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  1. #1

    Mar 2004
    New Mexico
    616

    Salt Lake, New Mexico

    I posted locations and descriptions about this place here:

    A few ghost town locations around your state
    « Reply To This Topic #2 on: May 18, 2008, 07:59:04 AM »
    http://forum.treasurenet.com/index.p...,158264.0.html

    But I never got around to posting pics.

    It's mostly early 20th Century, once had a population of 100-150, workers for the salt recovery operation. A few years ago the post office mail room was intact with bins and the names of all the employees still on them.

    It's a volcano cone with a lake of brine inside it.

    Jack



    Attached Thumbnails Attached Thumbnails Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt1.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt2.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt3.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt4.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt5.jpg  

    Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt6.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt9.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt11.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-saltlake.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt12.jpg  

    Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt13.jpg   Salt Lake, New Mexico-salt14.jpg  

  2. #2
    Charter Member
    hu
    Gypsyheart~ Queen of Rust

    Nov 2005
    Ozarks
    12,716
    2 times

    Re: Salt Lake, New Mexico

    Excellent pix...thanks for sharing this!
    I go a great distance,while some are considering whether they will start today or tomorrow

  3. #3
    us
    Jul 2005
    New Mexico
    White's XLT
    3,703

    Re: Salt Lake, New Mexico

    Jack, until you came along, I had no idea there were so many interesting spots in NM. I've only lived here about 4 years, and it's been a busy 4 years, but as things slow down I'll have a whole trove of invaluable info from you!
    We all know there's no such thing as a "hunted out" location.  Let's stop using that phrase to describe a park out of which you just dug a pile of coins!  Obviously that particular place wasn't "hunted out", right?

  4. #4
    Charter Member
    us
    Aug 2007
    NJ
    EXCAL 2, SOV. GT
    11,249
    2 times
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Salt Lake, New Mexico

    wonderful photos.. you guys out west are sooo lucky
    Live your life in such a way, that when your feet hit the floor  in the morning, satan shudders and says, OH CHIT, SHE'S AWAKE.

  5. #5

    Mar 2004
    New Mexico
    616

    Re: Salt Lake, New Mexico

    Quote Originally Posted by af1733
    Jack, until you came along, I had no idea there were so many interesting spots in NM. I've only lived here about 4 years, and it's been a busy 4 years, but as things slow down I'll have a whole trove of invaluable info from you!
    af1733: Glad someone's possibly going to get some use out of it all.

    If you're in Albuquerque you might make a pleasant day trip to Marquez [maps somewhere among those I've posted] north of Laguna. It's the best and closest to you I'm aware of, though if you manage to get in Cabazon's also pretty worthwhile. Marquez still has the standing remains of a stagecoach station/general store that once served the checkboard area in the hard-to-get-too wastelands east to the Puerco. Probably you won't wish to do any detecting on the Marquez townsite, but the areas getting to it are rife with places worth a stop.

    Good luck
    Jack


  6. #6
    us
    Aug 2007
    Rio Rancho, NM (Albuquerque)
    X-terra 70 WolfPack
    1,143
    All Types Of Treasure Hunting

    Re: Salt Lake, New Mexico

    Quote Originally Posted by Highmountain
    Quote Originally Posted by af1733
    Jack, until you came along, I had no idea there were so many interesting spots in NM. I've only lived here about 4 years, and it's been a busy 4 years, but as things slow down I'll have a whole trove of invaluable info from you!
    af1733: Glad someone's possibly going to get some use out of it all.

    If you're in Albuquerque you might make a pleasant day trip to Marquez [maps somewhere among those I've posted] north of Laguna. It's the best and closest to you I'm aware of, though if you manage to get in Cabazon's also pretty worthwhile. Marquez still has the standing remains of a stagecoach station/general store that once served the checkboard area in the hard-to-get-too wastelands east to the Puerco. Probably you won't wish to do any detecting on the Marquez townsite, but the areas getting to it are rife with places worth a stop.

    Good luck
    Jack

    Cabezon is fenced off with all kinds of signs on it. I understand they open it up once a year for some sort of celebration. However, lots of old homesites along the Rio Puerco in that area.
    Freedom has a flavor the protected will never know. Vietnam # 10 G.I Wolfpack

  7. #7

    Mar 2004
    New Mexico
    616

    Re: Salt Lake, New Mexico

    Quote Originally Posted by johnnycat
    Quote Originally Posted by Highmountain
    Quote Originally Posted by af1733
    Jack, until you came along, I had no idea there were so many interesting spots in NM. I've only lived here about 4 years, and it's been a busy 4 years, but as things slow down I'll have a whole trove of invaluable info from you!
    af1733: Glad someone's possibly going to get some use out of it all.

    If you're in Albuquerque you might make a pleasant day trip to Marquez [maps somewhere among those I've posted] north of Laguna. It's the best and closest to you I'm aware of, though if you manage to get in Cabazon's also pretty worthwhile. Marquez still has the standing remains of a stagecoach station/general store that once served the checkboard area in the hard-to-get-too wastelands east to the Puerco. Probably you won't wish to do any detecting on the Marquez townsite, but the areas getting to it are rife with places worth a stop.

    Good luck
    Jack

    Cabezon is fenced off with all kinds of signs on it. I understand they open it up once a year for some sort of celebration. However, lots of old homesites along the Rio Puerco in that area.
    Thanks for the info Johnnycake: I haven't been to Cabazon in a number of years and the last time I was there there was a fence with a gate and no signs except at the dwellings and a few plots in the village.

    That checkerboard country up there does have a number of dead communities, the best I've ever come across being Marquez to the west, but it's tricky getting onto those located on public land because of the checkerboarding ownership.

    Lots of BLM land in there and State land, but they checkerboarded private sections into it in payment to the railroad when it was coming through, along with other reasons for paying folk off. Later the famous gang of politicians in Santa Fe got into the act and took a chunk out of it, as well.

    Somewhere up there I once came across a little used BLM wilderness area, too, that was fairly interesting and didn't appear to get any traffic to speak of.

    Jack

 

 

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