Change comes on the wind at Los Poblanos Fields

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I step onto the dirt path under a gray sky, cold wind chilling my bare fingertips.

I reach the other side of the field 20 minutes later under a warm sun, heating up quickly in my fleece.

I have a narrow window before the wind whips into 40-mile-an-hour gusts, a common occurrence in central New Mexico from January to April.

When I walk east, the wind feels like it’s out of the north-northeast. When I walk west, it bumps up against my face as if it’s out of the west.

I’m no scientist. And though I’ve lived here a decade, that’s the blink of an eye in the West. But my gut tells me the spigot that’s blessed Albuquerque with snow and rain for weeks is turning off, though hopefully new snowfalls will continue to blanket the mountains.

That the spigot even turned on is all too rare as the Southwest warms.

A brown lump across the field catches my eye. It’s sizable. A deer? I wonder, though I’ve never seen one in the middle of the city.

It unfolds itself, begins a lope across the field. Coyote. Another coyote-lump unfurls itself and follows the first one’s lead.

Coyotes have adapted fiercely, establishing themselves ever more fully in lands more and more choked with humans.

How much further will we push them?

Hike length: 1.8 miles

Difficulty: easiest

Trail traffic: moderate

Wildlife spotted: coyotes, cranes, geese, grackles

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Elena Gallegos, tucked under a blanket of snow

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The gate beckoned us into the wilderness on a snowcapped ridge.
Just a few steps in, my husband plunged up to his knees in snow.
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OK. Not that route, at least not without snowshoes.
We’d still spend the afternoon wandering in and out of the wilderness, traipsing through snow that at times was up to our ankles, with occasional drifts to our knees.
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Another winter storm smacked Albuquerque since we traversed Embudo Canyon in snow a week ago. This storm dropped a rare two inches at our house in the center of town on New Year’s Day, so we knew the area around Elena Gallegos Open Space in the Sandia Foothills would have plenty of snow to explore.
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Despite the similar geography, this was a very different hike than last week’s. The temperature didn’t climb past 25 in Embudo Canyon last weekend, and the wind chill hovered closer to 15. Today we had almost no wind – the forecast around noon read “calm,” the first time I’ve seen that word in a New Mexico forecast. Before I knew it, I was down to a single sweater, warm hat and gloves stashed in my backpack.
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A wan sun wavered above the mountains. Moisture and chimney smoke mixed in the valley below us until Mount Taylor and the Sierra Ladrones appeared to levitate on a dusty plain.
We saw fewer people than we’d ever encountered on these popular trails, especially in the wilderness. We thought it was a prime day for another multi-deer sighting, but we saw only birds this day, along with bobcat, mouse and deer tracks in the snow.
Even with a good four to six inches of snow underfoot, the still air and the light blanket of cloud insulated the foothills, the world keeping us warm on one of our most wintry hikes ever.
Hike length: 6.2 miles
Difficulty: moderate
Trail traffic: light-moderate
Wildlife spotted: jays, towhees