Las Cruces is a city in New Mexico. It
is the state's second largest city, with a population of around 75,000, and
is the site of New Mexico State University.Attractions
• New Mexico State University is in Las Cruces, with an
interesting museum or two, a large conference center, and a comfortable
student union. NMSU sports have fallen on hard times recently. The good news
is that you shouldn't have trouble getting tickets to football and
basketball games; the bad news is that the games you see won't be very good.
• Museums. There are several small museums in town, and one
not-so-small one:
• New Mexico Farm and Ranch Heritage
Museum. 4100 Dripping Springs Road, 505-522-4100, . East of NMSU on
the way out into the countryside. This is a fairly substantial site based on
a working cattle ranch, with demonstrations. You can spend half a day here;
there are picnic tables as well as food available for purchase. Open M-Sa
9-5, Su 12-5; $3 (student and senior discounts).
• Branigan Cultural Center. 500 N. Water St., 505-541-2155. A small
museum dealing with local history. Open M-F 10-4:30, Saturday 9-1; free.
• Las Cruces Museum of Fine Art and Culture. 490 N. Water St. (next
to the Branigan), 505-541-2137. Predominantly contemporary art with a
regional emphasis. Tu-Fri 10-2, Sa 9-1; free.
• Las Cruces Museum of Natural History. 700 S. Telshor (in Mesilla
Valley Mall), 505-522-3120. Includes a small collection of live animals (to
call it a "zoo" would overstate it). 7 days, with evening hours on Friday;
free, but donations requested.
• University Museum. In Kent Hall at NMSU. 505-646-3739. Emphasis on
local archaeology and culture. Tue-Sat 12-4; free, but donations accepted.
Shopping
Unlike much of New Mexico, Las Cruces is not well endowed with local
Indian art or other characteristic types of durable mementos. If you want
something to remember your visit by, one idea is food, specifically chile
peppers, which are grown in abundance in the Mesilla Valley. The long
strings of red chilies that you see hanging from porches, gables, etc., are
called ristras and are available for purchase at many locations.
These are largely for ornamental purposes, but edible chilies are also
widely available, with spiciness levels ranging from mild to downright
inedible (New Mexico State University has a substantial chile research
program that grows peppers so hot that they function as bug repellents).
If in town in late summer or fall, make a pilgrimage to the outlying town
of Hatch on I-25 to the north. Hatch is the center of the
chile-growing business and has several shops with chile paraphernalia.
Better, it hosts a "Chile Festival" in early September, usually around Labor
Day, that's fun to visit as well as a great source of chilies. (Hatch is a
tiny town with little or no lodging, so you'll want to stay in Las Cruces
and make a day trip to the Festival.) If you're getting your chilies for
cooking rather than ornamentation, and can get them home/in a freezer
quickly, get them roasted while you're there; roasting is a key step in
preparation for the table, and doing it in a Hatch roaster will save you all
manner of peculiar odors resulting from doing the roasting at home.
For more pedestrian, day-to-day purchases, Las Cruces has all of the
usual shopping associated with a town of 80,000. Mesilla Valley Mall is
convenient off I-25 just north of NMSU for this purpose.
Dining
• Garduno's of Mexico ,
500 S. Telshor (near exit 3 on I-25), 505-521-7225, is the local franchise
of a popular and excellent chain that originated in Albuquerque and is
spreading through the Southwest. Mexican food with a New Mexico/Arizona
slant, although some dishes from "old" Mexico are served. 7 days, lunch and
dinner; an enjoyable and casual place to get some very good food, far better
than its "chain" origins might suggest.
• University Avenue, on the north side of NMSU, has the usual
assortment of student-oriented eateries, with the usual properties for such
places: lots of food, reasonable prices, less than haute cuisine. Some, by
no means all, of the restaurants along University are:
• Lorenzo's, 1753 E. University, 505-521-3505. Acceptable Italian;
lunch and dinner.
• Phoenicia, 1001 E. University. Serviceable Mediterranean, with
occasional entertainment; lunch and dinner.
• 5 Brothers, also 1001 E. University. Chinese, part of a local
chain with some other locations in town. Not the greatest Chinese, but
convenient for takeout.
• Pete's Hacienda, 2605 S. Espina (intersection with University),
505-532-0790. Mexican with some "American" options. Lunch and dinner. |
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Get in
Las Cruces is located at the junction of Interstate Highways 10 and 25
and is the southern terminus of the latter. The nearest airport with
commercial air service is in El Paso, Texas, about 50 miles away. Limited
bus service is available between El Paso and Albuquerque with stops in Las
Cruces.
Get around
Las Cruces has some degree of public transportation by the city bus line
RoadRUNNER Transit.. Service is limited to Monday through Saturday
and ends by 7:30 in the evening. Some buses can carry bicycles. Terrain in
the city is flatter than in most New Mexico cities and towns, and bicycling
is feasible. Otherwise, just plan to drive.
Activities
The Organ Mountains just east of town offer good hiking and rock
climbing. Follow University Avenue east from NMSU past the Farm and Ranch
museum to one of the primary trailheads, in a small park (fee) with
interpretive exhibit. Trails lead from here into the mountains. Some
campground space is available (additional fee).

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