Page Top

The Authentic Guide to Santa Fe

Archive for the ‘Santa Fe Day Hikes’ Category

Randall Davey Audubon Center

Sunday, February 27th, 2011 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

The new sign welcoming you to the Sanctuary

Sometimes you just need a quick getaway from town, a breath of fresh air, a place to stretch your legs without too many people around, and maybe a spot just to sit and be quiet for awhile. We have the perfect destination for you: The Randall Davey Audubon Center, just a couple of miles from the Inn on the Alameda, with good parking at either the Center itself, or just off Upper Canyon Road, at the Santa Fe River Canyon Nature Preserve. Both are free.

It’s a lovely place to have a short hike:

A pleasant walk on a winter afternoon. That's Picacho Peak above.

There are a variety of paths in the Nature Preserve south of the Center, with interpretive signs here and there:

An interpretive sign near the classroom and nature store

The “serious” birders are quick to post their sightings:

Catch of the day

A friend and I love to stop by the River Preserve to see what the beavers have been up to. Lately they’ve been rearranging their dams – here’s the newest one:

The latest engineering project on the Santa Fe River

“Busy as a beaver” doesn’t begin to describe these creatures. It’s amazing what they can accomplish:

An evening's nosh

And down, ready for stripping and hauling. That's a big tree!

There are already plenty of birds to see, even ‘tho it’s still February, and more are no doubt on the way. The robins are back – that’s always encouraging – and we also spotted mallards on the beaver ponds, scrub jays, white-breasted nutchatches, pine siskins, juncos, two kinds of towhees, and a pair of red-tailed hawks circling overhead, keeping everyone in line. The usual menagerie of reptiles is absent, since it’s still winter, so for those of you averse to slithery things, this is a great time for a walk.

Getting There:

From the Inn on the Alameda, turn east on Alameda Street (toward the mountains) and follow it along the tree-lined Santa Fe River until it makes a sharp right turn. At the stop sign at the intersection with Upper Canyon Road, turn left and enjoy a slow drive through a very picturesque section of Old Santa Fe until the road makes an abrupt left turn. Here you have a couple of choices: you can turn left here and then immediately right into the parking area for the Nature Conservancy’s Santa Fe River Preserve, or you can continue straight ahead, along a dirt road, about half a mile to the paved parking area at the Randall Davey Audubon Center itself. There’s a great nature store here, and it’s the meeting place for the Saturday morning bird walks. Check their website for the calendar of events.

The old Randall Davey House seen from inside the Preserve

Cloud-hidden, Whereabouts unknown

Sunday, December 19th, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

Conifers in the hushed air high in the Sangre de Cristo

Ever since our recent snow, the mountains above Santa Fe have been shrouded in thick clouds, the middle and higher peaks invisible behind the grey and white stratus that broods over the ranges. Since it’s only a short drive from downtown up into the forests, there’s no reason not to take a moment out of the day to see what lies inside that mysterious veil. Ten minutes’ drive brings you to the border of the Santa Fe National Forest, and ten minutes more takes you high into the mixed-conifer forest, some 2000 feet above the city.

You can’t expect any views under these conditions, but you will witness the forest in an atmosphere of utter quiet and peace. Snow clings to every branch, deadening sound.

A tranquil and snowy forest

There is no wind to chill you. Your horizons are bound and foreshortened by fog, and even a short walk takes you into a private world of meditative calm. Little things take on a new significance.

The cone of a Limber Pine, confected in snow and honeyed pitch

Soon the stillness seeps into your soul, and you can return to town refreshed, and ready to appreciate again the cultural delights of the Christmas season in Santa Fe.

The Breath of Winter

Tuesday, December 7th, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

The first snow in middle elevations

I know it’s not nearly as impressive as what those of you back East are enjoying right now, but here in Northern New Mexico, it’s been getting down below freezing most nights for the past two or three weeks, and there have been light snows in the mountains from time to time. Ski Santa Fe is scheduled to open on December 10, admittedly with the assistance of the snow-makers – but that lets you know it’s cold up there.

I like all kinds of weather, but I’ll confess that, from a geological point of view, it’s a little disappointing to see the ground disappear under the snow. You get a notion to have a look a particular belt of outcrops, only to be thwarted by that unusual mineral called ice. The last few weekends have been dry and relatively warm, however, and I’ve been getting out for some nice walks on the Chamisa Trail and the lower parts of the Winsor Trail, all good hikes in almost any weather, and blessed with wonderful light on a sunny winter afternoon.

November ice on Tesuque Creek

On our side of the mountains, Winsor Trail follow Tesuque Creek up nearly to Hyde Memorial State Park before it jogs off to the north and begins its climb up toward the Nordic Ski Area and Ski Santa Fe. The water is beginning to ice over and there are only a few places now where you can see the water burbling along its stony bed. One unexpected pleasure of a winter hike: those difficult stream crossings in the spring are a breeze in the winter:

The stream crossing at the junction of Winsor and Bear Wallow Trails

Since the Winsor Trail basically crosses the entire Santa Fe Range from west to east, it gives the observant hiker a look at nearly all the fascinating rocks that crop out in the mountains. It also gives you a taste of several climatic zones and their associated flora and fauna, from dwarf cactus and spiky yucca on the south-facing slopes near Tesuque all the way to alpine tundra and twisted bristlecone pines on the flanks of Santa Fe Baldy. With some magnificent forests and meadows in between.

Most of my walks lately have been in the 8000 to 9000 foot elevation range, where the conifers are mixed in species and delight the eye with their variety.

A magnificent White Fir along the Winsor Trail

A number of key geological transitions can be seen on a walk along Tesuque Creek once you get in the habit of looking. One of the most notable ones occurs just north of the junction of the Winsor Trail with the Chamisa Trail. From this junction, downstream and to the west, the ground is littered with fragments of a dark, glittery, very distinctive rock called amphibolite schist. But as you walk upstream from the junction, through a meadow and just past a mysterious old overgrown stone dam, you’ll notice that the path is now simply an orangy-pink:

Fragments of pink granite on the forest floor

You’ve crossed  a fundamental boundary in the bedrock, one that separates a belt of strongly deformed and metamorphosed sediments with a heavy component of dark volcanic tuffs and lavas, from an equally deformed belt of very hard pink granite. Not far after this transition the trail is forced to leave the pleasant meadows along the creek and cut its way along the canyon walls:

A rocky footpath in the granite above Tesuque Creek

Here you can get a good look at the granite, and see how it has been stretched by shearing forces deep in the Earth’s crust. This is  revealed by strongly aligned streaks of dark mica called biotite.

These rocks are exceedingly ancient, perhaps as much as 1.7 billion years old, and they got their distinctive textures via crushing in the roots of long vanished range of mountains, perhaps 10 – 15 miles deep in the crust. The granite was originally injected as a molten mass of rock, but it, too, was caught up in shearing forces after it crystallized (losing much of its countertop potential into the bargain, I might add).

If you’re like me, you might gain some appreciation of the trouble geologists must go to, to mark these boundaries on their maps. There simply isn’t any one place where X marks the spot, and all those beautiful trees and wildflowers simply obscure the facts. On the other hand, there are beautiful trees and wildflowers to look at – and subtler autumnal and winter vistas at this time of year – so whether you’re a rockhound or not, be sure to make time for a walk while you’re visiting us here in Santa Fe.

Getting There: I’ve been accessing this part of the mountains via the Chamisa Trail, a very popular trail a short way from Santa Fe, just inside the Santa Fe National Forest border.

From the Inn on the Alameda, you turn north on Paseo de Peralta, and then turn right at the light at the intersection of Paseo with Bishops Lodge Road. A second right at the next light, which is Artist Road, or NM 475, puts you on your way. About six miles along 475 you’ll see the sign marking the boundary of the national forest, and very shortly thereafter some parking place both on the left and (for overflow) on the right side of the road.

The trail maintained by the Forest Service is the uppermost one, at the trailhead to the right of the parking area, and this is the way I recommend. There is a less formal path directly along the creek, much favored by dog-walkers. After a mile’s walk along the trail you’ll reach a saddle with a sign, and another mile north brings you to Tesuque Creek and the junction with the Winsor Trail. There are beautiful meadows along here where you might enjoy a thermos of something hot. If you head west, downstream, you’ll encounter outcroppings of metamorphic rocks, and if you head east, upstream, you’ll see the transitions I’ve written about above. An ambitious hike will bring you to the meadow at the junction with the Borrego Trail, where you will see boulders of yet another crystalline component of the Santa Fe Range. But that’s for another time.

A boulder of pink foliated granite next to boulder of grey tonalite

The Aspen

Monday, October 11th, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

Sometimes you just don’t need to say very much. This is what it looks like in the mountains above Santa Fe right now:

Looking back along the Aspen Vista Trail

Trees along the road to Ski Santa Fe

Big Tesuque

Monumental sky above Tesuque Ridge

This could be you!

Saturated yellow along Winsor Trail

A mountain of color

Walking along the Winsor Trail

Rocky Mountain Ash

Aspen leaves on the forest floor

Come see us.

August

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

The beautiful cirque on the east side of Santa Fe Baldy

There is something majestic about the month of August – a golden generosity, an expansiveness, a time of fullness. Summer’s intense light has crested, but the reservoirs of life are still filling and shining in the sun. Nowhere is this more apparent than in the mountains above Santa Fe. August is the perfect time for a walk right up to the sinuous backbone of the Santa Fe Range, where you can bathe in alpine light while relaxing in the warmth of desert winds filtered through a sea of fragrant evergreens.

Hiking along the crest of the Santa Fe Range

Even if you don’t have the time to reach the very highest parts of the range, you can enjoy views of the peaks through partings in the spruce and aspen:

The gentle western face of Santa Fe Baldy from the Winsor Trail

Every opening in the forest is brightened by wildflowers and brimming with life:

Sneezeweed

Harebells

Some trails lead to broad and unexpected meadows perfect for a lunchtime stop:

La Vega just above Rio Nambe

The summer rains bring out an amazing variety of mushrooms on the forest floor. Some of them look like they came right out of a fairy tale (and bring the same deadly consequences characteristic of these stories, if you disobey and eat one):

The beautiful but deadly Fly mushroom "Amanita muscaria"

Others can get as big as dinner plates, and can – if you know what you’re doing – even grace them later, sauted:

The King bolete "Boletus edulis" prized by mushroom hunters

Mushroom hunting is an art, and since the books I’ve seen show a picture of one, captioned “Edible – choice” and then next, a practically identical picture red-lettered “POISONOUS”, I’d bring an expert along to help out. Nevertheless, it’s fun to see the mushroom hunters slipping furtively through the woods in August, with their net bags.

If you persevere in your climb upward, you’ll be rewarded with some magnificent views of the very crown of the Southern Rockies in New Mexico:

The Truchas Peaks in the heart of the Pecos Wilderness, from Windy Saddle

Unlike the soft and mostly forested face the Santa Fe Range presents to us here in town, the east side of the mountains has been bitten into by ice, and gives a much more alpine aspect:

The eastern flank of Santa Fe Baldy, from Windy Saddle

You’ll definitely know you’re in the Rocky Mountains once you’ve reached these heights.

So if you’re lucky enough to be able to visit us this summer, try to make some time for a walk in the mountains. If you’re feeling fit and frisky, aim for a real Rocky Mountain High and spend a day on the network of trails that reach the crest of the range above Santa Fe. August is generous with light, warmth, and abundant life at these altitudes. Go up to the granite throne and accept your gift.

Lake Peak from the switchbacks up to Windy Saddle

Getting there: The Winsor Trail is the best path into the high country from Santa Fe, and you can reach the upper part of this trail from Ski Santa Fe. You’ll want a map if you’re going exploring in the Nambe Creek watershed and the range crest above, and you’ll need some time. Visit our neighbor Travel Bug for maps.

The walk to the meadow at La Vega is approximately 3.7 miles one way, and while the elevation gain is minimal, there are some up and downs on the way. You’ll be making some trail changes along the way, and while there are Forest Service signs to guide you, I would definitely bring a map.

The hike to Windy Saddle is an all day affair, and you’ll be pleasantly fatigued when you get back to your car. It’s about a 6 miles one way, and there is an elevation gain of around 680 feet along about a 1.4 mile series of switchbacks after you’ve reached Puerto Nambe, so you’ll be winded yourself. The elevation of the saddle is 11,620 feet. Again, you’ll want a map, and you’ll need to carry plenty of water and have some snacks or lunch in your pack.

The parking area at Ski Santa Fe is approximately 16 miles from the Santa Fe Plaza, at the very end of NM 475. From the Inn on the Alameda, you turn north on Paseo de Peralta, and then turn right at the light at the intersection of Paseo with Hyde Park Road. A second right at the next light, which is Artist Road, or NM 475, puts you on your way. The Winsor Trail trailhead is clearly marked at the northwestern corner of the parking area, and the Forest Service maintains some pit toilets and picnic facilities there.

Dogs on leashes, mountain bikes, and livestock are allowed on the Winsor Trail. You can hike this trail year round, but it is snow covered in the winter and snowshoes or cross-country skis might be necessary. Thunderstorms are very frequent in the summer and you’ll want to bring at least some light rain gear, because the showers are chilling. Lightning and hypothermia are dangers once you get above tree line.

The Zen Forest

Monday, June 14th, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

Pecos Wilderness: The Winsor Trail

The Winsor Trail is Santa Fe’s gateway into the Pecos Wilderness from the west. Its most popular trailhead is near the western end of the large parking area of Ski Santa Fe, at an elevation of 10,240 feet. On the map for which I’ve provided a link, the portion of the trail from the parking area to its intersection with the Nambe Lake Trail is shown, a walk of about 2.5 miles one way. There is a relentless elevation gain of 760 feet in about a mile, to reach the crest of Raven’s Ridge and the entrance to the Pecos Wilderness, so be prepared – this is the price everyone must pay to enjoy this beautiful walk.

Dogs on leashes, mountain bikes, and livestock are allowed on the Winsor Trail. You can hike this trail year round, but it is snow covered in the winter and snowshoes or cross-country skis might be necessary. Thunderstorms are very frequent in the summer and you’ll want to bring at least some light rain gear, because the showers are chilling. Lightning and hypothermia are dangers once you get above tree line.

A walk in the "Zen Forest" along the Winsor Trail above Santa Fe

The Winsor Trail, the local hiker’s route into the magnificent Pecos Wilderness east of Santa Fe, is beautiful from end to end, but there is a short section that passes through a grove of trees with such a remarkable quality of light and peace that I call it the “Zen Forest”.  And since you can reach this place after only a two mile walk from the parking area at Ski Santa Fe, it makes an ideal destination for a day hike during your visit with us.

I’m not sure exactly what accounts for the appeal of this stretch of aspen. The mature trees, tall and widely spaced, let in a generous amount of the radiant northern light. The dark spruces are widely spaced as well, and hang their dark boughs down in a manner admired by the Arts and Crafts printmakers, contrasting beautifully with the bright upright aspen. Huge boulders and outcroppings of white stone emerge from the forest floor in sculptural forms, nestled in a sea of bright green heath and wildflowers.  At any moment in this forest, you expect to hear the sound of temple bells, or catch a glimpse of a forest hermit reclining in the shadows.

Light and aspen

And the fragrance here is heavenly. In summer the air is drowsy with the balsamic scent of spruce needles, warming in the sun. In spring the powerful life-force of the tasseling aspen adds its note. And in fall, with the yellow leaves swirling down against an alpine blue sky and collecting on the stones, there arises the subtle fragrance of oriental lilies, faint but unmistakable, distilled somehow from the aspen leaves as they participate in the Eternal Return.

It’s hard for me to tell you exactly when you’ve reached the Zen Forest. Not too long after you’ve left the dense spruce thickets along the slow descent from the saddle at Raven’s Ridge, the trail begins to turn to the right, and aspen begin to replace the dark evergreens. These trees grow larger, the light magnifies, and presently you’ll reach a spruce whose branches sweep toward the trail, forcing adults to genuflect ever so slightly. You’ve entered the grove. By the time you reach the rustic little bridge over the Rio Nambe, you’ve left it.

Forest Service bridge over the Rio Nambe

Wildflowers are abundant here:

Golden Banner

In spite of the high elevation, some of these forest dwellers have an almost tropical luxuriance:

A spray of Corn Lily near the Rio Nambe

The clean white boulders that crop out in the Zen Forest add to the grove’s luminosity. A closer look at these rocks reveals complex patterns that hint at turbulent past lives:

Ancient metamorphic rock on the forest floor

Without leaving the thread of our story too far, I just want to mention that these are truly remarkable rocks. They are called migmatites, and they represent metamorphic rocks that have been subjected to geologic conditions so extreme that the rocks began to partially fuse, bleeding white granitic melt and contorting into fascinating marble-like patterns. 

When you reach the cheerful Rio Nambe and leave the Zen Forest, you will catch views of Santa Fe Baldy shouldering its great massif skyward, to the north:

Santa Fe Baldy, looking north from a clearing near the Rio Nambe

This might even be your destination, if you are in good shape and you’ve left the trailhead early enough, on a cool summer’s morning. You’d be about a third of the way there, with a climb to a rocky summit at 12,622 feet still facing you. But you might be content instead to sit quietly by the stream and take in the peace of the forest, and then make your way back home, blessed by your brief sojourn among the aspen of the Zen Forest.

Heading home

Getting there: The parking area at Ski Santa Fe is approximately 16 miles from the Santa Fe Plaza, at the very end of NM 475. From the Inn on the Alameda, you turn north on Paseo de Peralta, and then turn right at the light at the intersection of Paseo with Hyde Park Road. A second right at the next light, which is Artist Road, or NM 475, puts you on your way. The Winsor Trail trailhead is clearly marked at the northwestern corner of the parking area, and the Forest Service maintains some pit toilets and picnic facilities there. It would not hurt to bring a trail map if this is your first walk on the Winsor Trail. You can download the PDF from the link I provided above, or purchase a map at the Travel Bug right next door to the Inn.

A Rocky Mountain iris in a meadow near the Winsor trailhead

Eyes on the ground: Hiking the Dale Ball Trails in Santa Fe

Monday, May 10th, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

 

Trail name: Dale Ball Trails South: map  link here and here.

Recommended seasons: These are all-seasons hikes. The trails can be snowy in winter but they are unsuitable for snowshoes. The Dale Ball Trail system ranges in elevation from 7000′ to 9000′ above sea level.

Dogs (on leashes) and mountain bikes are permitted. No horses. These trails are maintained by the City of Santa Fe and are very well marked.

 
A natural abstract painting of lichen and gneiss along the trail

I didn’t have as much time to spend up in the mountains as I usually do, this past weekend, and so on Sunday afternoon I made a short drive to the Nature Conservancy’s Santa Fe Canyon Preserve and had a walk along the Dale Ball Trail network up toward Picacho Peak – a hike I have described before. This is one of my favorite “I don’t have much time” hikes, one which I like to recommend to guests here at the Inn on the Alameda. My original intention was to follow the trail almost to the top of Picacho Peak, but then turn south and make a traverse that follows the ridge line over to Atalaya Mountain, another favorite destination for local hikers. But what with my late start, and a leisurely pace, I abandoned this plan when I got to the junction and turned back to make an equally leisurely walk back.

All of the Dale Ball Trails wind around in what can be considered the “foothills” of the Sangre de Cristo Mountains, which form Santa Fe’s dramatic backdrop. You’ll find quite a few local folks on these walks, many of them giving their dogs an outing. And while most of the trails stay in the “sun forest” of pinon pine that surrounds Santa Fe, green and fragrant all through the year, an observant hiker will find all kinds of signs of the changing seasons on the forest floor: 

First flowers of "Perky Sue", an early-blooming composite in the aster family

 

New Mexico is favored by more flowering varieties of the penstemon clan than any other state. One of the first to bloom is the graceful little Sidebells penstemon. They need another week, but the pretty grey-green spikes, nodding as they do right before pulling themselves erect and flowering, are everywhere in the hills:

Sidebells penstemons about to bloom. Penstemon are in the snapdragon family.

Soon these will be holding up a spike of violet-pink trumpets, with a tiny little “beardstongue” sticking out of each one.

Cactuses bloom in May regardless of the weather. The southern exposures of the foothills of the Sangre de Cristo are home to all kinds of winter hardy cacti. Here’s a cluster of hedgehog cactus aching to bloom:

Flower buds on a hedgehog cactus

Already you can hear hummingbirds whirring through the forest, twittering with anticipation. And there are frisky lizards all over the rocks. I even saw a tiny little horned toad in the stony litter along the trail. I always consider this a blessing, since for years these odd creatures seemed to have vanished. 

Everywhere you turn on these hikes, you seem to find  peaceful, natural rock alcoves as serenely disciplined as a Japanese garden. This twisting pinon lacks nothing except a statue of the Buddha to complete the picture:

A pinon pine along the trail

And – you know me – you can never disregard the rocks. Everywhere you walk in the Santa Fe Range, you will find the ground littered with fragments of very coarse granites in striking colors of red, pink, and white:

A boulder of red granite pegmaite shot through with quartz

Many of these fragments of pegmatite shine with silvery plates of white mica, and very occasionally you will find even more exotic minerals within, like these crystals of black tourmaline sulking darkly in the heart of the granite:

Black tourmaline, or "schorl" exposed in a pegmatite dike

Too bad they’re not gem quality! Or maybe not. The general metallic barrenness of the southern Sangre de Cristo Mountains spared them from the ravages of mining seen, say, up in Colorado, or south of us, in the Ortiz Mountains.

I’ll have more to say about the origin and significance of pegmatites in some future entry, but for now, I’ll just mention that these exotic rocks add a great deal of spice to your walks above Santa Fe. They fill fractures everywhere in the crystalline rocks, giving all sorts of interest to the outcroppings:

Pegmatite dike cutting across a ledge of gneiss

You probably noticed all these photographs were taken looking down. There are plenty of wonderful views along the Dale Ball Trail, believe me. But some of the subtlest signs of Spring – and the not so subtle evidences of ancient igneous activity – can only be seen with an attentive spirit – and eyes on the ground. 

Go have a walk.

How to get there: the trailhead for the Dale Ball Trails South is in the parking area of the Nature Conservancy’s Santa Fe Canyon Preserve. From the Inn on the Alameda, follow Alameda Street east approximately one mile to where it ends in a 3-way stop. Turn left onto Upper Canyon Road and continue east approximately one mile, until the road makes a sharp left and becomes Cerro Gordo Road. Immediately after making this left turn, you will see the parking area for the Nature Conservancy to the right. The trailhead is marked at the far end of the parking area.

 

 

 

A Bad Day for Geology

Monday, May 3rd, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

Tesuque Creek in "Springtime" runoff

Perhaps I should modify that to say “a bad day for doing geology”, as in, it’s really hard to find subtle contacts in the rock record when the ground is covered in two inches of fresh snow, and the trail is still crusty with old snow (which I thought might be gone by now) and the critical exposures in the creek are covered by floods of ice water. I was pushing my luck, I admit, by driving up to the aspen belt and hoping for an idyllic stroll, but the weather this weekend put the icing on the cake – or rather, the mountains – with a spring storm that simply wouldn’t move along. (more…)

The Circle Trail

Monday, April 26th, 2010 by The Santa Fe Naturalist

A view through the trees along the Circle Trail

The snow is slowly retreating from the mountains above Santa Fe, although winter never gives up without a fight in the Rocky Mountains. There was a dazzling new coat of white on the high peaks only a few days ago, revealed the morning after a chilly and unwelcome flurry down here in town last week. But the spring runoff is in full force, the authorities are letting water out of the reservoirs into the little Santa Fe River, which is burbling happily across the street from the Inn, and the aspen and river birches are confident enough to put out fuzzy tassels in the lower reaches of the forested canyons that lead you into the Santa Fe Range. (more…)

See Santa Fe like a Local

Friday, April 23rd, 2010 by Santa Fe Red
Sudden Spring Snow in the Sangres

Sudden Spring Snow in the Sangres

If you’ve been traveling through the blogosphere with us over the last month, you’ll note that the quest for free entertainment has been an ongoing process. Travels in the east stimulated a search for some things a traveler can do for free right here in Santa Fe. As with all destinations, ideas for free fun differ, but these are a few suggestions for times when you want to save your cash for the best Santa Fe restaurant experiences, which can easily consume some hard-earned travelers’ checks. That being said, we’ll forgo a corny Top Ten list and just offer ten ideas, in no particular order of preference, for entertainments that won’t break the travel budget and are accessible most times of the year, even in the event of a unexpected springtime snowstorm! (more…)

Inn on the Alameda | The Authentic Guide to Santa Fe is proudly powered by WordPress
Entries (RSS) and Comments (RSS).

Page Bottom