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NMiF discusses housing as a human right amid financial crisis during pandemic January 07, 2021
The COVID pandemic has thrown many people into financial crisis and has spotlighted how important adequate shelter is to health. This week on New Mexico in Focus, correspondent Megan Kamerick talks to law professor and housing advocate Serge Martinez about housing as a human right and how to stem the flood of evictions once the moratorium is lifted.
This month’s installment of Our Land looks back to an early 2020 conversation between correspondent Laura Paskus and Eugene Herrera, former governor of the Pueblo of Cochiti. Now, in 2021, Sen. Martin Heinrich’s plans to reintroduce a bill to change Bandelier National Monument into Bandelier National Park. While other northern New Mexico Pueblos support the measure, leaders at Cochiti still oppose it. Former governor Herrera tells why the people of Cochiti believe such a designation would damage spirit
Bandelier announces plans for prescribed burns
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Gaia’s Pantry Open For Business At Unitarian Church - 8:50 am
By KIRSTEN LASKEY
kirsten@ladailypost.com
The idea behind the Unitarian Church of Los Alamos’ Gaia’s Pantry is simple; take what food items are needed and leave food that can be donated.
The pantry, named after the Greek goddess of nature, opened for business this week in the church parking lot, 1738 North Sage St., but the idea percolated in the minds of the congregation for some time.
Unitarian Church member Kokheong McNaughton said she was introduced to curbside food pantries through a friend who attends the Trinity on the Hill Episcopal Church, which also maintains a food pantry.
The Best Outdoor Adventures in America Right Now By Jen Murphy © Mick Kelley We all crave these days what Thoreau called the tonic of wilderness : vast space, no people, plenty to see and soak up. Here s where to find it in the USA.
Henry David Thoreau, the American naturalist and philosopher, called our desire for big nature the tonic of wilderness. We sure all need it now. Below are 21 great outdoor adventures on the East coast, the West coast, the Midwest, and the South. We have organized them by degrees of physical difficulty involved: From almost none (Part 1, Adventures Lite), to some (Part 2, Active Adventures), to substantial (Part 3, Challenging Adventures), to, well, daredevil territory (Part 4, Extreme Adventures). Booking information is provided. And just this bit of advice: Know thyself.
Wake up in a wonderland in the Southwest
Now that Under Canvas has glamping tents in the stunning parks of the Southwest , like this site near Arches National Park, there s no need for DIY if you’d really rather not. Courtesy of Under Canvas
The only way to spend the night in the magically colored and contoured national parks of the Southwestern U.S. used to be basic DIY camping. No longer. When the pioneering glamping company
Under Canvas opens its newest camp in April on the edge of Canyon Rim Plateau in Lake Powell–Grand Staircase, on 220 acres of red, orange, and yellow land you’ll be able to book a circuit that also includes camps in the Grand Canyon, Moab, and Zion parks. The stylish tents sleep up to seven, have hot water and daily housekeeping, and include the services of a personal “adventure concierge,” who will arrange every imaginable activity, including rugged Jeep tours, mountain biking, whitewater rafting, and more.
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