By Lincoln McElwee
Santa Fe, New Mexico is a great example of tourism and culture that thrive through community engagement. Tourism in the city is a wonderful trifecta of color, sight and sound! From folk art, conservation and botany, to farmer’s markets, trains and road trips, Santa Fe, New Mexico offers its community—and those who happen to become a part of its community through tourism—the satisfying slice of life known to those “in the know” as variety.
And with the world having recently celebrated World Tourism Day on September 27, 2015, the city of Santa Fe is definitely a place that should peak right at the top of your fall travel destinations.
Kids will especially get a thrill from the many adventures geared toward kid-friendly fun, including searching for dinosaur fossils, river rafting, archery, horseback riding, painting, adobe brick making, and much, much more.
The city’s dedication to the preservation of culture and history, as well as what it offers to the public to reflect this preservation, speak to the educational impact which travel and tourism can and should have in our lives.
So what are you waiting for? Make a date to visit Santa Fe, New Mexico this fall! Rest assured that, in doing so, you will be aiding in teaching your children about the place of community and social responsibility in our lives and, most importantly, in our playtime.
The following list contains a few noteworthy activities that will not only make your stay in Santa Fe more memorable, but will help both you and your children see the value and necessity of learning and community engagement in both work and play!
Santa Fe Walkabouts & Pinzgauer Adventures
If you’re looking for a healthy dose of outdoor adventure and a chance to “reconnect with nature,” Santa Fe Walkabouts is sure to do the trick. Ranked #1 by TripAdvisor for worthwhile activities in Santa Fe, this esteemed outfit allows kids and adults to choose from a variety of seasonal activities, including scenic cultural tours, hiking and mountain biking, the entirely unique Pinzgauer 4×4 adventures, as well as cross country skiing and snowshoeing.
What is a Pinzgauer, you ask? It’s a high-mobility all-terrain military utility vehicle. The ever-popular tours are even offered now without a reservation for last-minute planners. Simply hop on at the corner of E. San Francisco St. and the Plaza and you can enjoy a 90-minute scenic tour into the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains!
The scenic tours will provide education and entertainment all wrapped up in one with stunning visits to Native American Pueblo Ruins, such as Puye Cliffs or Bandelier National Monument, as well as tours to amazing vistas and rock formations, like Plaza Blanca or Kasha Katuwe Tent Rocks.
One of the great things about the company is that it also provides customized itineraries, and with a bevy of seasonal adventures for the novice and experienced adventurer alike, you won’t miss out on any of the fun!
- For more information, be sure to visit the website: http://www.santafewalkabouts.com/
Museum of International Folk Art
The Museum of International Folk Art is a great place to begin a vacation filled with educational experiences through tourism! With exhibition galleries that invite your child’s participation through interactive activities, hands-on arts and crafts which are led by friendly and knowledgeable staff members, and a host of other exciting events, your family will find a full immersion into community engagement all while having loads of fun at this Santa Fe favorite!
Though the museum offers ample amounts of fun all year long, families with children should be sure to call ahead or visit the museum’s website for a full calendar of events that are targeted to younger audiences. You can peruse the museum’s guide online or pick one up right before the fun. For some exhibits, be sure to pick up an iPad Touch, which will allow the entire family to take part in the interactive learning experience while perusing the kid-friendly galleries.
“Pottery of the U.S South: A Living Tradition,” runs until January 3, 2016, and exhibits traditional stoneware from both North Carolina and northern Georgia. The selection of stoneware showcases earthy local clays and the interesting effects of wood firing. Visitors will get a chance to understand the stoneware’s roots in British and German ceramic traditions, and how it was once crucial to Southern agrarian life. As such, guests are encourages to consider the importance and dynamics of living traditions the world over.
- Museum of International Folk Art Homepage: http://www.internationalfolkart.org/
- For a full listing of current exhibits at the Museum of International Folk Art, be sure to visit: http://www.internationalfolkart.org/exhibitions/current.html
Santa Fe Clay Play
Looking for something entirely unique? How about Santa Fe Clay Play, where you or the entire family can take part in making art from clay. Accredited clay artist Ginny Zipperer knows that most people can remember playing in mud as a child, and so her private classes and team/family-building experiences are meant to invoke the child in us all! By opening her Santa Fe studio to the merits of clay making, Ginny hopes to bring out the inner child for a day of play.
One of the wonderful things about clay is that is requires no previous experience of developed skills to produce unique work for the artist to enjoy. In this way, Ginny is the trained facilitator while you and your family are allowed to artists, creating memorable treasures in the process.
You can create a unique, individual piece or take part in a family team building exercise and create a family piece to commemorate your Santa Fe vacation!
Be sure to call ahead and book your sessions at least 24 hours in advance. Workshops usually run anywhere from an hour-and-a-half to two hours. Call for group rates and custom options as well.
- Santa Fe Clay Play: (505) 204-6236
Santa Fe Children’s Museum
Winner of the Mayor’s Award for Excellence in the Arts 2010, this well-received venue is a must-do for families vacationing in Santa Fe. The museum houses interactive, hands-on exhibits, where kids from toddlers to the age of 14 can learn while engaging in a healthy dose of playtime. Kids can choose from adobe brick making, garden-to-table cooking, wall climbing, drama, music, and much, much more.
The outdoor space, called Earthworks, has a greenhouse, a music plaza, a sand pit, an adobe playhouse and a traditional southern adobe cook house (Horno). The indoor space includes the ever-popular water feature area where delighted kids can make giant bubbles, create damns and waterways and control a waterfall!
- Visit the website for more details: http://santafechildrensmuseum.org/
Georgia O’Keeffe Museum
The Georgia O’Keeffe Museum offers a variety of events and programs that cater to both children and adults alike. The museum makes it a point to itemize its activities into sections that will help you decide what best to do with your family while visiting the museum. These sections include: Adult, Family, Youth, Special Events, and Art & Leadership. There is also a section for Teachers as well. The free family art programs are particularly noteworthy.
- Georgia O’Keeffe Museum Homepage: http://www.okeeffemuseumevents.org/
El Rancho De Las Golondrinas
If your family has a penchant for live entertainment, prepare to be thoroughly amazed at El Rancho De Las Golondrinas—treat your family to an imaginative delight for the senses at this incredibly picturesque—and one-of-a-kind—living history museum!
Located on 200 acres of rural farmland, this historic ranch, translated as “Ranch of the Swallows,” actually dates from the early 1700s. This blast from the past also includes original colonial buildings that still stand on the site to this day. Children and adults alike can watch in awe and amazement as villagers, dressed in period clothing, reenact early frontier life in New Mexico.
With programs, events and festivals that highlight the life and times of the Southwest during 18th and 19th century New Mexico, there’s plenty to be seen and done here. Music, dance and daily life are but a few of the items explored through this living history project that combines aspects from Mexican, Spanish and Territorial life of the period.
The ranch also offers summer camp and special classes, including the Horno baking class, where visitors can bake bread while learning about the traditional outdoor ovens brought to New Mexico by the Spanish.
- El Rancho De Las Golondrinas Homepage: http://golondrinas.org
For a calendar of events at El Rancho De Las Golondrinas, visit: http://golondrinas.org/Calendar_of_Events/index.html
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