Video: a day in Santa Fe
Posted on 14 April 2010 | No responses
Santa Fe home sales rebound 16% after "terrible" 2009
Posted on 14 April 2010 | No responses
Improved home sales figures for Santa Fe released today: “The total volume of city-county detached home sales increased 16 percent from a year ago to 205. While the median price in the unincorporated area fell a bit — due in large part to sales in Rancho Viejo, which has targeted first-time buyers — prices of homes sold inside
…
the city were up some 50 percent to $464,000.”
New Mexico Rail Runner train = wifi all the way!
Posted on 14 April 2010 | No responses
Great movie of 30 years of the Santa Fe railroad – "Santa Fe Odyssey-volume 1"
Posted on 14 April 2010 | No responses
There’s something about a train – these mighty Santa Fe trains thundered through the West, probably adding to the mystique and allure of the town itself.
![]()
help center | e-mail options | report spam Santa Fe railroadPurchase at — www.greenfrog.com
The action on this DVD is a result of many rail fan trips by the noted rail photographer Emery Gulash, although none of the trips were devoted exclusively to the Santa Fe railroad. Emery captured enough 16mm color film to produce an incredible chronology of the Santa Fe covering a period of almost 30 years! From 1952 until 1980, Emery shot the Santa Fe from Chicago to the west. This 2 DVD set displays the Santa Fe FT freight units, the PA passenger power, and a variety of switchers and road trains. The ‘Warbonnet’ paint scheme and the change to the Santa Fe blue scheme is also covered in this chronology. There are a great number of incredible shots of the famous passenger fleet, interspersed with freights over a vast portion of the line. 2 hours 10 Minutes
Dolby Digital 5.1 Surround© 2010 YouTube, LLC
901 Cherry Ave, San Bruno, CA 94066
O'Mahony/Mahoney pioneers in Santa Fe!
Posted on 9 April 2010 | No responses
This group of intrepid Loretto nuns arrived over 150 years ago to what must have been a strange, exotic and untrammeled place. Together with Archbishop Lamy they started the institutional fabric of care for the sick, teaching of the young and – I suppose – comfort for the wayward that still exists today in Santa Fe.