I learned today of significant news relating to my upbringing.
When we learned to swim, we did so not in the private pool of Duane Van Vechten Lineberry, but rather in a public pool of hot springs water south of town.
We just called it "hot springs" and that was it.
A fault in the Picuris Mountains of the Rocky Mountain Chain allows hot water to ooze into a stream that fed the springs. (I don't know what heats the water, but it probably has something to do with molten lava and not so much to do with heaven or hell.).
Sometime back in "the olden days" a resort of sorts sprung up there. When we were kids there were locker rooms, a concession stand, and generally a fun place to go.
Here's what the ol' swimmin' hole looked like last year, according to a website I visited.
And here's the news of the day, courtesy of an instrument of the Town of Taos:
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WHEREAS the springs in Llano
Quemado, known as The Ponce de Leon Hot Springs, have been a scared site since
time immemorial for Native People, and
WHEREAS the springs, with 95-degree
groundwater pools, were a popular resting spot along the Camino Real and a
community gathering spot throughout the centuries, and
WHEREAS the springs, like many
ancient, special land parcels in Taos, have seen ownership, preservation and
issues of public access wrestled with throughout the decades, and
WHEREAS this 45-acre parcel,
through the coming together of the Taos Land Trust and Taos Pueblo, has found a
steward in Taos Pueblo, and
WHEREAS through this stewardship
appropriate access and a conservation easement to eliminate development have
been preserved and will match the wishes of the $500,000
anonymous, private donation that
enabled this exceptional stewardship, and
WHEREAS we have all come together
today to celebrate this stewardship of the Ponce de Leon Hot Springs by Taos
Pueblo,
NOW
THEREFORE, I Darren Cordova, MAYOR OF TAOS, do hereby proclaim July 14, 2012 as
“PONCE
DE LEON HOT SPRINGS DAY”
In honor of this significant day in the history of Taos, New
Mexico, and to pay tribute and honor both the Taos Land Trust and Taos Pueblo for
this valuable action that directly contributes to our community and its future.
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To that, I say....good!
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