Archive for the '360° Panoramas' Category

New 360° panorama from Cerro del Medio foothill added; Thanksgiving on the Caldera

Panorama from a meadow on the top of a foothill of Cerro del Medio

The latest addition to VallesCaldera.com’s section of 360° virtual-reality panoramas comes from a meadow on top of a foothill on the eastern flank of Cerro del Medio (which means “middle mountain”). Also known as “CDM,” the mountain is the oldest ring-fracture dome in the Valles Caldera (formed about 1.2 million years ago). The Valle Grande can be seen through the trees as the panorama opens.   Click here to download this panorama.  You can also see some views from the sky of Cerro del Medio here and here.

QuickTime (version 5.0 or above) must be installed to view our 360° panoramas. Click here to install QuickTime. You also need to have a high-speed internet connection, as this panorama is more than seven megabytes in size. QuickTime will automatically launch when the panorama has been downloaded.

Once the panorama loads, enter full-screen mode (by pressing Command-F on a Mac or Control-F on a PC) for the most enjoyable viewing experience. Drag the cursor in any direction to change your perspective. You can also press the shift key to zoom in, and the Command key (Control key on a PC) to zoom out.

Finally, enjoy the remainder of our collection of virtual-reality 360° panoramas — many of which feature locations that the public has rarely, if ever, been granted access.

In this controversial chapter of the post-Baca Ranch era, in which a spirited debate about alternative visions of future management of the Valles Caldera National Preserve has been extensively covered by state and national media, it is fitting to reflect on this Thanksgiving Day about certain historical aspects of the scenic crown jewel of New Mexico for which one should be thankful, because without these details of history this land might not be owned by the American people today.

  1. The Baca Ranch was never subdivided.  Throughout the entire 140-year history of private ownership of the Baca Location No. 1 (the land that became the Valles Caldera National Preserve), the parcel of land (originally 99,289.39 acres) was never subdivided.  This was despite, among other things, an 1898 court decree calling for the partitioning of the land amongst the dozens of various heirs of Luis Maria Cabeza de Baca (and other landowners, including Joel Parker Whitney and Maríano Otero) who each held fractional interests in the ranch (this order was later overturned by court-appointed commissioners).  If partitioning had happened then (or at any time in the next century) it is not unrealistic to conclude that our Caldera might today be a patchwork of communities, resorts, golf courses, and hotels.  It also certainly would have made the establishment of the Valles Caldera National Preserve in 2000 impossible.
  2. The Dunigans were responsible stewards of the land, and played hardball to stop clearcutting.  The Dunigans of Abilene, Texas, were the final private owners of the Baca Ranch, having purchased the land in 1963.  However, they did not own the timber rights to the land; in 1918, a 99-year lease to the timber rights had been signed by the Redondo Development Company, which later deeded the rights to the New Mexico Timber Company.  In the mid-20th century, New Mexico Timber Company began clearcutting the forests of the Baca Ranch (clearcutting is a logging practice in which all trees are cleared from an area).  In fact, the owner of New Mexico Timber, T. P. Gallagher, Jr., stated about the timber on the Baca Location that his company “intended to log it all” (Anschuetz 2007).  Chagrined at the harm that this practice was causing to the land, James Dunigan sued the owners of the timber interests in 1964.  Clearcutting continued for the next seven years as a legal battle was waged between the Dunigans and New Mexico Timber, until Dunigan purchased the timber interests back from the company in 1971, ending clearcutting on the Baca Ranch.  He bought back the timber rights for $1.25 million, which was a hefty 50% of the $2.5 million that he had spent eight years prior to purchase the entire ranch.  Author Kurt Anschuetz pays tribute to the good land stewardship of the man from Abilene as such: “Dunigan… went to extraordinary lengths, as shown by his lawsuit against New Mexico Timber, Inc., to try to restrain wasteful land use. Further, his companies eventually sold the Baca Location back to the public after his death…It is clear that Dunigan was interested in long-term conservation and went to great lengths to restore and sustain the property’s scenic qualities.”  Without Dunigan’s efforts, the scenic and environmental values of the Caldera might today be substantially diminished because of clear-cutting, and were it not for Dunigan’s wish that the Baca Ranch be sold to the American people upon his death, it is not unreasonable to assume that in 2000 the land would have been sold to private interests, precluding the creation of the Valles Caldera National Preserve.
  3. After 140 years, the Baca Ranch was purchased by the American people.  Q. What do the following have in common:  Jemez National Monument (1916-1932), Pajarito National Park (1916-1932), Jemez Crater National Park (1939), Valle Grande National Park (1961), Valles Caldera National Park (1979)?  A. All of these names represent unsuccessful efforts by local residents and political leaders throughout the 20th century to have the Baca Ranch purchased on behalf of the American people (the years represent when each proposal was floated).  For nearly a century, these efforts failed, until the Dunigan family sold the ranch to the American people in 2000 for $101 million, with the money coming from the Land and Water Conservation Fund.  Given that there had been so much energy invested for so many decades in finding a way for the Baca Ranch to become public land, without success, it was a remarkable confluence of events and circumstance that enabled New Mexico’s representatives from both political parties (as well as the President of the United States) to work together and find the political will to compromise on a deal that enabled the Baca Ranch, at long last, to be preserved into perpetuity.

 

New 360° virtual reality panorama: From the top of Cat Mesa, along the South Rim of the Valles Caldera

Panorama from the Top of Cat Mesa, Part of the South Rim

The latest addition to VallesCaldera.com’s collection of virtual-reality 360° panoramas comes from the top of Cat Mesa, along the South Rim of the Caldera, in the Santa Fe National Forest, high above and to the west of the Valles Caldera community of Sierra los Piños, facing to the northeast, before a late-summer afternoon thunderstorm. Download this panorama here (see the end of this post for technical instructions).

Once the panorama is open, the resurgent dome of Redondo Peak (elev. 11,254), the highest mountain in the Caldera, stands tall in the center of the perspective. Just below this sacred mountain is the Banco Bonito, a high plateau that was formed by an eruptive event that occurred between 50,000 to 60,000 years ago, in which thick, obsidian-like lava flowed to the west, a path which you can visually follow by dragging the cursor to the left (which moves the whole perspective of the panorama).

Below the Banco Bonito, take note of the prominent rock cliffs. These form part of the north wall of the East Fork of the Jemez River canyon. Although it cannot be discerned in the perspective, to the right of these rocks is Jemez Falls, one of the most family-friendly recreation spots in the Jemez Mountains, with a short trail from the road to the roaring waterfall traversed just as easily by young and old alike.

To the left of the rock cliffs (also not visible) is McCauley Warm Springs. However, if you turn the perspective about 60 degrees to the left, you can see a rich assortment of volcanic features: at the nadir of the north and south walls of the East Fork Canyon is Battleship Rock (tiny in this panorama), which is the location of the confluence of the two rivers that drain the Valles Caldera (the aforementioned East Fork of the Jemez River as well as the San Antonio River). Above that looms the wall of massive Virgin Mesa, which forms the Western Rim of the Caldera as it extends to the right (north). Panning even more to the left is an impressive collection of tent rocks. These curious formations are hoodoos consisting of eroded Bandelier Tuff (which are the output from the two cataclysmic Jemez eruptions 1.6 and 1.2 million years ago — the first formed the Toledo Caldera and the second created the Valles Caldera, obliterating most of the first caldera). There are various collections of tent rocks (some of them hidden) throughout the Valles Caldera and Jemez Mountains, most notably in Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument, a surreal, magical landscape that was designated a National Monument in 2001 by President Bill Clinton in the final days of his administration.

QuickTime (version 5.0 or above) must be installed to view our 360° panoramas. Click here to install QuickTime. You also need to have a high-speed internet connection, as this panorama is five megabytes. QuickTime will automatically launch when the panorama had been downloaded.

Once the panorama loads, enter full-screen mode (by pressing Command-F on a Mac or Control-F on a PC) for the most enjoyable viewing experience. Drag the cursor in any direction to change your perspective. You can also press the shift key to zoom in, and the Command key (Control key on a PC) to zoom out.

Finally, enjoy the remainder of our collection of virtual-reality 360° panoramas — many of which feature locations that the public has rarely, if ever, been granted access.

 

New 360° panorama: the Valle Grande Lightning Shack

Valle Grande Lightning Shack

This virtual reality panorama, which was just added to our collection of 360° panoramas, was taken along the south base of Cerro del Medio, near the Valle Grande Lightning Shack (click here to download the panorama). This structure was built during the Baca Ranch era to shelter cowboys working on the ranch during the Jemez Mountains’ monsoon season, in which dramatic thunderstorms fall upon the Valles Caldera almost every day in July for an hour or two during the early afternoon. Monsoons are a result of humid, warm air flowing northwest from the Gulf of Mexico. As the moist air ascends to New Mexico’s higher elevations, it cools off beneath the dew point and condenses into rain and hail.

Visitors to the Southwest (and, indeed, longtime residents) marvel at the spectacle of the Jemez’ monsoon season, in which it is not uncommon for the sky immediately above to be unleashing a torrential downpour, while much of the surrounding sky is bright blue. Experiencing warm raindrops falling in a verdant valley of colorful wildflowers as the bright New Mexico sun shines through the droplets from the west, producing an enchanting “liquid sunshine” effect, is one of the most magical parts of summer in the Jemez. This experience is also extremely enjoyable at one of the Valles Caldera’s magnificent hot springs.

Click here to download this panorama. There are dozens more 360° panoramas at VallesCaldera.com — click here for the full list, including a map to help you find the one you are looking for.

You need to have QuickTime (version 5.0 or above) installed to view our 360° panoramas. Click here to install QuickTime. You also need to have a high-speed internet connection, as this panorama is 2.5 megabytes. QuickTime will automatically launch when the panorama had been downloaded.

Once the panorama loads, we recommend that you enter full-screen mode (by pressing Command-f on a Mac or Control-f on a PC) for the most enjoyable viewing experience. Drag the cursor in any direction to change your perspective. You can also press the shift key to zoom in, and the Command key (Control key on a PC) to zoom out.

Click here to download another high-resolution 360° panorama of the Valle Grande — this one was taken from Highway 4 in March, as the valle was a majestic mosaic of snow and dry land.

Finally, enjoy some some views from the sky of the Valle Grande:

The Valle Grande from above the Southeast Rim
The Southwest Rim
A meandering East Fork of the Jemez River
The Valle Grande from above the South Rim