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Field Guide to the Sandia Mountains (2005)

by Robert Julyan

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Each year over 2 million visitors to New Mexico's Sandia Mountains enjoy more than 100 miles of trails, hiking, climbing, running, biking, skiing, and birding, as well as viewing the mountains from hang gliders and hot air balloons. This guide will assist visitors in discovering the diverse natural features of the Sandias. Field Guide to the Sandia Mountains includes sections on ecology, including weather and fire, geology, flora (grasses, flowers, trees) and fauna (arthropods, reptiles and amphibians, birds, mammals), and recreational opportunities. Plant keys and fauna checklists add to the book's features. Rather than a comprehensive field guide, the selections offer the most commonly encountered species in each category, presenting information on just over 100 species of flowers, for example, among almost 500 species that can be found in the mountains. A labor of love conceived by the Sandia Ranger District and the New Mexico Friends of the Forest (now known as Friends of the Sandia Mountains), this book is a resource no visitor to the Sandias should be without.… (more)
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Containsmuch good information about geography, geology, flora and fauna of New Mexico. ( )
  buffalogr | Nov 21, 2010 |
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(Chapter 1)
This most beautiful backdrop a city ever had.
--Phillip B. Tollefsrud (Memorial plaque at Elena Gallegos picnic area)

On my breakfast walk from UNM's old Hokona dorm to the dining hall, I always looked to the Sandia Mountains and absorbed a mood for the day. As a green freshman in 1949, I found comfort in scanning the peaks hidden among cloudy blankets. Some days, they seemed sleepy, as if they wanted to stay in bed. However, on the evening trek to dinner, they came alive, bathed in vivid pink, orange, and mauve tints, as well as a mixture of watermelon hues, betokening another day's perfect ending. My moods were inextricably tuned to the mountains.
--Sue Bohannan Mann, A Friend of the Forest
(Chapter 7)
The earth laughs in flowers.
--Ralph Waldo Emerson

Weed: a plant whose virtues have not been discovered.
--Ralph Waldo Emerson
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The Sandia Mountains continue to set the day's mood for many New Mexicans.
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(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)
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Each year over 2 million visitors to New Mexico's Sandia Mountains enjoy more than 100 miles of trails, hiking, climbing, running, biking, skiing, and birding, as well as viewing the mountains from hang gliders and hot air balloons. This guide will assist visitors in discovering the diverse natural features of the Sandias. Field Guide to the Sandia Mountains includes sections on ecology, including weather and fire, geology, flora (grasses, flowers, trees) and fauna (arthropods, reptiles and amphibians, birds, mammals), and recreational opportunities. Plant keys and fauna checklists add to the book's features. Rather than a comprehensive field guide, the selections offer the most commonly encountered species in each category, presenting information on just over 100 species of flowers, for example, among almost 500 species that can be found in the mountains. A labor of love conceived by the Sandia Ranger District and the New Mexico Friends of the Forest (now known as Friends of the Sandia Mountains), this book is a resource no visitor to the Sandias should be without.

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