-turies, variations on this approach have helped humans survive dif-ficult times and survive the difficult years when the skies don’t bring water to their lands.

Drought challenges this approach. Reservoirs go dry as the snowpack fades. Rainfall doesn’t come, leaving parched crops exposed to the dry winds. Aquifers drop and their water quality declines. Drought is the great equal-izer: regardless of your economic status, your political persuasion, or whether you prefer red or green, you feel the effects when it doesn’t rain.

That simple fact presents us with a basic contradiction in water policy. Because water affects every-one, the water debate has as many conflicting viewpoints as there are debaters. Or, as the old saying goes, whiskey is for drinking and water is for fighting over.

The other side of the contradic-tion is we all have a vested interest in figuring out how to live with less water. Our shared dependence on this vital and scarce resource can serve as the basis for a long-term solution to its scarcity.

We have to begin by realizing our water shortage is real and sus-tained. The National Climate Data Center says for 2014 the southwest and most of the western U.S. will remain in drought conditions and for most, it will likely intensify. The current conditions rival the exten-

sive drought area of the worst 20th century droughts.

We also have to realize we’ve seen, and survived, earlier droughts. When the Dust Bowl chased thou-sands of farmers to the cities, we learned how to produce more food with fewer resources, including water. Meanwhile, the former farm-ers turned their energies to factories and industries that fuel our nation’s phenomenal growth after World War II. Earlier droughts also upset the existing way of doing things only to see a newer and better system take hold.

In short, we can adapt to chang-ing conditions. We can develop new and more efficient technologies to protect our scarce water resources. We can work together to build a solid base for our future. And in the meantime, we can scan the skies for those moisture clouds that will eventually return.

Scanning the Skies, Far

and Beyond

We can develop new and more efficient technologies to protect our scarce water resources. We can work together to build a solid base for our future.

Hale to the starsBY ALAN HALE • A MONTHLY GUIDE TO THE STARS OF NEW MEXICO

40 Years Ago

February 1974: No Answer to Crisis Seen in Oil-Gas Price Rises. Letting the price of petro-leum products and natural gas rise to exorbitant levels is not the answer to the energy crisis. It would only shift more of the burden to those who are less able to pay. We are being steadily pushed in the direction of accepting the principal of “charging whatever the traffic will bear” without study or justification to show that there would be any benefit other than to the industry involved.

—Rural Electric News Service

20 Years Ago

February 1994: African-American Inventors Helped Create the World of Electricity. Inventors who brought us incandescent light bulbs, refrigerated meat trucks, the railway tele-graph and our red, green and yellow traffic signals were black men. They helped create sound equip-ment for movie theaters, developed portable X-ray machines. Typical history books do not reflect the contributions that black Americans have made to science and technology.

—Sharon O’Malley

10 Years Ago in enchantment

February 2004: Looking for Birds in All the Right Places. When John James Audubon’s Philadelphia business closed its doors, bankrupt, he went into the young nation’s forests and fields to chronicle its birds which led to great richness in understanding the birds of North America. And his spirit lives on right here in New Mexico, a spirit of discovery—of learning more about the birds that take up housekeeping in our forests, fields, farms, and yards. His art brought them to life on paper.

—Craig Springer

6 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

The cold nighttime skies of February have one bright

planet dominating the evening sky, and another one performing this role for the morning sky.

The evening sky luminary is our solar system’s largest planet, Jupiter, which is already getting well up in the eastern sky by dusk and which passes almost directly overhead during the mid-evening hours.

A decent pair of binoculars will reveal the four large Galilean moons, and relatively small tele-scopes should show some of the planet’s cloud bands and features like the Great Red Spot.

The morning luminary is Venus,

which dominated the evening sky for most

of the second half of last year, but which slipped

between earth and the sun last month, and is now emerging into the morning sky before dawn. Its phase is readily discernible in a small telescope, and this month it starts off as a very thin crescent that gradually thickens over the subsequent weeks.

Among the other planets, Mercury is visible in the south-western sky during late dusk right around the beginning of February, but starts disappearing into twilight within a few days.

Mars rises in the east during the mid-evening hours and is at its highest above the horizon an hour or two before dawn.

Saturn rises an hour or so after midnight and gradually

climbs higher into the eastern sky throughout the rest of the morn-ing hours.

The Red Planet, Mars, has long been the subject of speculation and mystery, and for the past couple of decades has been the destination of many spacecraft.

Two more are now en route to Mars: NASA’s Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution (MAVEN) mission, and India’s Mars Orbiter mission, infor-mally dubbed Mangalyaan.

Meanwhile, last month marked the ten-year anniver-sary of the Spirit and Opportunity rovers’ landing on the Martian sur-face for what were originally intended to be three-month missions; while

Spirit finally ceased operations four years ago, Opportunity is still going strong.

The more recent Curiosity rover has been in the news lately. Analysis of the soil at its landing site at Gale Crater has revealed it was once at the bottom of a freshwater lake, and indicate the conditions in this area were defi-nitely conducive to the existence of life in Mars’ past.

Sedimentary deposits (including sandstone and mudstone) near Curiosity’s landing site in Gale Crater, as photographed by Curiosity one year ago. NASA photograph.

Los Antespasados

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 7

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8 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

On The Menu BY MARY GERLACH, R.D.

DinnersTamale PieCrust1¼ cups yellow cornmeal½ tsp. salt1½ cups evaporated milk1 cup waterFilling1 Tb. olive oil1 clove garlic, finely chopped1 cup chopped onion¼ cup green bell pepper, chopped1 lb. lean ground beef1 cup cream-style corn½ cup black olives, drained, sliced1 cup tomato sauce1 Tb. red chile powder½ tsp. salt¼ tsp. black pepper½ cup shredded cheddar cheese

❧ Preheat oven to 425°F. Grease an 8-inch baking dish. Crust: In a small saucepan, combine cornmeal, salt, evaporated milk, and water. Cook over medium heat for 5 to 7 minutes or until thickened, stirring frequently. Place half the mixture in a bowl and cover with plastic wrap. Spread the remaining mixture on the bottom and sides of prepared pan. Bake in pre-heated oven for 10 minutes. Filling: In a medium-sized skillet, heat oil and sauté garlic and onion 2 minutes, stirring frequently. Add bell pepper and sauté another 2 minutes, stirring frequently. Add ground beef, break into small pieces and sauté until browned; drain, if needed. Add corn, olives, tomato sauce, chile powder, salt, and pepper; mix well. Spoon into cornmeal crust.

Drop rounded teaspoons of remaining cornmeal mixture on top of meat; sprinkle with cheese. Return to oven and bake for 15 minutes. Serve immediately. Makes 4 servings.

Weeknight One-Pot Stroganoff with Egg Noodles1 Tb. olive oil8 oz. cremini mushrooms, stems trimmed, sliced ¼-inch thick2 Tbs. unsalted butter1 medium yellow onion, finely diced2 garlic cloves, finely chopped1 lb. lean ground beef3 Tbs. flour1 tsp. paprika¼ cup dry white wine4 cups low-sodium beef broth½ tsp. freshly ground black pepper8 oz. dried egg noodles¾ cup sour cream1 Tb. fresh Italian parsley, finely chopped❧ In a large, heavy skillet, heat oil. Add the mush-rooms; sauté about 5 minutes until browned. Transfer to a bowl and set aside. Reduce heat to medium; add butter. Add onion and garlic; sauté about 4 to 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add beef, broken into small pieces; sauté about 6 to 8 minutes until no longer pink, stirring occasionally; drain if needed. Sprinkle in flour and paprika, stirring to coat meat; sauté 1 to 2 minutes. Add wine; sauté until almost evaporated (about 1 to 2 min-utes), stirring occasionally, scraping off any browned bits accumulating on bottom of skillet. Add broth and pepper; stir to combine. Increase heat to medium high;

bring to a simmer. Add noodles, reserved mushrooms, and accumulated juices; stir to combine. Reduce heat to medium low; simmer about 6 to 8 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the noodles are just cooked through. Remove from heat; stir in sour cream. Taste, season with salt and pepper as needed. Sprinkle with parsley and serve immediately. Makes 4 servings.

White Bean ‘N Bacon Soup¾ lb. thick-sliced bacon, cut crosswise, ¼-inch strips1 Tb. olive oil½ yellow onion, finely chopped1 medium carrot, finely diced1 celery rib, finely diced2 cloves garlic, minced1 fresh bay leaf½ tsp. dried thyme½ tsp. dried rosemary½ lb. Great Northern beans, soaked overnight and drained5 cups chicken brothSalt and freshly ground pepper to taste❧ In large soup pot, cook bacon over moderate heat, stirring until browned and crisp, about 7 minutes; drain, reserve fat and remove from pot. Add olive oil, onion, carrot, and celery; sauté over moderate heat, stirring occasionally, about 8 minutes. Add garlic, bay leaf, thyme, and rosemary; sauté 2 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add soaked beans, broth, and 3 table-spoons reserved bacon fat; bring to a boil. Simmer soup over moderately low heat until beans are tender. Discard bay leaf and season with salt and pepper to taste. Garnish with bacon and serve. Serve immediately with crusty bread. Makes 4-6 servings.

VALENTINE'S DAY

Just in time for Valentine's Day. Gather your loved one's around the dinner table and warm your souls with dinner everyone will enjoy.

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 9

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This exclusive product was designed with one overwhelming goal: safety first. From a seat that won’t let you get out the wrong way to a battery backup for power outages, this stair climber has the features you want and the safety you need. Why risk your life on the stairs when an easy and affordable solution is only a phone call away. Call now and a knowledgeable product expert will answer any questions you may have.

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10 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

Energy Sense BY JAMES DULLEY

Bake-Up Energy Savings with Energy Efficiency Tips

Dear Jim: I’m updating my kitchen appliances. I am a bit

of a chef, so I want efficient tools. What are the best appliances for cooks? Can you share a few energy-efficient cooking tips? —Barb R.

Dear Barb: If you’re a frequent cook, you consume a lot of energy. The major energy user is the refrig-erator. Odds are if you prepare a lot of food, you have a large refrigerator and it opens often. Place commonly used items (milk, butter) near the front of your fridge. Keep the fridge fairly full; use water jugs if needed.

In addition to selecting efficient cooking appliances, there are simple tips to cut your energy use. Keep in mind cooking tips change from winter to summer. During winter, the heat and humidity from cooking help warm your house and reduce the heating load on your furnace or heat pump. During summer, this same heat makes your air conditioner run more, increasing electric bills.

When installing

kitchen appliances, locate them properly. The cooking range and oven should not be directly next to the refrigerator. Their heat makes the refrigerator compressor run longer. Also, don’t put the range or oven under a window; a breeze can carry away heat before it gets into your pots and pans.

The most efficient electric range heating elements are induction units. These elements produce magnetic energy which warms magnetic (usually iron and steel) pots and pans. If there is no utensil on an induction element, the ele-ment does not get hot. Induction elements provide heating control almost as precise as gas burners.

Induction elements offer an energy advantage: nearly all of the energy goes into the pot or pan to heat food. With a regular resis-tance element, the heat transfers from the range top to the base of the pot. A lot of heat is lost to the air, never getting to the food.

Since you don’t always want to use magnetic cooking dishes, your range should have only one or two induction elements. The others should be standard resistance or halogen. Halogen elements heat up faster, but are not as efficient.

Opt for different sizes, then match the size of the pot to the element size for less heat loss.

When it comes to ovens, elec-tric is preferred by most profes-sionals. It holds more even heat than gas for baking. Another advantage, especially during summer, is that electric does not introduce extra moisture to your house. Extra moisture means more work (and energy use) for your air conditioner. When gas or propane burns, the basic prod-ucts of combustion are water and carbon dioxide.

A convection oven saves energy as compared to a standard oven. Even though the small air circula-tion fan uses some electricity in a convection oven, they cook so much faster that there is signifi-cant overall savings. Not all foods roast and bake well in the convec-tion mode, so you will not be able to use it for everything. Choose a self-cleaning oven model because

they often have heavier wall insu-lation needed for the super high cleaning temperature.

Want great energy savings in the kitchen? Use small counter-top appliances when possible. For example, a small toaster oven, especially one with a convection option, uses significantly less elec-tricity than large oven elements. This is true even though the large oven has more wall insulation. Countertop electric woks, rice cookers are other good examples. During summer, use them out-doors to reduce indoor heat.

Microwave ovens are still the most efficient appliance for cook-ing individual food items. They run on lower wattage and offer short cook times. If you are cook-ing larger quantities of food, a large oven remains the best choice. Plan your baking to make similar-baking-temperature foods simulta-neously or consecutively while the oven is hot.

Run the range hood, especially during summer, to carry away heat and moisture. Install CFL bulbs. Source: Broan-Nutone.

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 11

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12 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

The Lost Cemeteryof Las Vegas

BY ELLEN RIPPEL

The Old West abounds with tales of outlaws and outcasts—their lives, their deaths, and stories of the cemeteries where they were buried. Boot Hill, or the potter’s field, was customarily the final resting place for

people who were thought not entitled to be interred near the “respectable” folks of the community. In the 1800s, Las Vegas had such a cemetery, but—over the decades—the graves were lost and forgotten. Until an accident uncovered the past.

In the autumn of 1972, a quarrying operation on private land near the outskirts of Las Vegas inadver-tently uncovered an unmarked cemetery. The public may have never known but a New Mexico Department of Transportation employee intervened. The man heard of grave robbing associated with the site—even of a worker mailing a skull from the cemetery to friends in California—so he alerted an archaeology professor at New Mexico Highlands University.

Three years earlier the New Mexico Legislature had passed the Cultural Properties Act, regulating preservation of historic and cultural resources. The law discouraged disturbing objects of archeologi-

cal and historical significance on private lands, but didn’t prohibit it. All that was required for digging was the consent of the property owner. And the quarrying company had that approval.

The professor needed time to recover the remains. He convinced the owner of the quarry-ing operation to pause activity for one week. Then the professor quickly assembled his archaeology students for a dig.

When the archaeology team arrived at the site, they found the top layers of earth and rock had been stripped off by the backhoe. Upper portions of caskets had been sheared off and their contents scat-tered, so the term “dig” was only partially correct. In this area of the quarry the archaeology group would simply collect dispersed remains and artifacts.

The team identified a particular grass grow-ing over the partially-unearthed graves. They anticipated finding additional graves by looking for similar clues. Based on the number of grass patches, the group estimated roughly 45 graves, with 15 to 20 graves in immediate danger because they were close to where quarrying was already underway. The team

Ellen Rippel standing at the quarry (Lost Cemetery) site in 1979. Note the vast amount of gravel and large rocks in the area. Photos and artifact photos by Ellen Rippel, from her master’s thesis, Graves in the Gravel, at New Mexico Highlands University.

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 13

Restored and Protected, the Lucy CemeteryBY CRAIG SPRINGER

Suffice it to say that making a living off the land is difficult. Throw in factors like three-foot snows, summer monsoons that come late

or deliver little rain. And then there’s the wind that never seems to cease in the Estancia Basin. Add to that the economic malaise of the Great Depression. It all made a tough row to hoe for those scratching a living from the friable central New Mexico soil near the town of Lucy.

If you have never heard of Lucy, you’re not alone. Even though the Burlington Northern Railroad posted a sign on the tracks about 15 miles northeast of present-day Willard, paralleling the transcon-tinental U.S. Route 60, the historic rail stop in Torrance County is but a faint memory for a select few souls who still grace the living. There’s not a great deal left of the old community, except for a cemetery. And it too was beleaguered and ravaged by the effects of time, gravity, and trampling cows. But love conquers all, they say.

Take Bernadine Creager, a spunky 84 year old, born in Lucy in 1929, the very year the pallor of the Depression laid over the land. She still possesses a love for her mother, Willie Belle Boyd-Harper, who she didn’t get to know well. Her mother died at age 40 when Creager was but three years old. Her mother’s asthma, allergies, and lung aliments are partly what brought Creager’s family from Plainview, Texas, to Lucy, not to mention the prom-ise land to call their own. It was her frail lungs that took her to the grave. Her gravestone like most all the others is small and unassuming, its arching top is engraved with the word, “Mother,” and below is a record of her existence.

That grave, and a couple dozen others—Lucy’s pioneers, the souls that came here to homestead about 1905—have words and numbers etched on them that in the aggregate tell a story of rural New Mexico. If the names tell us anything, Lucy, origi-nally called “Lucia” was settled predominately by Anglos: Ayer, Clayton, Estes, Shults, Rhoads, Miller, and there’s the stone with this etched on it: “Infant Child of Pablo Rodriguez, May 11, 1920.” Little Ettie May Cook also passed on as an infant; she was born

February 24, 1919, and was laid to rest in May of that same year. There’s a spate of deaths around 1918-1921.

Armon Austin was born in Lucy the day after Ettie May Cook and he’s about to turn 95 years old. He splits his time with family between Albuquerque and his ranch near Lucy. The rancher remembers when the Rural Electrification Administration brought electricity to the homestead, when the train whistled its comings and goings, and when Roy Cline, the owner of a Lucy roadside stop sold out to a Mountainair hotel, picked up stakes and headed north to make an indelible mark along Route 66—a place travelers know as Clines Corners.

Austin recollects riding a plow behind horses as his dad split sod to plant pinto beans. He also rever-ently remembered being a pallbearer at the Lucy cemetery. Austin of course remembers a recent phone call from Bernadine Creager. “She knew I was from Lucy, and wanted to know who to talk to about fixing up the cemetery,” says Austin. “I told her to contact Leroy Humphries of the 7Up 7Down Ranch. That got things rolling to fix the place up.”

Creager had visited Lucy Cemetery and was moved to protect the site. She enlisted the help of Humphries. He committed his ranch hands to build fence and weld pipe, and facilitated discounted buys on materials. Creager with the help of Austin, located kin of the deceased. Private cash donations saw the project through. Creager’s daughter, Judy Hilger, created the decorative archway that graces the cemetery on the prairie.

“It’s an exceptional place now,” says Austin. “It feels good.” Creager agrees, citing the sense of accomplishment she has knowing what’s been done for the future, honoring those from the past. The restoration culminated in a ceremony at the cemetery last June, attended by a few former Lucy residences and descendants of the deceased.

Austin and Creager, though unrelated, were born in the same house east of Lucy cemetery 10 years apart. They share a familiar connection to a place on the prairie, a spot along the railroad and a ribbon of highway. Their friends and relatives will spend their earthly eternity at Lucy, and they have honored the dead, those who they knew and those that rest in unmarked graves. Written in the stones are the records of those who homesteaded in the middle of New Mexico to raise fruits of the soil—beans and children.

…continued on page 15

agreed to concentrate on the most vulnerable buri-als because of the one-week deadline.

In the seven-day period the archaeology team collected the contents of 17 graves—some that had already been exposed, the rest from locations where they predicted there would be more burials. They took photographs, bagged and labeled bones and artifacts, then carried everything back to the Highlands University Anthropology Lab for analysis.

Although all 17 graves showed similarities—for instance, each had a wood coffin—there were also unusual differences. The upper portion of the skull of one of the bodies had been removed with a saw, indicating a post-mortem may have been per-formed. Another body had an axe head, wrapped in a blanket, placed on its chest. Yet another body was found with its head resting in the middle of the torso. And, there was the grave of a child.

Who were these people? Researchers exam-ined maps, newspapers, and other documents but couldn’t find information about the graveyard.

Coffin “screw downs” from one of the graves. Screw downs were used to hold the lid of the coffin to the portion that held the body.

The complete pot-metal, swing-bar handle from the child’s coffin. The archaeology team found only pieces of fabric in the casket since the child’s remains had already deteriorated. The handle was originally taken by a quarry worker, but later returned to the Anthropology Laboratory at New Mexico Highlands University.

14 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

When submitting a book, please include the fol-lowing information: • Book Subject: title, author, publisher, copyright date, softcover or hardcover, number of pages, price, and brief summary of book. • Contact Information: author and publisher phone numbers, e-mails, websites, brief biography of author/editor; and where book can be ordered.

Book Chat BY PHAEDRA GREENWOOD

Follow the Spinning SunBy Leandro Thomas Gonzales2012, 286 pages, $24.95Sunstone Press 1-800-243-5644

In this novel Gonzales explores, mainly through dialogue, a story about the Anasazi of Bandelier near Los Alamos who might have abandoned their home not because of drought, but thanks to the visions of their elders who bade them to follow the spinning sun and join the Great Migration west. It’s challenging to cultivate an authentic voice from inside an extinct culture; Gonzales is good at narration, but portrays the Native Americans in lengthy discussions about sin and evil, sacrifice and forgiveness. Knee-nose, an animal spirit guide, is sacrificed by cutting a hole in the top of his skull to release its mes-sage. When that fails, Jopin, a wise elder, agrees to the same opera-tion. He has a startling vision of World War II and the mystery egg that destroys Hiroshima in one fiery blast. Toward the end of the book, most tribal members choose to leave. Too bad this morality tale trickles off into the sand.

RiveR waRSBy William A. Luckey2011, 362 pages, $14.40Published by Perry Luckeywww.amazon.com

What a fun surprise! To promote traditional Western novels, for over 30 years, Belinda Perry wrote under the pen name of William A. Luckey. She authored a Gunsmoke Western called Bad Company and published a trilogy about the history of the McCraw family near Marfa, Texas: Flags Over Texas, published by Ballantine Books, published under the name of Perry, Texas Springs, and River Wars the last in the trilogy. Her latest book is An Old Woman Lies, with a photo of herself on the back cover. She is a grand-mother who still rides and retrains spoiled horses. River Wars is a strong, historical novel with lively characters, vivid details of war, and then a life in the Southwest that includes the Mexicans who have been chased across the river by ban-dits. The author culled from local papers the background history of raids, skirmishes and border inci-dents. A slow-cooked, savory read, this novel won the Pinnacle Book Achievement Award.

Sweet By and ByBy David Bachelor2012, 251 pages, $17Mercury HeartLink www.heartlink.com

This is an easy and entertaining read, a first mystery novel from a retired school teacher who obvi-ously knows horses and rural New Mexico. Charlie, the main character, a retired rancher and widower, is about to lose his ranch to the bank. He fondly recalls his petite and pretty late wife, Alice, who would sometimes chide him with “Jackass!” and tap him on the head with a wooden spoon. Charlie takes on a horse-training job that involves plenty of real-life drama with classy Elizabeth and her young son. Alternating chapters, discon-nected from the heart of the story, follow four bad guys on a random, cross-country killing spree. (This is not “Thelma and Louise.”) By coincidence, their mindless violence intersects with Charlie’s trip to the bank—and chaos ensues! The book is self-published through Mercury HeartLink of Albuquerque, a press that grants authors all the profit from sales, all royalties from Amazon and “creative responsible publishing.”

heR KneeS pulled in: poemSBy Elizabeth Jacobson2012, 84 pages, $14Tres Chicas Books 505-400-3898

Poets are always about acute awareness. To translate awareness into words is a delicate task that Jacobson seems to accomplish with zest, like skating along a frozen arroyo. She manifests the invisible with an unspoken question that author Natalie Goldberg calls “mys-terious.” The silence is a startling implosion the reader must approach from the underside. Sensual as the texture of sandstone, sexual as a melon ripe with seed, her poems never stray from the absolute truth of the natural world even when she dissolves into the stillness of the moment. As she sits on “the daisy print couch” with “knees pulled in” she senses the ebb and flow of eons and “rests in the view/coiled in her water smell…” All the reader has to do is turn the page.

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 15

They reviewed church records, but believed this area wasn’t a cam-posanto, the consecrated portion of a Catholic cemetery. Those not dying in a “state of grace,” according to the Catholic Church, were buried just outside the camposanto. These graves, however, were some distance from existing cemeteries.

In 1979, Dr. Myra Ellen Jenkins, New Mexico’s first State Historian, said she believed this cemetery was the lost pot-ter’s field of Las Vegas and there would probably be no official record of it. Jenkins said the potter’s field—a grave-yard for poor, notorious and unknown people—could have been established and maintained as unlicensed.

Students from Highlands University interviewed local residents for clues. Some Las Vegans remembered stories of the region being used as a parade ground for Fort Union in the 1860s and some said the locale was used for horse races in the 1920s.

One elderly woman recalled hearing stories when she was a child that the notorious outlaw, Vicente Silva, was buried in the cemetery. Her recollec-tion fit with historic reports. After Silva murdered his wife, his outraged gang members killed him and buried his body in a ditch. His remains were later exhumed and reburied in the potter’s cemetery. Might one of those unearthed graves have belonged to Vicente Silva?

Could the contents of another grave be the body of convicted murderer Paula Angel? There was no record of where Angel was buried. Las Vegas had the dubious distinction of hang-ing her—the only woman ever to have been executed in either the Territory or State of New Mexico—not just once, but twice. It was a horrific affair: Angel survived the first attempt at hanging so the sentence was (successfully) carried out a second time.

Undoubtedly we’ll never know who was buried in the lost cemetery, but history provides many candidates. The Old West tales of those early days in Las Vegas contain many other accounts of outlaws, shoot-outs and hangings.

After the first railroad arrived in 1879, shootings became commonplace. In one month alone 29 people were killed in and near Las Vegas. Some were described as having been buried in the potter’s field.

Conceivably the lost cemetery was the same graveyard referred to in

books and unpublished papers con-nected with those events.

Shortly after the partial excavation of the cemetery, the staff at Highlands University Anthropology Department learned the remaining graves had been destroyed.

No one knew what happened or who was responsible. Perhaps those graves, with their skeletons and artifacts, were unearthed and crushed along with the gravel. Or perhaps grave robbers again took grim souvenirs from the unmarked burials.

Despite what many believe, not all cemeteries are revered, not all are for per-petuity, and not all are protected by law. Except for the initial accidental discovery, and the research that followed, the graves of the lost cemetery of Las Vegas would continue to be unknown today.

The author adapted this article from her book, Outlaws and Outcasts: The Lost Cemetery of Las Vegas, New Mexico, avail-able through www.amazon.com.

…continued from page 13 The Lost Cemetery In 1979, Dr. Myra Ellen Jenkins, New

Mexico’s first State Historian, said she

believed this cemetery was the lost

potter’s field of Las Vegas and there would

probably be no official record of it. Collar and tie found on one of the bodies. A fabrics expert described the collar as being “highly starched.”

8185

1X ©

201

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16 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

While retired Clayton high school teacher Terry Birdwell bears no resemblance to

red-headed Thor, the hammer-wielding Norse god of thunder, the clang of hammer against anvil resounds daily from his workshop in the nearly deserted homesteading village of Seneca.

Working at his coal-fired forge at temperatures over 2,000 degrees Fahrenheit, Birdwell fashions chuck wagon cooking equipment, branding irons, fireplace tools, custom design interior architectural elements, and historical reproductions. He gets calls for fireplace sets embellished with a brand; a corner wall is filled with all the brands he’s made. He makes spurs the traditional way, from a single piece of steel with no welding. He recently traveled to Gainesboro, Tennessee to deliver a gate for the cemetery where his ancestors are buried, and where he traces his ancestry to the 1700s.

From this dirt–floored warehouse crammed with re-purposed, hand-made tools—some made from diesel engines and others from Caterpillar tractors—and walls filled with practice pieces and design samples, he sends finished work from his T Diamond Forge all over the country—to Texas, Oklahoma, Oregon, California, and North Carolina. One of his orders even went to the owner of a Bass Pro Shop. Recycling, he explains, is part of the tradition of blacksmithing. “In the old days, everything was re-melted down and re-used,” he says.

He may start with a steel rod, heat it in the forge until the end glows red-hot, then takes it to the anvil and hammers it into the shape he wants. Patiently, he does this over and over, until what he sees in his imagination is translated into metal.

“I want to live here,” says Birdwell, a resident of Union county for most of his life. He loves the open spaces afforded by the ranch he shares with his wife, Kelsie. The wind and isolation might not be to everyone’s taste, but this rancher deeply rooted to the land finds it suits him just fine. “There’s not many people who get to live in Seneca,” he says. Birdwell ran cattle most of his life, but he got droughted out a couple of years ago. Now, time freed from tending Angus translates to more time at the anvil.

During the 25 years Birdwell taught high school business classes, he became one of the first in the state to offer classes in computers. Ironically,

perhaps, he now is one of a select group no more than 20 professional blacksmiths working in New Mexico who keep the ancient tradition alive. “For cooking and wagon competitions, only technologies that were avail-able in the 1880s are allowed,” he explains. “That means no gas or arc weld-ing. Only hammered forge welding is acceptable, and the forge has got to be coal-fired.” These days, he is so busy creating at his forge, he rarely looks at a computer screen.

Birdwell comes by his inclinations to craft handmade objects from both sides of his family. His father’s people came to Union county in 1921. “They thought they were going to a better place,” Birdwell says. “They believed the area was a farming paradise. They raised dry land corn and feed. My granddad was a good carpenter and he could do just about anything, which he did, since the farm stopped working.” Then, too, Birdwell spent a lot of time with his maternal grandparents. “My granddad on my mother’s side didn’t think he could farm without a forge,” he recalls. “It always fascinated me, the things he could do with that forge.”

Years later, he followed that early apprenticeship by studying at Robb Gunter’s Forgery School in Tijeras. “I still call him often to bail me out of something I don’t know how to do,” he says. The lacy, interwoven flourishes he creates, with their hand-rubbed patina, are testimony to Birdwell’s love of the craft and his desire to push the boundaries of what he can do with red-hot malleable steel. “Most of the time customers leave the design to me,” he says.

“I like to work at my own pace,” he says. “I want to stay slow.” He has no web-site; people find him mostly by word of mouth. “I’m a one-man shop. Somebody’s always waiting on something,” he says. “I guess that’s busy enough.”

Vecinos BY SHARON NIEDERMAN

Terry Birdwell takes the iron to the wall.

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 17

18 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

February 1 • Socorro Guided Night Sky Stargazing Etscorn Observatory, 575-835-7423

February 2 • Socorro NM Tech Performing Art Series: The Fantastics Macey Center, 575-835-5688

February 2, 9, 16, 23 • San Antonio Raptor Rumble Bosque del Apache NWR, 575-835-1828

February 6 • Artesia Ozark Jubilee Ocotillo Performing Arts Center, 575-746-4212

February 7 - 9 • San Antonio Guided Refuge Tour Bosque del Apache NWR, 575-835-1828

February 7 - 25 • Raton Hispanic Folk Art Show Old Pass Gallery, 575-445-2052

February 8 • Clovis Windrush Alpaca Open Farm Day 770 CRM, 575-683-5177

February 8 • Las Vegas Rough Rider Blues Sweetheart Dance Plaza Hotel Ballroom, 505-425-8631

February 8 • Red River Torchlight Parade Lift House, 575-754-2223

February 8 • Socorro Community Arts Party Finley Gym, 575-835-8927

February 14 - 16 • San Antonio Narrated Refuge Tour Bosque del Apache NWR, 575-835-1828

February 15 • Roy Salute to Bob Wills Sweetheart Dance Community Center, 575-485-0055

February 15 • Grants 31st Mt. Taylor Winter Quadrathlon Cibola County Convention Center, 800-748-2142

February 15 - 16 • Taos Taos Chamber Music Presents: Heaven Sent Arthur Bell Auditorium, 575-758-0150

February 15 - 17 • Statewide Fee Free Days New Mexico National Parks

February 16 • Raton Goldwing Express Concert Historic Shuler Theater, 575-445-2052

February 17 - 19 • Portal Portal Rescue Soup Kitchen Fundraiser Fire Station, 520-558-5858

February 18 • Artesia World Concert Series #5: Umi Garrett Ocotillo Performing Arts Center, 575-746-4212

February 18 - 19 • Portales New Mexico Ag Expo Roosevelt County Fairgrounds, 800-635-8036

February 20 • Artesia Glenn Miller Orchestra Ocotillo Performing Arts Center, 575-746-4212

February 21 - 23 • San Antonio Duck Identification Bosque del Apache NWR, 575-835-1828

February 22 • Alamogordo Sertoma Superhero Freedom Run Corner of First & Scenic, 575-437-6120

February 22 • Chama Balloon Sno-Ball Rally Throughout Chama, 800-477-0149

February 22 • Red River USASA Rampage Slopestyle Ski Area, 575-754-2223

February 23 • Alto Glenn Miller Orchestra Spencer Theater, 888-818-7872

February 25 • Artesia Peter Pan Ocotillo Performing Arts Center, 575-746-4212

February 27 • Red River Mardi Gras in the Mountains Throughout Red River, 575-754-2366

February 27 • Taos Hospitality Event Fechin House, 575-758-2690

February 28 • Socorro NM Tech Performing Art Series: Carlos Nunez Macey Center, 575-835-5688

February 28 - March 2 • Cloudcroft Mardi Gras in the Clouds Burro Avenue, 575-682-2733

Enchanted Journeys

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 19

Have you ever said to yourself “I’d love to get a computer, if only I could figure out how to use it.” Well, you’re not alone. Computers were supposed to make our lives simpler, but they’ve gotten so complicated that they are not worth the trouble. With all of the “pointing and clicking” and “dragging and dropping” you’re lucky if you can figure out where you are. Plus, you are constantly worrying about viruses and freeze-ups. If this sounds familiar, we have great news for you. There is finally a computer that’s designed for simplicity and ease of use. It’s the WOW Computer, and it was designed with you in mind. This computer is easy-to-use, worry-free and literally puts the world

at your fingertips. From the moment you open the box, you’ll realize how different the WOW Computer is. The components are all connected; all you do is plug it into an outlet and your high-speed Internet connection. Then you’ll see the screen – it’s now 22 inches. This is a completely new touch screen system, without the cluttered look of the normal computer screen. The “buttons” on the screen are easy to see and easy to understand. All you do is touch one of them, from the Web, Email, Calendar to Games– you name it… and a new screen opens up. It’s so easy to use you won’t have to ask your children or grandchildren for help. Until now the very people who could benefit most from E-mail and the Internet are the ones that have had the hardest time accessing it. Now, thanks to the WOW Computer, countless older Americans are discovering the wonderful world of the Internet every day. Isn’t it time you took part? Call now,

and a patient, knowledgeable product expert will tell you how you can try it in your home for 30 days. If you are not totally satisfied, simply return it within 30 days for a refund of the product purchase price. Call today.

Call now and find out how you can get the new WOW! Computer.

Mention promotional code 51368 for special introductory pricing.

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757

© 2014 by first STREET for Boomers and Beyond, Inc.

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• Surf the Internet: Get current weather and news

• Play games on line: Hundreds to choose from!

“I love this computer! It is easy to readand to use! I get photo updates from my children and grandchildren all the time.”– Janet F.

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U.S. Based Customer Service

20 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

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2. Cost is $15 for up to the first 30 words. Each additional word is .50¢. Ads with insufficient funds will not be printed. Ad will only be published once unless paid for future issues in advance.

3. Only members of New Mexico rural electric cooperatives may place ads.

4. We reserve the right to reject any advertisement. Ads postmarked after the deadline of the 9th will be placed in the next issue.

5. Fill out contact information and select a category:

6. Mail your ad and payment to: NMRECA 614 Don Gaspar Avenue Santa Fe, NM 87505

Advertisements in enchantment are paid solicitations and are not endorsed by the publisher or the electric cooperatives of New Mexico. PRODUCT SATISFACTION AND DELIVERY RESPONSIBILITY LIE SOLELY WITH THE ADVERTISER.

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Big Toys (Tools & Machinery)

Country Critters (Pets)

Livestock Round-Up (Livestock)

Odd & Ends (Camping, Music, Digital)

Roof Over Your Head (Real Estate)

Things That Go Vroom! (Vehicles)

Vintage Finds (Antiques & Collectibles)

When Opportunity Knocks

(Business & Employment)

Trading Post

1,760+ DEEDED ACRES NEAR I-40 BETWEEN Santa Rosa and Tucumcari, NM. Excellent home, bunkhouse, shops, trucks, tractors and more. 3 windmills, submergibles, Turnkey operation. $600 per acre. Call 505-259-8079.

CARRIzOzO: 5 FLAT ACRES WITH WONDERFUL views on a county maintained road with city water. A 5 bedroom, 2 bath, livable fixer-upper only $41,000. Patsy Sanchez, Broker,Tierra Verde Properties. 575-648-2326 or 575-491-0633.

FOR SALE: VIGAS, HOUSE LOGS CUT from standing, dead, dry Spruce. Up to 45 ft. Will custom cut. Forked Cedar posts for ramadas, corn drivers and cedar fence posts. Call 575-638-5619.

FORT SUMNER SITE BUILT 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath home on 31+ acres just outside city limits. Electric, natural gas, well, septic, shop, garden, many beautiful trees. SE corner, US 54/60 and Billy the Kid with over 1,000’ frontage on each highway. Plenty of room for additional home sites and commercial businesses. $170,000 Stallard Real Estate 575-355-4454.

VERY SPACIOUS 2,800 Sq. FT. CUSTOM home on 45 acres (3 adjoining 25 acre lots available, all lots have power). $395,000 Catron county. 928-228-1655. Can be viewed on forsalebyowner.com listing number 23965144.

CARRIzOzO: 5 FLAT ACRES WITH WONDERFUL views, county maintained road with city water. Five bedroom, 2 bath, livable fixer-upper only $41,000. Patsy Sanchez, Broker - Tierra Verde Properties 575-648-2326 or 575-491-0633.

Things That Go Vroom!

COMMERCIAL MEAT SAW, $1,200. 1975 FORD F-250 4WD, $2,000. 3,000 lb. scale, $2,500. 100 tin sheets 1’x30,’ $38 per sheet. 16’ gooseneck trailer, very nice, $900. 505-832-4228 (daytime), 505-832-6914 (after 5:00 pm).

FIVE OLD CHEVY TRUCkS FOR SALE: ‘49, ‘54, ‘55 First Series, two ‘58 Second Series. Different prices for the three I will sell. Serious inquiries only, please. Call 575-343-2674. CASH ONLY DEAL when you pick up. Gallup area.

2007 ALFA GOLD 5TH WHEEL, MODEL 35RLIK. Top of the line, three silide-outs, w/d, two refrigerators (one w/icemaker) generator, deep freeze, etc. $32,500 OBO. Consider trades. Call 505-660-2509.

Big Toys

DRINkING WATER STORAGE TANkS, HEAVY DUTY Black Poly, proven algae resistant, 125 to 11,000 gallons, NRCS and EQUIP approved. Please give us a chance to serve you!! MasterCard/Visa. 575-682-2308, 1-800-603-8272.

TRACTOR PARTS: SAVE 15-50% ON qUALITY replacement parts for tractors. Large inventory for 8N and 9N Fords and TO20+TO30 Massey Fergusons. Valley Motor Supply, 1402 E. 2nd, Roswell, NM 88201. 575-622-7450.

SOLAR SUBMERSIBLE WELL PUMPS. EASY TO install, reliable, and affordable. Pumps and controller carry a two year war-ranty. Affordable installation is avail-able. For more information visit www.solarwellpumpsonline.com or call 505-429-3093.

920 CASE DIESEL TRACTOR; 2 (7) yard dump trucks; 2 (20) F flat bed trailers; 1 gooseneck; 1 pull type; 246 International engine overhauled; 5.9 Cummins diesel engine, 100K miles, transmission and rear end. Chevrolet 350 engine, trans-mission, and rear end, 15K miles. 505-617-4141 or 505-454-0781.

WATER TANk: 10, 000 GALLON GALVANIzED steel, potable, clean with manway. Suitable for subdivision, livestock, etc. $6,000. Will deliver. 575-756-4100.

FOR SALE: MASSEY FERGUSON 135 TRAC-TOR. Ready to work. $4,000. Call 505-310-1482.

FOR SALE: 100 LB. SOLID WROUGHT iron anvil. Cottonwood stump for a stand. $150 for all. In good shape. Call 575-447-2987.

HEAVY DUTY BRAND NEW TANDEM DUAL flatbed trailers: Pierced frame, low profile, torque tube, double jacks, tool box & more. 24,000# GVWR 28,́ $8,350; 30,́ $8,500, center pop up & spare included! www.sandiatrailer.com or 1-800-832-0603. Still buying your old, unused horse, stock, flatbed, enclosed trailers.

SEPTIC TANk PUMPING, CALL MARqUEz EXCAVATING Septic Pumping & Installation. Tony: 505-670-7582, 505-757-2926 or Anthony: 505-913-0619. Serving Pecos, Glorieta, Rowe, Ilfield and Mora area.

37.5 kVA ONAN GENERATOR WITH JOHN Deere diesel motor, $2,500. 1045 New Holland self propelled bale wagon, 80 bale cap, $5,600. 16 - 88 Singer walking foot sewing machine with clutch, motor and table, $500. Timesaver Speedbuilt 18” Sander model 18SB industrial belt sander, $1,200. Singer 31-15 sewing machine with clutch, motor and table, $500. Kubota 3,000 walt generator, $200. Oliver Cletrack tractor loader missing injector pump, $3,200. Call 505-384-4128, Estancia, NM.

INDUSTRIAL SEWING MACHINES: USED JUkI SERGER, $600 or better offer. Consew Straight Stitching machine, hardly used, $900 or better offer. Must see. Call 505-470-5957.

kOHLHAAS GALVANIzED H20 TANk ON CRADLE/2 lids 2,600 gallons. Nneeds minor repair. Tijeras. $1,200 OBO. Call 505-281-3479.

70 MODEL JOHN DEERE TRACTOR. PROPANE, $2,500. Call 575-396-7716.

Livestock Round-Up

MINIATURE DONkEYS FOR SALE. LOTS OF fun. E-mail: [email protected] or call 254-965-7224.

NEW MEXICO DRINkING WATER STORAGE TANkS, Heavy Duty Black Poly. Fittings custom-ized to your needs NRCS and EQUIP approved. High Specific Gravity, heavy weight, Long Warranty, Algae Resistant, Black NRCS Water Tanks. 1-800-603-8272, 575-682-2308.

BUFFALO MEAT, GRASS-FED, ALL CUTS, USDA inspected. All natural (no hormones, antibiotics, chemicals) low cholesterol, heart-healthy, non-allergic, wholes. Skulls, Hides, By-products, Gift Certificates, 575-278-2316 Tom and Inge Bobek.

FOR SALE: MINIATURE CATTLE! BELTBUCkLECAT-TLE.COM WANTED: grazing lease for cattle! 505-384-1101.

THANkS FOR ADVERTISING IN ENCHANTMENT! WE certainly appreciate your business.

NOT ALL WATER TANkS ARE CREATED EQUAL! Is Quality, Value and Longevity impor-tant to you? Buy High Specific Gravity, Heavy Weight, Long Warranty, Superior Black NRCS tanks. Notice: lowest prices only provide minimum standards, lower weights, and shorter warranties. Find out more! 575-430-1010.

Senior Community Services

Assisted Living Program, Santa Rosa, NM

The most daring thing is to create stable communities in which the terrible disease of

loneliness can be cured.” ― Kurt Vonnegut

Providing 24 hour Care and Services to those who can no longer live alone safely

Serving a five county region

Private Pay

Long Term Care Insurance Approved Medicaid Provider

Veteran Benefits

Affordable • Quality Long Term Care

Creating a Community of Caring

seniorcommunityservices .org 575-472-2000 Call For More Information

1 Year Subscription: $8 2 Year Subscription:

$13

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enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 21

HAYGRAzER 4’X6’ ROUND BALES, EXCELLENT qUALITY, fine stemmed. Over 30 miles SE of Portales, $130 per ton or $70 per bale. Call 575-273-4220, 575-760-4223.

GOATS FOR SALE: 4 DOES NUBIAN, LaMancha mix, 9 months. One buck purebred LaMancha, 1 year. Rodeo, NM. Call 575-557-2506.

Odds & Ends

COFFINS: HANDCRAFTED SOLID WOOD FROM $680. Several models suitable for burial or cre-mation. Statewide delivery available. For a FREE catalog and funeral information booklet, please visit www.theoldpinebox.com or call 505-286-9410.

LIqUID STORAGE TANkS. MANY SIzES/SHAPES IN stock. Agricultural, commercial, indus-trial, water. FDA specs. www.western-tank.com or 1-888-999-8265. Discounts to everyone! Delivery available.

AFFORDABLE CASkETS. FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY OR pick up in northern NM. Prices start at $499. Call Dave 575-668-9009 or Cell: 505-652-0106 for your needs.

WOOL YARN, HAND SPUN. NATURAL BROWNS & whites. Dyed colors, blends with Angora, Alpaca occasional. Available at Victorias-Mountain-Yarns.com - Maple Winds Farm, Stanley.

CUPID CALLING! PECOS PABLO SWEETHEART GIFTS. Blue Ribbon capulin jelly, assorted jellies and jams, mountain wildflower honey, English Toffee, green chile piñon brittle, plus more Valentine sweet selec-tions. [email protected] or 505-603-2310.

WOOD BEAMS & ROUGH CUT LUMBER 4 Sale in Costilla, New Mexico. Call the RCCLA @ 575-586-0542. Big orders, please give an advance notice. Other wood products also available.

21 ACRE PECAN FARM FOR SALE, Las Cruces. 2 wells, Elephant Butte irrigation rights, $840,000. Call Sam @ 575-647-0320.

Roof Over Your Head

I WOULD LIkE TO PURCHASE THE Real Estate Contract, Mortgage or Deed of Trust for which you are receiving payments. Please call for fast pricing and quick closing. E-mail: [email protected] Barbara Baird, 1-800-458-9847.

4 ACRES FARMLAND. UTILITIES INCLUDE: WELL, septic system, and electricity. Steel metal garage/cement slab. Fenced. Irrigation rights. Fawn fesque grass with alfalfa mix. Contact Lisa, 505-699-1137. Property located in San Acacia, NM.

BEAUTIFUL THREE BEDROOM HOUSE IN THE mountains with view of Bluewater Lake. 1.5 acres, has own well. Propane and elec-tric. Very private & quiet. 505-980-1004.

FOR SALE: MORA VALLEY. APPROXIMATELY 20 acres dry land and 15 acres mountains. Serious Inquiries Only. Contact Mike at 505-753-6338.

BEAUTIFUL MOUNTAIN LAND 5-10 ACRE TRACTS. Heavily wooded, piñon, few pines, elk, deer. Great for recreation, four-wheeling, wood cutting, etc. Near Pine Hill, NM. Owner financed, 10% down. 575-694-3175, 505-783-4422.

RESERVE, NM. HALF ACRE WITH CABIN. Borders Gila National Forest. Concrete slab, septic system, beautifully landscaped. Electricity and water to property line. Located at end of paved road. $39,000. 575-533-6274.

3.9 ACRES AT LEMITA JUST NORTH of Socorro, $42,000. Mountain views, beautiful area, underground power, community water to property. Low down payments, low monthly payment. Owner/broker 575-430-0006.

GORGEOUS VIEWS, 3,000 Sq. FT. HOME plus 6.7 acres, fenced, pastures, ancient water rights, barns, antiques and tractor. Call to see photos 805-402-4641 or to see actual property in Socorro County.

CHAMA VALLEY. TEN ACRES. MINUTES FROM El Vado Lake with new private well, TERMS $34,000. One acre with scattered pon-derosa pines near Chama Rive,r $24,000. Willow Way area off US84/285 west of Chama, 22.3 acres with power to lot and two new wildlife ponds, $125,000, TERMS. Call 505-249-4415.

2 BEDROOM, 1 BATH, PART ADOBE house with modern windows. Located walking dis-tance from school, 7 miles from electric field, on 1.10 acre with double garage and screened back porch, and outer storage buildings surrounded with 14 fruit trees. All of this is fenced. The house is partially furnished with refrigerator, 4 burner range, clothes washer and dryer. One bed, one hide a bed, 1 heater wood stove. Call 575-935-1841.

HOME FOR SALE ON 50 ACRES, 8 miles north-east of Roy: 3 bed; 3 bath, 2,240 sq. ft; 662 sq. ft. attached, finished garage; 187 sq. ft. finished, separate studio; fully fenced, irrigated and gated orchard, gardens and yard; entire property is fenced. Asking $80,000. Seller financing available. Call 505-228-2485.

25 TREED ACRES NE OF qUEMADO, NM. Very private, borders state land. Great water well, telephone line within property, gor-geous unencumbered view of mountains. Partially fenced. $61K. Call 575-518-8224.

THREE BEDROOM, TWO BATH ON 40 acres, Portal. AZ. www.portalhomeforsale.com or 520-720-9547.

1,760+ DEEDED ACRES NEAR I-40 BETWEEN Santa Rosa and Tucumcari, NM. Excellent home, bunkhouse, shops, trucks, tractors and more. 3 windmills, submergibles, Turnkey operation. $600 per acre. Call 505-259-8079.

CARRIzOzO: 5 FLAT ACRES WITH WONDERFUL views on a county maintained road with city water. A 5 bedroom, 2 bath, livable fixer-upper only $41,000. Patsy Sanchez, Broker,Tierra Verde Properties. 575-648-2326 or 575-491-0633.

FOR SALE: VIGAS, HOUSE LOGS CUT from standing, dead, dry Spruce. Up to 45 ft. Will custom cut. Forked Cedar posts for ramadas, corn drivers and cedar fence posts. Call 575-638-5619.

FORT SUMNER SITE BUILT 2 BEDROOM, 1 bath home on 31+ acres just outside city limits. Electric, natural gas, well, septic, shop, garden, many beautiful trees. SE corner, US 54/60 and Billy the Kid with over 1,000’ frontage on each highway. Plenty of room for additional home sites and commercial businesses. $170,000 Stallard Real Estate 575-355-4454.

VERY SPACIOUS 2,800 Sq. FT. CUSTOM home on 45 acres (3 adjoining 25 acre lots available, all lots have power). $395,000 Catron county. 928-228-1655. Can be viewed on forsalebyowner.com listing number 23965144.

CARRIzOzO: 5 FLAT ACRES WITH WONDERFUL views, county maintained road with city water. Five bedroom, 2 bath, livable fixer-upper only $41,000. Patsy Sanchez, Broker - Tierra Verde Properties 575-648-2326 or 575-491-0633.

Things That Go Vroom!

COMMERCIAL MEAT SAW, $1,200. 1975 FORD F-250 4WD, $2,000. 3,000 lb. scale, $2,500. 100 tin sheets 1’x30,’ $38 per sheet. 16’ gooseneck trailer, very nice, $900. 505-832-4228 (daytime), 505-832-6914 (after 5:00 pm).

FIVE OLD CHEVY TRUCkS FOR SALE: ‘49, ‘54, ‘55 First Series, two ‘58 Second Series. Different prices for the three I will sell. Serious inquiries only, please. Call 575-343-2674. CASH ONLY DEAL when you pick up. Gallup area.

2007 ALFA GOLD 5TH WHEEL, MODEL 35RLIK. Top of the line, three silide-outs, w/d, two refrigerators (one w/icemaker) generator, deep freeze, etc. $32,500 OBO. Consider trades. Call 505-660-2509.

1991 FORD F-350 COMMERCIAL BOX TRUCk (8x8x12). 7.3 Diesel, automatic. Fresh oil and filter. All new tires. Ready to go any-where. $3,500 [email protected] or 575-512-1185. Located in Corona, NM.

1966 FORD F-250 3/4 TON REBUILT V-8 engine & transmission limited, slip differential. Good paint, newer tires, excellent condi-tion. Call 575-544-0952.

Vintage Finds

I BUY SPANISH COLONIAL SPURS, STIRRUPS, horse bits with jingles, weapons, etc. Also, old New Mexico handmade/carved furniture. Call 505-753-9886.

WANTED: NEW MEXICO MOTORCYCLE LICENSE PLATES 1900 - 1958. Paying $100 - $1,000 each. Also buying some New Mexico car plates 1900 - 1923. Bill Johnston, Box 640, Organ, NM 88052-0640. E-mail: [email protected] or telephone 575-382-7804.

WE HAVE SOME DANDY OLD CUPBOARDS at Rough Rider Antiques in Las Vegas. Two are turquoise, one mustard yellow; one large blue and a traditional dark oak Hoosier. There’s more: a large oak Craftsman-style cabinet with three glass shelves and interior light. Medical cabi-nets: one red, one white; oil lamps, hall trees, trunks, mirrors, art, desks, chests of drawers, a few table and chair sets, and several pieces of Art Deco “water-fall” bedroom furniture, individually priced. New to the store: Regional books and rare book sets; custom-made silver rings and always more jewelry. A coral and sterling silver bracelet by Navajo artist Harrison Jim is stunning. Open daily at 501 Railroad and East Lincoln. Follow the signs to the Visitor’s Center. 505-454-8063.

BUYING OLD STUFF: GAS PUMPS AND parts 1960s or earlier, advertising signs, neon clocks, old car parts in original boxes, motor oil cans, license plate collections, Route 66 items, old metal road signs, odd and weird stuff. Fair prices paid. Have pickup, will travel. Gas Guy in Embudo, 505-852-2995.

Toll Free 1-888-875-8233

F a x : 9 4 0 - 4 8 4 - 6 7 4 6 e m a i l : i n f o @ r h i n o b l d g . c o mW e b s i t e : h t t p : / / w w w . R H I N O B L D G . C O M

25 Year Warranty on Roof & Walls;

Prices F.O.B. Mfg. Plants;

Seal Stamped Blue Prints;

Easy Bolt Together Design.

Farm•Industrial •Commercial

VISIT

OUR

WEBSITE

PRICES INCLUDE COLOR SIDES

& GALVALUME ROOF

VISIT

OUR

WEBSITE

(Local codes may affect prices)

Arena Special (roof & frame)

100’ x 100’ x 14’...$35,499

30’ x 50’ x 10’........$8,68140’ x 60’ x 12’........$11,99950’ x 75’ x 14.........$17,88860’ x 100’ x 12’......$23,995100’ x 150’ x 14’....$56,999

22 FEBRUARY 2014 enchantment.coop

WANTED: NEW MEXICO HIGHWAY JOURNAL MAGAzINE, 1923 - 1927. Paying $10 - $25 single issues, $400 - $800 bound volumes. Library discards OK. Bill Johnston, Box 640, Organ, NM 88052-0640. E-mail: [email protected] or telephone 575-382-7804.

RAILROAD ITEMS WANTED: LANTERNS, LOCkS, kEYS, badges, uniforms, dining car china, etc. Especially seeking items from early New Mexico railroads such as: AT&SF, D&RG, EP&NE, EP&SW, and C&S. Randy Dunson, 575-356-6919.

HAVE A HAPPY VALENTINE'S DAY@

WANTED: NEW MEXICO AUTOMOBILE LICENSE DIRECTORY (“The Zia Book”), and Motor Vehicle Register books, 1900 - 1949. Library discards OK. Paying $75 - $100 per volume. Bill Johnston, Box 640, Organ, NM 88052-0640. E-mail: [email protected] or telephone 575-382-7804.

1998 CHEVROLET REAR BUMPER BRAND NEW, $250. Three rolls barbed wire 12-1/2 gauge, $40 each. One roll hog wire 12 gauge 39”x300,’ $85. Seventy Crown Royal sacks, $45. Fifteen 4”x6”x10’ Dry, Dagles Red Fir beams, $12 each. 5 ft. antique claw foot bath tub, perfect condition, $1,200. Call 575-758-2564 Taos, NM.

When Opportunity Knocks

RURAL CONVENIENCE STORE WITH PACkAGE LIqUOR License, living quarters on 1.3 acres with 3 acre foot well. Borders Gila National Forest. FSBO. Call 575-533-6274.

STORAGE UNITS, MCINTOSH, NEW MEXICO. OFFICE and 98 units, 2.25 acres, Highway frontage w/room for additional busi-ness. Call 505-384-5163.

WOODWORkING BUSINESS: 10 YEAR HISTORY, READY to be taken to the next level. Growing demand outpacing owner’s ability to keep up. Recession-proof product with few competitors. Top ranking website generates nationwide business. Currently home-based, can easily relocate. $168,000 + inventory. Info packet available to SERIOUSLY interested parties. 505-286-9410.

RICk MUNCY’S LEATHERS CUSTOM MADE SADDLES, rebuild and repair saddles and horse gear. Call 575-423-3267.

I DON'T UNDERSTAND WHY CUPID WAS chosen to represent Valentine's Day. When I think about romance, the last thing on my mind is a short, chubby toddler coming at me with a weapon. ~Author Unknown

OVER THE YEARS, WE’VE SEEN THE USES FOR ELECTRICITY CHANGE. BUT ITS VALUE HASN’T.

www.tristate.coop

If you question the value of electricity, consider its role in your daily life. From the

comforts and conveniences of home to the time-saving tools at work, electricity is vital

to how we live. In 1952, Tri-State was formed as a consumer-owned power provider with

the mission of delivering reliable, affordable electricity throughout the rural West. Today,

we generate and transmit electricity to our 44-member co-ops who, in turn, serve more

than 1.5 million people across a 200,000 square-mile territory. Collectively, we know

we’re delivering more than electricity. We’re delivering quality of life.

Tri-State Generation and Transmission Association • P.O. Box 33695 • Denver, CO 80233 • Wholesale power supplier to 44 electric cooperatives in Colorado, New Mexico, Nebraska and Wyoming.

TRI453-087_Co-Op_Ad#5_7.33x10_Enchantment_PROD.indd 1 6/28/12 3:53 PM

enchantment.coop FEBRUARY 2014 23

Diego Caraveo, Age 7, Questa Evony Chino, Age 12, Grants Sandy Duran, Age 11, San Ildefonso Pueblo

Michael Gonzales, Age 6, Cuba Destiny Vigil, Age 11, Chimayo Hakota Endito, Age 7, Thoreau

Charlene Alaniz, Age 12, Estancia Kari Baker, Age 13, Portales Luke Bogle, Age 7, Dexter

Spring begins March 20. So, let's spring into action and draw colorful, refreshing bird houses for our feathered friends.

Take a leap to your local library and check out a book on frogs. It's amazing the colors and types of frogs there are in nature. Maybe you'll see one in your favorite team color. So, for April, draw a big frog or two. Have a super, fun time!

Remember: Print your name, age, mailing address, phone number, and co-op name on your drawings. Otherwise, your drawings are disqualified. Remember: color, dark ink or pencil on plain white 8.50 x 11.00 size paper is best. Mail to: Youth Editor, 614 Don Gaspar Avenue, Santa Fe, NM 87505. Entries must be here by the 9th of the month before publication. Each published artist receives $10 for his or her work.

Your Gift Of Love This Valentine's Day…