TURQUOISE TRAIL
Drivers can travel between Albuquerque and Santa Fe by two main routes: Interstate 25 and State Road 14. Though I-25 (the more efficient route) passes through several pueblos and features views of valleys and mesas, NM-14 wins the contest for the scenic route. The road makes up most of the Turquoise Trail, a National Scenic Byway, and passes several points with breathtaking views.
The Turquoise Trail is a road for drivers who like winding over mountains and through valleys. The road passes rugged and undeveloped mountains between San Antonito, toward the south, and Cerrillos (a small community once a bustling mining town) allowing for expansive views of the plateau outside Santa Fe and the Sangre de Cristo Mountains. Mountainsides and mesas present brown, yellow, and red sediments topped by deep green shrubs and trees and lighter green grasses. Turquoise, gold, silver, and lead were extracted from the hills in this area.
The community of Madrid (pronounced MA-drid) is the area’s biggest draw. This former mining town now offers shoppers an array of jewelry, clothing, sculptures, photographs, and a host of other works of art. The famed Mineshaft Tavern is a stop on New Mexico’s Green Chile Cheeseburger Trail, while The Hollar offers excellent Southern cuisine.