Take A Peek At Los Alamos, New Mexico

Tag: Los Alamos Real Estate Market (Page 4 of 12)

Our Amazing Libraries!

Thanks to the new Oppenheimer movie, Los Alamos memorabilia is a hot item on E-bay. A lot of this memorabilia includes postcards. I have to say that these are So. Much. Fun! While brainstorming ideas for this blog, I ran across a beautiful and very dated postcard photograph of the Post Office and Mesa Public Library circa 1945. It got me thinking about our two public library branches. Both are beautiful and modern. They offer our community a huge number of amenities and access to an enormous collection of information and artwork. So, how did this very small, remote town come to have such a great library system? The history might surprise you!

The First Library in Los Alamos

Considering the gathering of so many scientists, engineers, and pioneers of academia here in the early days of Los Alamos, it can’t be a surprise that creating a library became such an important task.

According to Lisa Bier’s research in “Atomic Wives & the Secret Library at Los Alamos”, the first librarian was Charlotte Serber, wife of prominent physicist Robert Serber. She was an unusual choice because she wasn’t a librarian at all. The history suggests that Oppenheimer chose her specifically because she wasn’t a librarian and therefore wouldn’t have the same hang ups about library protocol. It makes a lot of sense if you consider the haphazard and often slapped together quality of the Secret City during the early days. There probably wasn’t much time for protocol.

The original library materials had to be ordered, but could not be sent directly here. All mail to residents of Los Alamos was forwarded through a single post office box in Santa Fe. PO Box 1663 is still Triad’s LANL operating address today. In fact, many residents five to six generations back who were born in Los Alamos had PO Box 1663 on their birth certificates!

Library materials were ordered and borrowed through UC Berkley and numerous other scientific organizations. Over 1200 hardcover books and full runs of 50 different periodicals made the list.

But the coolest part of the library story illustrates the difficulty of keeping things secret. At one point, an investigator from Los Alamos was sent to Santa Fe to discover how random Santa Feans had gotten the names of some of the most secret and famous residents of Los Alamos. Turns out that these scientists and engineers had gotten library cards to the Santa Fe Library in their own names in order to borrow books! The books would be sent via mail. Can you imagine how strange it must’ve looked to the post office to have all of these books, periodical journals, and scientific research journals plus something like 250 copies of the Sears Catalog among other regular mailings. It would’ve been pretty obvious that there was something special going on in PO Box 1663!

This desire for secrecy prompted the security service to hang around in Santa Fe spreading misinformation about what was actually going on in Los Alamos. The “official version” was that we were making electric rockets up here. Eventually, as you might imagine, the Manhattan Project wasn’t able to be kept a secret anymore.

LANL Research Library

Of course, that original library is long gone. The current LANL Research Library is located on the main campus of LANL here in Los Alamos. It’s near the Otowi building and is able to accessed by the general public during regular business hours. As you might expect, not everything available to badged LANL employees is accessible to Average Joe, but just being able to go in there and see the building and some of the historical information housed there is worthwhile! If you do happen to work for LANL and have a badge, you can access the library 24/7. It’s an amazing collection of periodicals, technical papers, records of experiments, and books from every possible corner of the globe on any number of topics!

Mesa Public Library

The main branch of our local library is pretty recognizable to folks as they head toward the former location of Central School. Though the school was actually located more in the vicinity of Circle Drive, the library is just a little further up Central Ave with the main driveway entrance being just across from the Justice Center.

What a lot of folks don’t realize, is that the Mesa Public Library has tons of art on display and cataloged for educational use. Depending on the circumstances, some of the art can be checked out like a book. The gallery displays works from many well known contributors to the art world. The downstairs often offers kindermusic classes, story time, and any number of other kid friendly local activities.

The upstairs area of the modern library has rooms which can be reserved for meetings, group events, and other gatherings. There is no fee for local clubs or groups. You just need to chat with the ladies at the desk.

Of course, the first Mesa Public Library was part of the original Central Park Square Complex. The library was initially funded as a subscription library in 1943 by 70 local families who each donated $5. By 1945 it was free and open to everyone. In the image below, the library is on the right, but you can’t tell how far it extended. As I recall, the library building occupied all of the space between what is now the corner you can see in the image, and the jewelry store on the opposite corner. There were always stores fronting the parking lot at 15th and Central Ave. It really does give me a sense of nostalgia to see this photo image. I’ll talk more in another post about Central Park Square in general.

White Rock Branch Library

The first branch library in White Rock was opened in 1985. It was located in a small section of the White Rock Community Center on Longview Dr. The space still hosts the White Rock Senior Center, but in 2015 the county built a fabulous library on the corner of Sherwood Blvd and State Road 4 directly across the highway from the White Rock Visitor Center. If you’ve never been to the White Rock Branch Library, it’s worth a visit just for the spectacular views from the windows. Handily enough, the library is right next to the White Rock Youth Activity Center which offers kiddos 3rd-8th grade the opportunity to go back and forth depending on what activities they want to participate in. If you haven’t visited, make a plan to do it soon!

Regardless of whether or not you love books, it’s hard to deny the value in our local libraries. It’s just one more amazing thing about life in Los Alamos. When you’re ready to make the move, give me a call! This is a great time to sell real estate in Los Alamos County and a popular time to join our community. I’d love to talk to you!

Main Gate Park

There’s no doubt that the Oppenheimer movie has generated some additional tourist traffic this season. With all of the extra questions folks have been asking about the “old days”, I thought it might be interesting to dig a bit into the spot where traffic up the hill literally stopped. The Los Alamos Main Gate.

Main Gate Park

You’re probably plenty familiar with this local location. There’s a small, sparse campground there. The building with the facade on it is actually bathrooms. And none of this blocks the road or prevents any kind of traffic from passing through. In fact, if you just look at Main Gate Park and the tower on the other side of the road, it’s difficult to visualize exactly how the old front gate worked.

The Missing Pieces

So many times when we see historic images of the Main Gate, this is the image we see. An old car parked in front of a tiny building that very much resembles the bathrooms we have today. This historic photo from 1943 is certainly accurate. However, the background is entirely wrong. It appears that the clapboard building is on a skid that allows it to be moved around. It was likely in the middle of the street, which makes a lot of sense in 1943. But in the beginning, they thought there would only be a handful of scientists and some support staff. You might say that things quickly got out of hand and required a “main gate upgrade”.

The biggest missing piece of the original setup is actually the Petree Garden Center. As it is today, someone added more windows because it was a restaurant for a good many years. But when Los Alamos Landscaping purchased the building several years ago to become their garden center and a base of operations, I got the opportunity to take a peek at some of the still existing and rather ancient parts beneath the building that show it was very much part of the old main gate.

What structures, you ask?

The main “structure” that remains is an old tunnel that goes beneath the road and was used to access the tower on the opposite side of the road. The tunnel has some interesting graffiti. There was a youth group using it as a “hang out” at one point. Structurally speaking, it’s likely still sound. However it hasn’t been updated with any new wiring or safety egress for a long time so it is considered “closed”.

If you put the pieces together, this is what the gate looked like during most of the Manhattan Project.

This image is from a very old postcard. It shows how the Main Gain at Los Alamos used to appear when it was functional and the Secret City was closed to all but authorized personnel. The location makes quite a bit of sense really. Can you imagine what the view is like from that tower?

Since we’re talking about the Main Gate, I thought I’d toss in this postcard image as well. The photo is of the curve just past the Totavi gas station at the bottom of the hill. At that time it was called the K-195 highway. Some of you might remember when it looked like this. I suspect when the city was still closed, the road was much narrower and probably not paved. The ride up to the Main Gate must have been a nail biter for folks who’d never experienced mountain driving! It’s still that way for some visitors even though the locals tend to drive the thing like NASCAR.

If you’ve got additional information about our Main Gate, please feel free to leave it in the comments! I’d love to hear your thoughts. As always, I try to be thorough in my research, but there are a lot of pieces to the puzzle of Los Alamos and sometimes they don’t always fit together to make the same story. I’m a third generation Los Alamos resident and I love the history of this amazing place! If you’re ready to be part of our community, give me a call. I’d love to talk real estate with you!

Back to School!

It is so crazy to imagine that in only a few days, our school staff will be back in the building planning for the coming school year. The first day of school is August 9 and it’s coming up fast!

As I get my own kiddos ready to return to the classroom, I’ve been thinking about the back to school routine here in Los Alamos when I grew up. You remember. Before Amazon. Before the “Big Smith’s”. Back when every school grade had the same school supply list and the variety of supplies to purchase was so limited that we were all carrying the same lunchbox…

School Lists

Of course, I can only speak for my own experience of school shopping here in Los Alamos. Everyone had their own routine and it certainly changed from decade to decade depending on a lot of things. I’ve had relatives who remember when school supply lists were posted on the front windows of their school along with class lists letting folks know who their next teacher would be. You had to copy these lists long hand, (because there were no hand held cameras back then), and then head off to whatever stores were available to buy supplies.

Most of what I remember involved a class list posted in the school window along with a copy of suggested supplies for each grade. But each student in the district received a very small welcome packet that had a school supply list included. One you had that list of supplies however, you were on your own to find what you needed.

Before Walmart

Some of my acquaintances several years, (in some cases decades), ahead of me, remember shopping at TG&Y back when it was where Ruby K’s is now. When I was young TG&Y was located where the Pajarito Brewpub is located now. I would get some new clothes and maybe a pair of shoes. Some of my friends made a big deal about shopping for a first day of school outfit or a special outfit for picture day. There’s more information about places we used to shop HERE.

Anthony’s could be counted on for some clothing and shoes as well. And there was Revco, a drug store, in case you wanted a slightly different looking pencil or pen. Aspen Copies used to be the Los Alamos Stationery Store. I’m not even sure my kids would know what stationery is these days. But a few folks would get very cool looking pens, pencils, and other office supplies there. The Stationery Store was also where we could pick up a piece of poster board if we needed it.

I’m certain that some folks went off the hill to K-Mart in Santa Fe for school supplies. And there were always a lot more options if your parents were willing to drive to Albuquerque. Clothes were sometimes purchased from the Sears Catalog and delivered to the catalog store which was once located in the vicinity of our current UPEX store. Walmart didn’t appear in Santa Fe until the nineties. If you school shopped in Santa Fe you were probably at the Villa Linda Mall, which used to have quite a few department stores like Mervyn’s, Dillard’s, Sears, and also Millers Outpost where most of us can probably remember purchasing our Levis.

First Day of School

When I was younger, there was no meet the teacher. Through a good portion of elementary school you lugged your school supplies to the classroom on the first day in your backpack and a series of paper or plastic grocery sacks. You didn’t meet your teacher or see your classroom until that first day. The first day of class was almost always on a Monday and you spent most of it talking about which days you had gym, art, and music class and sometimes teachers would write a schedule on the blackboard.

I didn’t think anything of the way we were essentially thrown into the “deep end of the pool” with this method of showing up on the first day with no previous knowledge of where I was going or what the classroom looked like. I have to say that I’ve loved going with my kiddos as they meet their teacher before the first day, set up their desk or locker, and then get a good idea of what the building layout is, or what to expect in the coming school year. We talk a lot more these days about setting kids up for success and keeping them prepared. That’s progress! But I also kind of enjoyed the excitement of getting to school and maybe not knowing exactly what to expect.

The Special Touches

What I can remember rather vividly was how cool it was to have at least one school supply that was different from everyone else’s. When stores didn’t carry a huge variety and there weren’t a lot of stores anyway, everyone had the same stuff. Pencils were almost always yellow, green, or red. Pens were identical. Everyone had the same crayons, or the same color of highlighter.

If you could get a “special” piece, it was generally a pencil someone had given you for a holiday, or even at church or a sports event. Or perhaps you’d found one of those ballpoint pens that wrote in ten colors depending on which button you pushed down. Even a lunchbox or backpack that your parents had bought while out of state was the coolest thing ever!

I have such amazing memories of going to school here in Los Alamos. As I said before, if you came before or after I did, there’s a good chance your experience was different in some way. I’d love to have folks share their memories of back to school! Make a comment below or post one on my Facebook page. I’d love to hear from you! And as always, when you’re buying or selling real estate in Los Alamos, give me a call. I’m your hometown real estate broker!

More Cool Groups to Join

A few weeks ago we chatted about Derby Dames Roller Derby, the Toughriders Mountain Biking group, and half a dozen musical organizations that would love to add you to their numbers. This week, I want to invite you to two of my favorite groups here in Los Alamos.

Atomic City Road Runners Club

If you want to walk or run, would like to walk or run more, or would like company while you walk or run, this is the place for you! Membership is open to anyone and it’s such a great opportunity to have company on the trails. Find the Atomic City Road Runners on the web HERE.

What if I’m not such a “great” runner?

That’s the beauty of this group! You don’t have to be aiming for an Ultra Marathon. You can just enjoy getting out in nature at your own pace. Meets or races are held regularly and members estimate their times as a way to compete not only with each other, but with themselves. The goal is self improvement and the atmosphere is accepting and encouraging. It’s a great place for long time locals and newcomers to Los Alamos alike.

Los Alamos Auto Club

Ever see a group of super cool cars and trucks gathered in the parking lot at 15th & Central Avenue here in Los Alamos? If you have, you might want to stop next time and introduce yourself!

The Los Alamos Auto Club meets every Sunday other than the first Sunday of the month in the parking lot across from the Bradbury Science Museum on Central Ave. The group is open to anyone who loves to talk about cars. Sometimes the group gets together and caravans to other events in nearby cities like Santa Fe.

My teenaged son loves to talk vehicles of any kind and has been welcomed by the Auto Club members, so age doesn’t matter here folks! It’s such a great way for locals to meet other locals with similar likes, exchange knowledge, and help out with ongoing projects. I hope you’ll check it out this weekend! For more information and to connect with the group, check out their Facebook Page HERE.

So next time you think there’s nothing to do in Los Alamos, reach out to some of these groups we’ve been talking about and get involved! There is so much to do in our little mountain town, so much to see, so much to experience! Science Fest is here, the weather has been beautiful, get out and enjoy! And when you’re ready to talk real estate in Los Alamos, give me a call! I’d love to chat with you.

You Are Invited!

Yes! You are invited! To what, you ask? This Friday night, June 30, RE/MAX is one of several businesses sponsoring the Friday night concert. Yes, I know. The whole state is invited to see the live performance of Ryan Chrys & the Roughcuts. But RE/MAX customers are invited to a special VIP area before the concert with drinks, food, and fun. So join us at 4PM!

Which customers are invited?

ALL OF THEM! Yes! If you were a customer in the past, are currently searching for your dream home or selling your current home with RE/MAX, or you’re looking for a way to meet and greet fantastic real estate brokers, we want YOU in our VIP section.

I’ve been talking quite a lot lately about the Friday night concerts at Ashley Pond. There’s no doubt these are an amazing local event filled with family fun, food, great music, and a chance to chat with your neighbors. RE/MAX is all about supporting local events and we’d really like you to come out this Friday night and say hello!

The line up for this Friday’s concert should be great fun! The Los Alamos Community Winds will kick off the night at 6:00PM. Next is an amateur country showcase from 7:00PM until Ryan Chrys & the Rough Cuts come on stage at 8:00PM. I just did a post recently about the Los Alamos Community Winds. You can check that out HERE. This Friday is going to be a concert that has a bit of something for everyone!

Who is Ryan Chrys?

The Rough Cuts and their front man Ryan Chrys are passionate about their music, their fans, and their grass roots dedication to Modern Outlaw Country. You can learn more about the band HERE. Listen to a sample of their music and you’ll probably be reminded of what we sometimes think of as “old school” country music.

Chrys grew up on a ranch in Montana. His mother was a folk singer and later he moved to Denver to pursue a music career singing the style of country he’d grown up loving to play. The Rough Cuts pride themselves on producing a traditional country sound. There’s a great interview with Ryan Chrys on Voyage Denver’s website HERE. This concert should be a great opportunity to enjoy old country music in a comfortable local venue with friends, food, and our very own spectacular scenery as a backdrop. What could be better?

Once again, this Friday night – June 30 – RE/MAX is hosting a VIP area for our customers with fun, food, drinks, and a great chance to listen to live music. We’re starting at 4:00 PM and will be enjoying the music until the concert ends at 9:00PM! Come out and say hello, grab a beverage, and enjoy the show. The food will be available until it’s gone! And if you’ve ever considered buying or selling real estate in town, give me a call! I’d love to chat with you this Friday by the pond!

Filming in Los Alamos

With the new Oppenheimer film releasing on July 20, 2023, I thought it might be interesting to take a look back at the rather large number of films that have been shot here in Los Alamos. Since the filming of Oppenheimer was so recent, most of us can recall the excitement of having movies crews, staging equipment, actors, and other film personnel hanging about town. But this isn’t the only large scale film to be shot here, nor were Matt Damon and Robert Downey Jr the “biggest” actors (of their time) who were here on location in Los Alamos.

According to IMDB stats, there are 42 films or filming projects that officially list Los Alamos in their “filming locations”. Some of these include shows like “Longmire” and half a dozen or more documentary series that were filmed here due to our connection to the Manhattan project. In 2017 most of us remember Only the Brave, which was a movie about the Granite Mountain Hotshots. But some of the other films and film projects might surprise you.

Twins

This 1988 comedy starring Arnold Schwartzenegger and Danny DeVito was wildly popular when first released. At one point in the story, the very opposite fraternal twins go in search of their “test tube” origins. They find answers in a very small building at the Los Alamos Laboratory. The building used for filming is the one once located just “beneath” the hospital that was very recently torn down to make way for the new apartments just off Trinity Dr. Residents at that time gathered to gawk at the stars. Of course, many excited fans were trying to get a look at just how “enormous” Arnold’s physique actually was in person! If you haven’t seen this film, it is a funny trip back to the late eighties. The scenes in Los Alamos are tastefully done and the scenery certainly looks genuine, even if those parts of the story were pretty minimal. And, I don’t think anyone here at LANL (or LASL) was ever involved in utilizing test tube babies to create super humans. But I suppose we’ll never know, will we?

Silkwood

This 1983 suspense drama was filmed both in Albuquerque and in Los Alamos. The plot is based on the real life story of Karen Silkwood who worked at a plutonium facility in Oklahoma and was exposed to radiation. The film starred Meryl Streep, Cher, Kurt Russell, and Craig T Nelson as well as many other well known actors. Considering the plot line, I think we can all imagine why they would use areas at LANL as sets for the plutonium facility. It’s still interesting to think that these folks were wandering around town when I was growing up here and I had no idea. But as I think back, we weren’t necessarily as up to date on films being shot on location. Our appetite for celebrity news wasn’t nearly the same in the world before social media.

The Milagro Beanfield War

Also filmed in 1988, the Milagro Beanfield War is a Robert Redford film starring heavy hitters from the time such as Richard Bradford, Christopher Walken, and Melanie Griffith. The story focuses on the difficulties with water rights in a small high desert community. A local tale from that time was that Redford’s horse wrangler was having issues with a horse being used on set up on North Mesa during filming. A local horsewoman helped out by volunteering her own gelding for filming and was thrilled to meet Robert Redford and “work” with him.

Tiger Eyes

Judy Blume’s book, Tiger Eyes, was set in Los Alamos. You can read more about that HERE. But the film adaptation made in 2012 did quite a lot of on location filming here in town. The film has quite a few deviations from the original story, but is well done and worth watching as a “coming of age” story about a teenager trying to overcome a severe family trauma. Judy Blume and her son Lawrence wrote the script together and Lawrence directed. I love this fact about the film because it means the author was able to have direct input on any changes to her original vision. Judy Blume actually lived in Los Alamos for a few years in the mid to late seventies. I wonder if it surprised her to see how much change had happened between her living here and her shooting her film here?

There are plenty more films shot here in Los Alamos. With our unique connections to history, the dramatic scenery, and in some cases the “time capsule quality” of our local flavor, it’s really no wonder we’re popular that way. The Secret City on the Hill has plenty to offer and so much character! When you’re ready to talk more about Los Alamos, give me a call! I’m your hometown real estate broker and I’d love to talk Los Alamos with you!

Get Musical in Los Alamos

It’s summer, so it’s easy to think that the music scene here in Los Alamos revolves around the Gordon’s Concerts at Ashley Pond, which it does. Sort of. You can always get more info about the Summer Concert Series, but you probably have no idea just how many ways there are to get musical here in Los Alamos. And our musicality goes back a looooong way! All the way to 1944 in fact!

From Rosemary O’Connor’s history of the Los Alamos Symphony Orchestra:

During the war years Los Alamos had no organized instrumental group. The residents satisfied their musical hunger with many string quartets, piano quintets, and other such chamber groups. There was also, at that time, a very fine Jazz band which entertained the community weekly.

From January 1945 through 1946, there was a group formed under the direction of Robert Dike, a french hornist. He also wrote special scores for the instrumentation available. The group was comprised of military and civilian personnel. The funding came from the “Special Services” of the Army and was administered by Captain Hugh Martin. Some of the people who performed in this group under Bob Dike were Al and Diz Graves, Moll Flanders, Eric Jette, Robert Richtmyer, Frank Osvath, Frank Bice, Ken Jeusen, Harold Fishbein, Hermond Lacey and Don Lovelace.

Isn’t is amazing to think of the amount of trouble folks went to back then for entertainment? I sometimes feel as if they’d laugh to hear us complain about a lack of “things to do” nowadays! At one point, the Los Alamos and Santa Fe Symphony groups tried to combine to form a larger orchestra. Unfortunately, the transportation up and down “the hill” available in the fifties made that impossible. But the relationship is still strong. And the original spirit of musicians playing for the love of music as a way to share in community has continued forward into more musical organizations than you might imagine!

Los Alamos Symphony Orchestra

These days the Symphony Orchestra includes musicians that are both local and also from Santa Fe. Many of our players belong to the Santa Fe Community Orchestra as well as LASO. LASO welcomes student involvement and hosts guests conductors and soloists from all over. Each year, the Symphony Orchestra awards a scholarship to young musicians graduating from LAHS in an effort to promote music and help the community.

LASO also has a strong connection to the Los Alamos Choral Society, which has been a musical voice locally since 1944. The groups perform a joint concert at least once a year. Whether you like to play or enjoy listening, it might be time to check out the LASO schedule.

Coro de Cámara

Technically a “spin off” of the Los Alamos Choral Society, Coro de Cámara is a premier chamber chorus that performs music from a multitude of eras, styles, and conductors. Singers are from Northern New Mexico, but the group began in Los Alamos and showcases a wealth of local talent. Spots in the chorus are open to auditions and the group performs regularly throughout Santa Fe and Los Alamos.

One exciting bonus of the Santa Fe/Los Alamos relationship is the availability of Santa Fe Opera apprentices for some of the performances. The opportunity to hear and to perform with such talent is usually hard to come by in out of the way places like Los Alamos, but culture is something we do rather well in the Secret City and if you’d like to see Coro de Cámara perform, check out their website for the latest schedule.

The Hill Stompers

Did you play a band instrument for a semester or two in school? Are you looking for an awesome group of folks who just like to play music and enjoy life? Would you be surprised if I told you those two things are all that’s required for you to join the Hill Stompers?

This award winning jazz band ensemble formed in October 2000 just to have fun. They play public venues like bars and parties, participate in parades, and provide music for local events too! Even if you’re just learning an instrument for the first time, you can find a spot in the Hill Stompers.

Los Alamos Community Winds

As I mentioned above, there is a long history of musical ensemble groups here in Los Alamos. As Rosemary O’Connor’s history of the Symphony Orchestra reminds us, many of those original groups were blends of military and civilian musicians who just wanted to play! The Los Alamos Community Winds dates back to those groups from the 1940’s as well!

For those of you who grew up playing in the elementary, middle school, and high school bands, you probably remember Mr. McDonald. Jan McDonald was a conductor in the 70s, 80s, & 90s who often invited students to join the Los Alamos Concert Band. Under his direction, the group played civic concerts during the summer, especially at the Fourth of July Fireworks Celebration. The Community Winds group is the continuation of that tradition. Musicians and music lovers from our local area are invited to join the Community Winds as a player or as an enthusiast! Check their news page for the latest concert information or to find out how to be involved!

I hope you’ve been bookmarking websites and planning your social calendar for the next several months as I run through the amazing list of things to do, see, and experience here in Los Alamos. Whether you’re buying or selling real estate or just chatting about this amazing place we call home, give me a call! I’d love to talk to you!

Hear the Music!

Summer is here. School is done this week. Graduation is upon us. And the best part of summer is beginning! The Los Alamos Free Concert Series opens on May 26, with Billy Bob Thornton & the Boxmasters.

Why You Should Go

I suppose it’s possible to live here in Los Alamos and be unaware of the Los Alamos Concert Series going on at Ashley Pond each Friday. However, for many of you, knowing the concerts are available isn’t necessarily incentive to go. I get that. The crowd is sometimes enormous and it could easily seem overwhelming. But as we kick off this summer’s series, I’d like to give you a few things to consider.

Our concert series has been lauded as the best free concert series in New Mexico. It runs from Friday May 26 until Friday September 1 and there are artists to fit any taste in music. Some are local and well known, some are local and unknown. Several are well known all over the world! But because this is a free concert, you don’t have to feel compelled to stick around for the whole thing. You can make your concert experience pretty much whatever you’d like.

Even If You Don’t Like Crowds

Don’t want to squeeze yourself onto the lawn in front of the pavilion? No problem! Utilize the free shuttle service and eliminate the need to park at all. Or park several blocks away or more and walk to the pond. Wave to your friends and neighbors, get a crazy awesome view of the crowd at twilight from the steps in front of the Justice Center. Listen to the music as you wander through the garden behind Fuller Lodge. Find a slice of the concert atmosphere pretty much anywhere in the downtown area on Friday nights. Part of the charm here in Los Alamos is the option to enjoy the entertainment in a way that works for you.

A Snack For Everyone

Food trucks are a novelty that has resonated with plenty of us these days. And there’s no doubt that the amount and variety of food trucks is almost incentive enough to pop by the pond on a Friday night. Local favorite Senor Tortas got their start in a food truck and they often still make an appearance on Friday nights. Snow cones, slushies, cotton candy, and other carnival style faves are available too. Whether you want dinner or just dessert, you can find something amazing. And that while your kids bounce themselves silly in the bouncy houses and run wild across the lawn like kids are supposed to do!

Something you may not realize is that the Youth Activity Center located in the Community Center basement is open during the concerts. The YAC will be in their parking lot offering treats like popcorn, candy, sodas, slushies, and even cotton candy. The proceeds all go back into free community programs for the YAC and the inside snack bar is available for taquitos, personal pizzas, and other regular menu items. The YAC even offers the opportunity to whip out the credit card for Square payments and their menu is priced significantly lower than many other available options.

On a semi-related side note, the YAC staff would like to remind the local public that if you’re enjoying a jaunt around the pond anytime during operating hours, they’d be happy to sell you a beverage at the snack bar. You don’t have to be a 3rd-8th grader to head inside and purchase a snack or a drink. So stop by during the summer to say hello!

Get Involved

Sometimes it’s easy to feel isolated up here in Los Alamos. I hear from folks all the time that there’s nothing to do and that they have difficulty finding social groups. The truth is that there are things to do all around us here in Los Alamos, but we have to get out and find those things. The summer concert series is an amazing example of that. It’s a huge local event and even if you went every week for the whole season you’d probably not run out of things to do and see!

If you’d like to step it up a notch, check out the concert’s website for job opportunities! They’re hiring everything from opening acts to social media coordinators. It could be a fantastic way to get involved with one of our amazing local traditions.

A Local Legend

A lot of folks might not realize that the Los Alamos Concert Series began as one local businessman’s attempt to bring music to Los Alamos. Russ Gordon and his family opened a record store (that sold ice cream!) in White Rock in 1988. The store eventually moved to the MariMac center in Los Alamos and the first “Gordon’s Stage” was a slapped together wood platform in the parking lot where the entire town gathered on Friday nights for a free concert. Gordon’s Concert series hosted over 500 music acts from all genres and Russ was an incredible influence on so many young people who wandered in and out of his record store over the years. With Russ’s retirement in 2017, the Los Alamos Summer Concert series became a thing, but many of us still call these events “Gordon’s Concerts” and there is a plaque on the pavilion at Ashley Pond celebrating Gordon’s contribution to the fabric of Los Alamos.

We are a tight community with tons of history and so much local flavor it might seem slightly crazy to outsiders. But we are also welcoming and eager to share our history and our amazing amenities and opportunities with everyone. So get out and enjoy the concert series this summer! And when you’re ready to join our community here in Los Alamos, give me a call! I’d love to chat Los Alamos Real Estate with you.

It’s A Dog’s Life

There is no doubt that Los Alamos loves dogs! If you spend any time driving around town, you’ll notice plenty of folks outside with their dogs. Most of our paved trails have doggie clean up bins stationed at regular intervals, and we have three dog parks here in town. Several businesses have cropped up to keep dogs active and happy too. The Doghouse offers Doggie Daycare, training, and boarding services. And we have more than a few dog walking services. But if you really want to get to the hub of the dog community in Los Alamos, you should check out the Los Alamos Dog Obedience Club.

The Los Alamos Dog Obedience Club is a 501(c)4 non profit organization that has been supporting Los Alamos dog owners since 1951. Yes. 1951. That’s a really long time! Their building is located next to the Animal Shelter and the East Park Dog Park. The metal building is an old Quonset Hut left over from the Los Alamos war years, which might be enough of a curiosity to at least visit the club. Honestly though, this group has the resources to take your dog ownership to the next level.

When most of us think of dog obedience, we immediately imagine basic manners class with a puppy. If you have a puppy, you can certainly sign up for some basic training courses. It’s a great place to start. But if you’ve got an older dog at home, that doesn’t mean you’re left out!

Along with basic manners and tricks for fun, our local dog enthusiasts participate in beginner to advanced agility training, herding, tracking, dock diving, breed showing, nose training, and even schutzhund (protection training). Our locals get together on a weekly basis and even arrange trips out of area for training events, shows, and competitions. Professional dog trainers come to Los Alamos from as far away as South Africa to assist with specialized work such as Schutzhund and some of our local dog owners have successfully competed dogs internationally!

Even if all of this sounds overwhelming, you might be surprised at the unusual services our local dog obedience enthusiasts can provide to the community. A great example is snake training for your dog. A professional trainer comes to town fairly frequently during snake season in order to expose you and your dog to possible snake encounters on the trail. For those of us who trail run or hike with our dogs, or even those of us who live in an area where snakes might appear in our yard, training our dogs not to get bit is a huge bonus! The snake specialist travels with several varieties of snakes who are specially prepared to keep your dog safe while offering them the experience of a snake encounter in a way that prevents them from making a critical boo-boo at a later time. Contact the Dog Obedience club for details, or check their Facebook page for upcoming dates.

Summer sign up for classes begins on June 14. So this is the perfect time to look at your summer schedule and make some time to get fit with your dog. Dog training is a passion sport with tons of benefits for both you and your canine companions. And it’s just one more cool thing to do here in Los Alamos! Get involved with Dog Obedience and when you’re ready to join our community here on the Hill, give me a call! I’d love to chat real estate in Los Alamos with you.

Stumbling on Art in Los Alamos

One of the things I love most about being in the real estate business might surprise you. Sure, the flexible hours are great. I love being able to meet new people and talk about (or brag on) a community that I really enjoy being part of. But truthfully, getting the opportunity to take a peek into other people’s living space is fascinating to me. I suppose you might call me voyeuristic, but I’m not being creepy. I’m just interested! And sometimes, being interested pays off. For example, I recently purchased two beautiful works of art a client had inherited from his grandparents. It was a crazy amazing opportunity for me and a welcome way for this client to find a new home for something he didn’t have a use for.

It might surprise you to realize that Los Alamos homes are full of unusual and often valuable trinkets and works of art. You might scoff, but I promise you it’s true. Art in particular is something we don’t necessarily realize Los Alamos does well. At the end of last year I did a post on galleries and art classes here in Los Alamos. This week I’d like to talk about two artists in particular who are famous for their love of Northern New Mexico and their artistic renderings of Southwestern culture.

Donald “Keith” Kelley

When you plan your next (or first) visit to the Smithsonian, don’t forget to seek out a photograph by the nationally and internationally acclaimed artist, Keith Kelley. I have fond memories of Keith as he lived not far from my grandmother when I was young. He was a kind man and I own several of his paintings, which I love!

Born in Illinois in 1928, Kelley moved with his wife to Los Alamos in 1949 to work at the Safeway store. He worked at the Piggly Wiggly, later Mesa Market, until he was 46 years old. It might seem so very odd that anyone would move to Los Alamos in order to manage a grocery store, but Kelley loved the Southwest. He studied Archaeology at NMSU as a young man, but when he retired, he decided to dedicate his time to painting. He’d always had a talent for oils, but was an avid photographer as well.

Kelley was the same sort of artist as he was a man: an individual. He used a combination of oils and razor blades to achieve the gorgeous works of art which reflected life in the southwest. In 2015, after Kelley’s death in September of 2011, his family donated five of his paintings to the Los Alamos Medical Center to hang in the front lobby. He often gave works of art to friends all over town, some painted during the time he was still working at the grocery store. For that reason, many of his paintings can still be found in homes all over Los Alamos.

Kelley was 82 when he passed away, but he still has family living here in Los Alamos and in other places in the United States to carry on the memory of this talented man. Kelley’s art hangs in American Embassies in Moscow, Russia and Pretoria, and South Africa. Every painting by Kelley includes a “hidden bunny”, something Kelley did deliberately to encourage viewers to enjoy his art in new and unique ways.

Secundino “Sec” Sandoval

A story folks use to tell about Sec Sandoval is that he once took a painting class and was asked to paint a nude model. When the model disrobed, Sec reportedly left the classroom and went outdoors to paint birds. The talented artist was mostly self taught and though he often sought to improve his technique, he didn’t enjoy being told what to paint.

Sandoval began drawing at the age of five, struggled in school as a young man, but ended on a high note as the captain of the football team before graduating 7th in his class at LAHS. He graduated with a BA from Adams State in Alamosa, CO and went on to be a technical illustrator for the US Army Aggressor Center in the late forties and fifties. Sandoval returned to Los Alamos and worked for the Lab for 15 yrs before retiring and devoting his time to his love of painting.

Sandoval is known for paintings of the Southwest that are so true to life that they resonate with other lovers of Southwestern culture and landscapes. Sandoval never painted while outdoors. He reportedly didn’t like the unpredictability of the weather. Instead, he took pictures and painted from those. Or, he was fond of making a sketch of a rock or a tree and then creating a painting based upon his own ideas. In the end, most of his paintings were of fictional places inspired by places and animals he saw throughout his daily life. He is best known for oils and watercolors of the aspen trees and wildlife of the Pajarito Plateau. He reportedly told one a friend that he could never get the aspens “quite right”, but that he intended to keep on trying until he did. If you’ve ever seen any of Sandoval’s paintings, you probably agree with me that he certainly got that right and so much more!

If you’d like to acquire some of these works for yourself, you might try contacting the Karen Wray Gallery. Or, you might be surprised what you find by contacting the Cricket Window and checking out some of their estate sales around town. And when you’re ready to buy or sell real estate in Los Alamos, give me a call. I’d love to talk about Los Alamos with you!

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