196 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
196 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
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Episode: 3830
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Title: HPR3830: Into New Mexico
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr3830/hpr3830.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-25 06:10:46
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---
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This is Hacker Public Radio Episode 3830 for Friday the 7th of April 2023.
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Today's show is entitled, Into New Mexico.
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It is part of the series Travel.
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It is hosted by Ahukag and is about 14 minutes long.
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It carries a clean flag.
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The summary is.
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We move to another state, New Mexico.
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Hello, this is Ahuka, welcoming you to Hacker Public Radio and another exciting episode
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in our ongoing series on RV Travels and now we move into New Mexico.
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In Monday, February 21st of 2022, this was a travel day.
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We started by threading on needle to get the RV out of the space we were in.
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The car was parked where it was not supposed to be on one side and a concrete barrier was
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on the other side.
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But we managed to back in the truck, hook her up and get the RV out without any problems.
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When it was off to Deming, New Mexico for the Sunrise RV Park.
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As we traveled, we could see a gradual change in the vegetation.
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Soaro cactuses are no longer seen, but yuccas are now common.
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Deming is very near the edge of the Chihuahuan Desert, the other major desert type, the other
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being of course the Sonoran, which is what we were in in most of Arizona.
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The Chihuahuan is the other major desert type in this part of the world and it is a very
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windy type, at least where we were.
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We knew we were in for it when the signs along I-10 warned about the possible dust storms
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we might go through.
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Winds here get up to 40 to 50 miles per hour with some regularity and the winds howled
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all afternoon and evening.
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Tuesday, February 22nd, we found a little gem in Deming, a local museum with a wonderful
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and varied collection.
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Some of it was Old West, a lot of it was the Mimbras Indians, some of it was military
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from the area.
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They had a fantastic collection of dolls and a nice bunch of quilts.
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Some of the Mimbras bowls had holes in the bottom and we were told that these bowls
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would put over the head of a deceased person and the holes were made to let the soil get
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out.
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You never know what you will find in a local museum and that's one of the things that
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in our travels we've discovered we want to try and get to museums wherever we go just
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to see what kind of interesting things we're going to learn about the area.
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The other bit of fun today is that we found water under the sink, never a good thing.
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After a lot of diagnosing, we figured out it was the spray hose that was leaking from
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the head.
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Now, we never used it so we just pulled the hose out and put the spray head under the
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distrainer on the side sink.
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That will stop the problem for now and we can put this on our general RV list for repairs
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when we get back to Michigan.
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If you want to see some stuff from the museum, we have photos for most of the days and
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there are links in the show notes to my Flickr account where all the photos are stored
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so feel free to check it out if you're interested.
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Wednesday, February 23rd, we got out by 9 because we were told the wind is not so bad
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in the early morning.
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We went to City of Rock's State Park and there we saw some fantastic rock formations.
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They were caused by volcanic eruptions millions of years ago and these eruptions were estimated
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to be a thousand times as powerful as the Mount St. Helens.
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The ash compressed into a type of rock called tough.
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We saw some of that as well previously when we were in Arizona and then in the tough,
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the cracks form, erosion takes place and now those beautiful formations are the result.
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But the wind picked up continually while we were there which is not surprising because
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that's how the erosion happens.
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We came back after traversing the main rocks.
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It was so bad that it was hard just walking back to the truck because the wind was blowing
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sand and dust in our faces into our eyes and everything.
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On the way back we had, as we driving back from the park, we had tumbleweeds blowing
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across the road like a herd of small animals and we passed through more dust clouds.
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When we got back to the RV we got an emergency notification on our phones about high winds
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and soon the RV itself was rocking.
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Then we got a second notification extending the wind warning for another three hours.
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Kind of hope our next stop is a little less windy.
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Wednesday, February 24th, we woke up to another very windy day in Deming but we packed up
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and hit the road to Anthony, New Mexico where we're staying at the road host RV park.
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This puts us in a convenient spot between Las Cruces, New Mexico and El Paso, Texas and
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we'll be here for nearly three weeks.
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We should find time to check out some interesting things in this area.
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It is pretty windy right now in this park and tonight the temperature will drop below
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freezing but then it is forecast to go up into very warm territory so I may get a chance
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to use some sunscreen before this trip is over.
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This is a lot better than the winter weather advisory notices I see for back in Michigan.
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Friday, February 25th.
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Today was cool and overcast so we opted for going indoors.
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We went to the El Paso Museum of Archaeology which was devoted to exhibits and artifacts
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from the various local Native American populations.
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They started with the paleo Indian populations of some 12,000 years ago right up to the
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present day.
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This was a very nice museum.
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We had a good time there and after a few hours in this museum we literally walked next
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door to something called the Border Patrol Museum.
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We probably wouldn't have made a trip just to see this but since we were there we looked
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in for about an hour or so then it was back to the RV.
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One thing we found interesting is that El Paso has mountains inside the city limits which
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we had not expected but then again as we travel the southwest we find it is very mountainous.
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But unlike in Colorado or New England other mountainous places we've been the mountains
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are kind of plops down in flat plains.
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I recall learning a cherry cava that was a place in Arizona that we visited previously.
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The natives called these mountains islands in the sky which does kind of fit.
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Saturday, February 26th.
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Today is another taking care of business day.
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We did laundry in the morning and after lunch picked up my prescriptions at Walgreens
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and refilled an empty propane tank.
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After that we relaxed for a bit before taking a walk out behind the RV park and that means
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walking in basically some just some random desert landscape.
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Sunday, February 27th.
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We went to Messia which is an older town outside Las Cruces and we learned a little bit of
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the history.
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The bulk of New Mexico, Arizona and California were taken from Mexico in the Mexican American
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War of 1846.
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The border at that time ran just south of Las Cruces and a lot of the Mexican people in
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the area did not want to be in the United States so they went over the border and found
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it Messia.
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When in the Gadsden Purchase, which was in 1853, a strip of land along the border was
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bought by the United States and Messia was in that strip.
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So I guess they ended up in the United States anyway.
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Messia was a larger town than Las Cruces until about 1900 when Las Cruces started to overtake
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it.
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We went into the historic section of Messia to do a little sightseeing and found a craft
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market going on in the town square.
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But before doing all of that, we went to Messia Valley Bosque State Park.
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There we met with a very friendly park ranger who told us all about the area and the wildlife.
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We had seen a very small bit of water, barely more than a creek and he told us, yeah,
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that's the Rio Grande.
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Apparently the flow varies on different parts of the river and also varies with the seasons
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so it can be more impressive in other times and places.
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Of course, a lot of water gets taken out for irrigation and other sorts of uses.
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So the Rio Grande in general should be called the Rio Picanio as far as I'm concerned.
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It's not a large river at all.
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The park ranger also explained that towns along the river discharge treated sewage into
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the river and it did smell bad so I would not go in the river if given the choice.
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Okay, Monday, February 28th, overcast and cool day, my knee was hurting a little so we took
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the day off to relax.
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Tuesday, March 1st.
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We set out to go to a hiking trail in a park in El Paso but we had trouble finding it.
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We may have finally found it, we're not sure.
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It looked more like a vacant lot than a park so we decided to give it up as a bad bet.
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And instead went to the Centennial Museum which is on the University of Texas El Paso campus
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and was very nearby.
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It had a very eclectic collection.
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We started by looking at paintings done by Mexican or maybe Mexican-American artists and
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they were sort of focused on the plate of immigrants.
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Then we went upstairs to look at minerals, fossils, rooms about the animal life and so
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on.
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Like I said, very eclectic.
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Then we checked out the Chihuahuan Desert Garden outside which was very nice.
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The Chihuahuan Desert has different plants from the Sonoran Desert.
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The Sonoran Desert is characterized by the Swaro cactus but the characteristic plant
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in the Chihuahuan Desert seems to be the yucca.
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So the day did not turn out the way we had planned but it was a good day.
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Wednesday, March 2nd.
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Today we decided to check out the White Sands National Monument.
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It is north of Las Cruces about an hour from where we are staying.
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We stopped at a roadside overlook at the top of the San Augustine Pass over the Oregon
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Mountains where there is a Nike missile set up.
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The National Monument, the White Sands National Monument is within the White Sands Missile
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Missile Range and we were told that the monument would be closed on March 10th because they'll
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be closing the area for a missile test.
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At the Visitor Center for White Sands National Monument we watched a movie about how the
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sand dunes were created, the wildlife lives there and so on.
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The area is inside the Tula Rosa Basin which is a very low point without any drainage.
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So when the rains come they dissolve calcite from the mountain rocks and this flows down
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to the bottom.
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Then the water evaporates and calcite crystals form.
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Then the wind blows the crystals around and breaks them down in a very fine white sand
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which accumulates into dunes.
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We hiked a few trails but hiking on sand dunes is very taxing so eventually we'd had
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enough for the day and decided to go back.
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Thursday March 3rd.
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We never got to the most impressive dunes yesterday so we went back.
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We saw the white dunes stretch out all around us as we hiked the Alkalife Flats Trail.
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We never to get to the end because it was a five mile trail up and down sand dunes but
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we hiked in for a bit then turned around.
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It is a fantastic experience to be out on those dunes.
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It really looks like snow when you're looking around so that it feels like you're in a frozen
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field except I was wearing shorts and a t-shirt.
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These two days were not to be missed at all.
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One of the interesting things about the white sands is that the sands are cool, they're
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not hot.
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You think they would be but they're so white that they reflect the sun instead of absorbing
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it.
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In fact, you could walk around barefoot and be perfectly comfortable.
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If you get to New Mexico, you really need to check out the white sands.
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That's the end of this particular episode.
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This is Ahoca for Hacker Public Radio signing off and encouraging you as always to support
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free software.
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Bye bye.
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You have been listening to Hacker Public Radio.
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At Hacker Public Radio does a walk.
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Today's show was contributed by a HBR listener like yourself.
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If you ever thought of recording a podcast and click on our contribute link to find out
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how easy it really is.
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The hosting for HBR has been kindly provided by an honesthost.com, the internet archive
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and our sings.net.
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On the Sadois status, today's show is released under Creative Commons, Attribution 4.0 International
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License.
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