He looked cold to us.
Pictures and notes on our full-time travels in North America since 2004. Double-click any picture to enlarge it! Click the browser Back button to continue. To look at eariler posts click on the little triangle for a year and month under 'Blog Archives' at the lower left. Also, check-out the links below our picture.
Saturday, October 14, 2006
SANDIA PEAK TRAMWAY RIDE
He looked cold to us.
Thursday, October 12, 2006
Tuesday, October 10, 2006
Monday, October 09, 2006
ACOMA PUEBLO - NEW MEXICO

A barren land.


Acoma children playing in front of their home.
Typical adobe home construction.


Streets are narrow and can get quite muddy after a rainfall.

ACOMA PUEBLO - NEW MEXICO


Only 12 families live year round at the pueblo where there is no running water or electricity. They have port-a-potties around the village, and they must carrier water from wells. Small wood burning stoves are used for cooking and keeping them warm.


Handmade pottery in traditional colors of orange, black, and white.

ACOMA PUEBLO - NEW MEXICO
Another traditional pottery piece. This one was used for storing seeds in the fall for planting in the spring. The hole in the lid was large enough to put seeds in, but too small for birds or rodents to get at the seeds. In the spring, they smashed the pottery to get the seeds.
This land was granted to the Acoma through a Spanish Land Grant that has remained in force, and they are the only Indians living on their own land and not sent to reservations.
The Acoma Pueblo is America's oldest continuously inhabited community. A population of 6,000 most living on Pueblo land with only a dozen or so families living on top of the mesa Pueblo. The Pueblo has served as the physical hub of the Acoma for nearly 2,000 years. The land is barren and hostile, but the Indians have managed to survive on it.