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Located northwest of Santa Fe and 80 mi/130 km north of Albuquerque, Abiquiu, New Mexico, is where artist Georgia O'Keeffe lived for many years. You can still see the beautiful chimney rock formations (and even a few cattle skulls) made famous in her...
Categories: Abiquiu
Located along the white sands of a crescent-shaped bay along Mexico's Pacific Coast, Acapulco is one of Mexico's original tourist destinations. The city remains a favorite for its spirited nightlife, inviting beaches and charming cityscape....
Categories: Mexico
Acoma, or “Sky City” is located on the top a mesa, elevated area of land with a flat top, hundreds of feet above the surrounding land. Once you have reached the top of the mesa you can see breathtaking panoramic views of surrounding mesas and mountai...
Categories: Acoma Pueblo
The state of Aguacalientes, completely surrounded by the states of Jalisco and Zacatecas, is located midway between the center and west of Mexico. The land was originally populated by Chichimecs, who fiercely resisted the Spanish conquistadors. Parad...
Categories: Aguascalientes
Near Alamogordo is the birthplace of the Atomic Age. In 1945, the first atomic weapon was detonated at the Trinity Site—a 146-acre/59-hectare area of snow-white gypsum sand dunes about 50 mi/80 km northwest of town. The site is now part of the White ...
Categories: Alamogordo
Albuquerque, New Mexico, could be the place to fulfill dreams of a southwestern getaway. A centuries-old Spanish church anchors the city's plaza, chili-pepper-spiked delicacies are found on almost every menu, and residential neighborhoods are chock-f...
Categories: Albuquerque
Categories: Artesia
The East Cape area on the south east of the peninsula has beautiful unspoiled beaches, and the area near Rosarito Beach is famous for lobster restaurants. Ensenada has a nice Mediterranean climate that is suitable for year-round living. It offers dut...
Categories: Baja
Categories: Baja California Sur
Reserve your vacation hot spot this winter to get the best rates on hotels and excursions. Peak travel to this area is January through April so make sure to reserve your spot early so your clients gets their first choice of hotel and lock in the expe...
Categories: Mexico > Quintana Roo
Categories: Campeche (state)
As one of the most popular tourist destinations in Mexico, Cancun attracts about four million visitors each year to its pristine white beaches, its top-notch resort and hotel scene and its crystal blue water. The city is home to hundreds of hotels th...
Categories: Mexico
Categories: Candelero Bay
Carlsbad Caverns National Park is part of the Guadalupe Mountain range southeast of New Mexico and southwest of Carlsbad, New Mexico, USA. 250 million years ago the area surrounding Carlsbad Caverns National Park was submerged in the sea - home to ma...
Categories: Carlsbad Caverns National Park
Certain ancient places—the Egyptian pyramids come to mind—capture the imagination with their enduring majesty and mystery. Chaco Canyon is one of those places. Located in the northwest corner of the state, these ruins were built over a period of thre...
Categories: Chaco Culture National Historical Park
The State of Chiapas is located in the south tip of Mexico, bordered by the states of Oaxaca, Vera Cruz and Tabasco, and the Central American country of Guatemala. The state is extremely rich in water and other natural resources; its jungles and high...
Categories: Chiapas
Categories: Chihuahua (state)
Located between Santa Fe and Taos, Chimayo is home to El Santuario de Chimayo. This unadorned but striking shrine was built on the site where, in 1810, villagers claimed to see a light emanating from the ground. When they investigated, they unearthed...
Categories: Chimayo
Categories: Clayton
This town just west of the Texas border on Highway 84, 200 mi/320 km east of Albuquerque, is the home of the Norman Petty Studios, where the late Buddy Holly recorded many of his most famous rock 'n' roll hits in the late 1950s. The studio is still i...
Categories: Clovis
Categories: Coahuila
Categories: Colima (state)
Beautiful Isla Cozumel is an immensely popular vacation and diving destination located in the Caribbean Sea off the Riviera Maya coastline in Mexico. The island is relatively small, only 10 miles wide and 30 miles long but packs a big punch with many...
Categories: Mexico
Ensenada Grande Sur is a remote and uninhabited beach located in Baja California, Sur, on the Sea of Cortez. Enjoy hikes ashore viewing the desert vegetation, or cool off in the crystal clear turquoise waters on stand-up-paddleboards, kayaks, or snor...
Categories: Ensenada Grande Sur
Espanola, New Mexico, is best known for being at the heart of a handful of historic pueblos: San Juan, San Ildefonso, Santa Clara and Pojoaque, to name a few. Espanola will also appeal to car buffs: It's a center for low-riders and classic autos. It ...
Categories: Espanola
Located in one of the most fertile valleys in New Mexico, Farmington is 150 mi/240 km northwest of Albuquerque and just east of the Navajo Nation Reservation, which stretches into Arizona. The city hosts a huge hot-air balloon fiesta every spring, an...
Categories: Farmington
New Mexico's northwestern corner joins three other states—the only place in the U.S. where four states share a common point. A monument run by the Navajo tribe (whose reservation encompasses this corner of the state) allows visitors to stand in Utah,...
Categories: Four Corners NM
You may find yourself passing through Gallup, 130 mi/210 km west of Albuquerque: Both Interstate 40 and Amtrak's Southwest Chief rail line run through town, as does a portion of old Route 66 (the town even gets a mention in the musical tribute to the...
Categories: Gallup
Another town that preserves a portion of Route 66, Grants lies near one of the largest deposits of uranium in the world, 75 mi/120 km west of Albuquerque. Its discovery in 1950 made uranium extraction the main business in Grants. The New Mexico Museu...
Categories: Grants
Guadalajara, Mexico's second largest city, offers travelers a wide range of traditional and contemporary experiences. Visitors travel to this cosmopolitan destination to experience a plethora of attractions including nearby magical towns such ...
Categories: Mexico
Categories: Guanajuato (state)
Categories: Guerrero
Categories: Han Yang Ling Mausoleum
Categories: Hidalgo
The twin cities of Ixtapa and Zihuatanejo (sometimes the two are referred to as Ixta-Zihua) are anything but identical. It's the perfect vacation destionation for travelers looking for a round of golf on a lush, green course followed by a leisur...
Categories: Mexico
Categories: Jalisco
Not far from White Sands Missile Range is Las Cruces, 200 mi/320 km south of Albuquerque, the largest city in southwest New Mexico, a leading agricultural center and home of New Mexico State University. The New Mexico Farm & Ranch Heritage Museum inc...
Categories: Las Cruces
Las Vegas started as a farming and ranching settlement in the 1840s after a dozen or so families petitioned Mexico for a land grant. It was up and running when Gen. Stephen Kearny declared New Mexico part of the U.S.—the announcement was made from a ...
Categories: Las Vegas NM
Lincoln, New Mexico, located 135 mi/215 km southeast of Albuquerque, owes its fame to Henry McCarty, better known as William Bonney and best known as Billy the Kid. It was in this frontier town in April 1881 that the Kid escaped from the Lincoln Coun...
Categories: Lincoln NM
Los Alamos, 55 mi/90 km north of Albuquerque, is where Robert Oppenheimer convened the team of scientists that first developed and tested the atomic bomb. In the years since, the town has become the center of the nation's nuclear-arms program. Today,...
Categories: Los Alamos
Los Cabos is a magic land full of contrast, from breathtaking seas, to desert and mountains. Also known as “Land’s End” for being located at the tip of the southern Baja California Península. Step into the extraordinary world of Los Cabos where the u...
Categories: Mexico
Whether you seek leisure, excitement, magnificent views, romantic ambience, the thrill and fascination of places or experiences new and different, Mazatlán will meet your every desire.
Nestled on the Pacific shoreline of Mexico, Mazatlán has 12 mi...
Categories: Mexico
Mescalero, New Mexico, is home to Ski Apache, part of the Inn of the Mountain Gods Resort & Casino. The park collects an average of 15 ft/4.6 m of powder each season and peaks at 11,500 ft/3,565 m, with 55 distinct trails for all levels. Eleven lifts...
Categories: Mescalero
Categories: Mexico (state)
From the Alameda, a leafy center of activity since Aztec times, to the Zona Rosa, a chic shopping neighborhood, Mexico City offers endless options to urban adventurers.
Founded by the Aztecs as Tenochtitlán in 1325, Mexico City is both the ...
Categories: Mexico City
Cancun, Riviera Maya and Cozumel are three of the best tourist destinations across the country of Mexico. The region’s riviera is known worldwide for its idyllic landscapes, activities of all kinds, cuisine of great proportions and its incomparable b...
Categories: Mexico
Mexico's Barrier Reef, also know as the Chinchorro Bank is the largest coral-ringed lagoon in the world. Over the centuries the reef has claimed over twenty ships, which are now covered with brightly covered coral, and offer a unique underw...
Categories: Mexico's Barrier Reef
Categories: Michoacan
Categories: Morelos
Categories: Nayarit
Categories: Nuevo Leon
Categories: Oaxaca (state)
No trip to New Mexico is complete without a visit to at least one of the state's 19 Native American pueblos. Although they are centuries-old dwelling sites, they are also modern communities whose residents deal with modern issues. One of those issues...
Categories: Pueblos of New Mexico
Sponsored by the Puerto Vallarta Tourism Board and Riviera Nayarit Visitors and Conventions Bureau
Two destinations united geographically that live as one. This region is one of the Mexico's most popular tourism corridors because of its great...
Categories: Mexico
Categories: Queretaro (state)
Categories: Quintana Roo
Once an important stop on the Santa Fe Trail, Raton (pronounced ra-TONE) is near the Raton Pass into Colorado. Today's visitors can experience the same sense of wonder that the pioneers must have felt as they observed the majestic ascent of the mount...
Categories: Raton
Categories: Rio Grande del Norte National Monument
Stretching down the Yucatán Peninsula's Caribbean coast lies the Riviera Maya, also known as the Mayan Riviera. The Riviera Maya coastline stretches from the southern end of bustling Cancun to the north, down south to the Mayan Ruins in Tulum, a...
Categories: Mexico
Categories: Rongbuk
This is where the aliens landed ... maybe. Some believe it started in 1947, when the U.S. military recovered unusual wreckage on a ranch near Roswell. Though the official report later claimed it was the remnants of a weather balloon, others maintain ...
Categories: Roswell
This small town in the mountains 130 mi/210 km southeast of Albuquerque is a popular vacation area, especially for people from west Texas. Many travelers go there to gamble at Ruidoso Downs and the attached Billy the Kid Casino. Slot machines are ava...
Categories: Ruidoso
Categories: Saga
Categories: San Luis Potosi (state)
Santa Ana Pueblo has a long history of progress. In 1709, the pueblo purchased 5,000 acres along the Río Grande to increase its agricultural production and land base. The pueblo's 15,000-acre Spanish land grants and additional land purchases brought ...
Categories: Santa Ana Pueblo
Even though Santa Fe is capital of New Mexico, the state's third largest city, and has been around longer than all but one other city in America, it is still relatively unknown to many U.S. travelers. The city history spans almost 400 years yet much ...
Categories: Santa Fe
Cruising
Categories: Sea of Cortez
Categories: Sinaloa
Categories: Sonora
Lying in the southeast of the country, Tabasco lives up to its Nahuatl name: "place where the ground is damp." This is the land of the Ulmecs, "the rubber people." Tabasco borders on Veracruz, Chiapas and Campeche and is washed by...
Categories: Tabasco
Categories: Tamaulipas
This town tucked into the Sangre de Christo Mountains, 70 mi/113 km northeast of Santa Fe, has attracted artists since the late 1800s because of its beautiful setting and dramatic light. Today, it's still full of artists, galleries and travelers who ...
Categories: Taos
The complex of ruins known as Teotihuacan, Mexico, is so enormous and varied it even looks spectacular from the air. Built mostly between AD 150 and 600, the ruins were already abandoned by the time the Aztecs came to power and took over the site. Mo...
Categories: Teotihuacan
Located 22 mi/35 km north of Mexico City, Tepotzotlan is home to the church of St. Francis Xavier—now the National Museum of the Viceregal Period. The church is considered the second-best example of the highly embellished Churrigueresque-style archit...
Categories: Tepotzotlan
Located 45 mi/75 km west of Mexico City, the large industrial town of Toluca, Mexico, is not particularly attractive. Most visitors from Mexico City are there to catch a flight out of its busy airport, a hub for many budget carriers. However, the Mex...
Categories: Toluca
Categories: Valle de Bravo
Categories: Veracruz (state)
Categories: White's City
Categories: Yucatan
The state of Yucatán is located in southeastern Mexico, along the Gulf of Mexico in the north section of the Yucatán Peninsula. The region boasts both a coastline of pristine beaches and interior sections rich with natural preserves. Yucatán is home ...
Categories: Mexico
Categories: Zacatecas (state)