Tag Archives: Ski Valley

Winter fun for tots to teenagers

Originally published in The Taos News

Taos children, who seem to have an endless supply of energy during all seasons, never lack local opportunities to have fun. Summertime calls for hiking, rafting and hot air ballooning, but winter also beguiles kids with a variety of activities, both indoors and outdoors.

Ski aqui!

Taos is world-renowned as a preferred ski destination for adults. It also offers the charms of its snowy slopes to the little ones.

The Kids Center at Taos Ski Valley has developed a selection of programs for kids of all ages. It all starts with Bebekare (from 6 weeks to 1 year old). The Bebekare quarters are brightly lit rooms where children do art projects, which are displayed right there. “We do a lot of sledding,” said Bebekare supervisor Karrie Gallegos. “The kids also play with blocks, balls and cars.” Parents are welcomed to come by, nurse the kids or just peek in. They can ski right off the mountain and walk into the Kids Center. Kinderkare (from one to three years old) also offers indoor and outdoor activities. Nature walks are a favorite, said Gallegos.

Kristi Vine supervises Junior Elite I (from three to seven years old, potty trained). Here children learn the basics of skiing and snowboarding, though snowboard instruction isn’t started until age four. “I have great a staff that makes it all work,” said Vine.

Paco Highans, a Junior Elite I instructor, enjoys what he does for a living. “I am an eight-year old in a thirty-six-year-old body,” he said. “My biggest reward is when I see a kid who was terrified of snow the first day making turns and getting really excited about the sport.” They have a ceremony to introduce their students to Junior Elite II (from eight to fifteen years old) where the learning pace is much faster.

“We also have a program oriented toward the community, the local children,” said Jenny Cooper, the Children’s Snowsports School Manager. “Shredders” is a 5 week program for local kids from three to fifteen years old. The program includes a morning and afternoon lesson, lunch, a free lift ticket and free rental equipment. The instructors work with school children in Taos and outside, including Pojoaque and west Las Vegas. “We work with almost every school in Taos,” said Cooper. “We have been doing that for thirteen years now with great success.”

Twirl and swirl

More than just a store, better than a playground, this is an enchanted space where one can find pirate treasures, music boxes, a wishing well, an ever-changing diorama… and plenty of giggles.

“For the winter months, we will be hosting a different-themed play day every day in our free upstairs playroom, which is open daily from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.,” said Nikki Ross, Twirl’s Marketing Director.  In addition to the usual library of toys available for drop-in play, the following activities will be on offer:

Monday: Active Play (with tumbling mats and inflatable toys)

Tuesday: Imaginative Play (with sand and playstations)

Wednesday: Make Music (with musical instruments)

Thursday: Make Stuff (arts and craft supplies)

Friday: Dress up (costumes and more)

Saturday: Make More Stuff (arts and craft supplies)

There are also guided classes, all of which are free. Ballet for Preschoolers is a real favorite.

Angela Abbate-Shriver is Twirl’s Playspace Coordinator. For the Crafty Kids classes, she usually offers a craft that is in some way seasonal. “Kids will probably be making lots of snowflakes out of beads,” said Ross. “All the materials are free, and children only need to come with their imagination and a parent. Everyone gets to take their masterpiece home with them.”

As for the musical activities, Twirl provides a wide range of musical instruments that include rhythm sticks, drums, cymbals, shakers, spoons, and bells, all available for free play. For the Family Music Classes, Abbate-Shriver leads singing and instrument playing and invites children and parents to join in. She also includes scarves, ribbons and puppets in the class to encourage movement and imaginative dance.

“All our classes are free of charge,” said Ross, “and parents don’t have to sign up in advance”

Meet the Museums

The Harwood Museum of Art caters to the artists of the future. Its Saturday Arts for Families program presents Art & Movement Classes for Kids in February 5th, 19th and 26th , from 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. Classes are free and include a yoga session for kids, with mats provided. The yoga sessions, combined with art activities, will be led by artist and Jivamukti yoga teacher Jayne Schell at the Agnes Martin Gallery.

“The children will also create their own art pieces, inspired by this beautiful environment, in the Fern Hogue Mitchell Education Center,” said Lucy Perera, Curator of Education. “It’s a wonderful opportunity to stimulate the children’s imagination and we recommend it for kids six years old and up.”

Art in Museums, another free program sponsored by the Museum Association of Taos, is designed for preschoolers and younger children. Every Wednesday at 11:30 a.m. children, as well as parents and care-givers, can meet to enjoy a short story and age-appropriate art activities. It rotates monthly to different Taos Museums. In February it will be hosted at the Millicent Rogers Museum.

So there are plenty of choices…from skiing and snowboarding to staying indoors with a Twirl toy and a stuffed puppy, to museum hopping. One thing is for sure—Taos kids will not get bored this winter.

The Harwood Museum of Art of the University of New Mexico is located at 238 Ledoux Street, Taos, NM  87571

For a complete listing of all Harwood Museum Educational programs and activities visit www.harwoodmuseums.org / email education@harwoodmuseum.org /

Or call Lucy Perera, Curator of Education: 575-758-9826 x 105

Twirl is located at 225 Camino de la Placita, opposite Our Lady of Guadalupe Church and next to the John Dunn parking lot.

To find out more about the special activities, call 575-751-1402 or visit their website http://www.twirlhouse.com

To learn more about the Kids Center at Taos Ski Valley visit their website

http://www.skitaos.org/content/kids-center

or call 575 776 2291

Christmasing in Taos

Photo Curtesy – Lex Python with  John Fullbright Studio

 

Christmas celebrations begin early this year, with the lighting of the town’s Christmas tree on Taos Plaza after Thanksgiving.

Other pre-Christmas events are

Holiday High Tea

The Turquoise Teapot is located at 605 Camino De La Placita. Tel: (575) 737-0419

The Turquoise Teapot, the only tea house in the town of Taos, is an English-style tea shop and gallery with a fabulous assortment of teas. Every year the owners serve a holiday high tea on December 4th. “We do a special buffet with season fare that includes Christmas sandwiches, truffles and cakes,” said Kathleen Smith, one of the proprietresses. “We also have live music (a wonderful harpist) and holiday wreaths.” Reservations are accepted for seating at 12 noon and at 2:30 p.m.

 

Las Posadas (Spanish for “the inns”)

San Francisco de Asís Church is located at 60 St Francis Plaza, Rancho de Taos

Tel: (575) 751-0518

The nine days before Christmas, taoseños reenact the holy family’s search for lodging in Bethlehem. A well known posada starts in San Francisco de Asís church, in Rancho de Taos. The peregrinos (pilgrims) sing traditional songs as they go to different houses and are turned away… until they finally find a “posada” in one of them and everybody is invited to come in and celebrate. There are other posadas going on around town, in churches as well as in private homes.

 

Lighting of Ledoux

It takes place on December 11th, a Saturday, from 5 p.m. to 7 p.m. For many taoseños and visitors alike, this is the kick off of the Christmas season. Lots of people who haven’t seen each other during the year get together that day to catch up and chit-chat. It all started as a “neighborly” function for the street, around sixteen years ago, but now it is an official event sponsored by the town. The neighbors bring out the luminarias (sand-filled paper bags with a votive candle inside) and the whole street gets lined up with them. “We start lighting them around three-thirty,” said Shaun Richel, owner of 203 Fine Art. “By four-thirty, the whole street will be lit up and people begin to stroll down.” All the businesses open their doors and cookies and punch are offered to the visitors. “But then it lingers on after everybody leaves… at eight p.m. the lanterns are still on and it’s so peaceful,” Richel said. “Some places have bonfires. Last year we even had roasted marshmallows.”

 

Harwood Museum of Art Celebrations

Located at 238 Ledoux Street. Tel: (575) 758-1475

On the same day that Lighting of Ledoux takes place, December 11th, the public is invited to visit The Harwood Museum of Art for the official opening of its 10,700 square-foot expansion. There will be a ribbon-cutting ceremony, live music and performances. Graham’s Grille will provide food and refreshments. An exhibition by Taos Modern Artists Bea Mandelman and Louis Ribak, for whom the major new gallery is named, will be on display. “We represent the estate of Mandelman-Ribak,” said Richel. “The big exhibit will be at the museum but we also have lots of printings and drawings for sale here, at 203 Fine Art.”

 

There is another special Christmas event for music lovers at the Harwood, “A Classical Holiday,” that will take place on December 18 at 7:30 p.m. in the Arthur Bell Auditorium. Taos Chamber Music Group celebrates the holiday season with a program of music from the 18th and early 19th centuries. Tickets are $18 in advance; $20 at the door and $10 for children under 16.

 

A Skier’s Snowy Paradise

Taos Ski Valley offers a variety of activities for all ages and tastes. Celebrations up there begin with the Brewmasters Festival on December 18th from 4:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m. Though not a Christmas activity as such, it is definitely a fun event… for those twenty-one and over. It takes place in Tenderfoot Katie’s and the Martini Tree. Admission is $25 and the fee includes souvenir sampling glass, good food and great entertainment. Come and sample beers from twenty-five breweries from across the southwest region!

 

Christmas Eve Torchlight Parade

Friday, December the 24th

Visitors gather in the base area at 6 p.m, when it’s already dark, to watch as skiers make their way down the mountain with flares as their only means of light. “You have to get here early to get a good spot,” said Heather Cleary, who works at The Boot Doctors, in the Ski Valley. “It’s spectacular. I wouldn’t try it, but I give the skiers kudos for doing it.”

 

New Year’s Eve Torchlight Parade and Fireworks
Friday, December 31st
It all starts at the base of lift #1 at 6:00 p.m. Watch a torchlight parade and fireworks display and follow it with the countdown to the New Year in the Martini Tree Bar. Welcome the New Year with fireworks and music while the mountain sings its winter song!

 

Christmas Eve at Taos Pueblo

Taos Pueblo is located 2 miles north of Taos

120 Veterans Highway, Taos – (575) 758-1028

First, bundle up before you go! The air will be frosted and it may snow that night. When the sun gets down, small bonfires are built near the San Geronimo church (there is no electricity in the pueblo) while people wait for the procession to start. The celebration begins with a dance, Los Matachines, in which El Toro, la Malinche and los Abuelos, in elaborate costumes, reenact one of the oldest ritual dramas in northern New Mexico. When it finishes, the firing of guns marks the start of the procession. The statue of Virgin Mary is taken out of the church, followed by the dancers, musicians and the crowd, and paraded around the plaza. As darkness increases, more families lit their own bonfires which are around twenty feet high. You watch the bonfires burn down, feel the heat of the flames, smell the aroma of the piñón… “It is close to how it should have been hundreds of years ago,” said Dr. Mike Adler, Executive Director of SMU-in-Taos. “To me, as an archeologist, it’s very special to see rituals like this one.”

You can enjoy luminaria displays in many other streets and try bizcochitos (spicy, anise-flavored cookies) all over town. Christmas in Taos is a flavorful, colorful and light-filled holiday. Just remember to keep your feet warm when Christmasing around.