USA Southwest States Region
Destination Guide & Hotel Reservations
The four sparsely populated Southwestern desert states of NEW
MEXICO, ARIZONA, UTAH and NEVADA are extraordinary, unforgettable and unique. They stretch
from Texas to California across an elemental landscape ranging from towering monoliths of
stark red sandstone to snowcapped mountains, on a high desert plateau that repeatedly
splits open to reveal yawning canyons. The raw power of the scenery, uninterrupted from
horizon to horizon, is overwhelming, and is complemented by the emphatic presence of
numerous Native American cultures and the palpable legacy of America's Wild West frontier.
Among the earliest inhabitants were the Ancestral Puebloans (the former name for
whom, " Anasazi ," has now fallen into disrepute). The remains of their
cliff palaces and cities, abandoned around seven hundred years ago, are scattered
throughout the region, but their direct descendants, the Pueblo peoples of New
Mexico and the Hopi in Arizona, still lead much the same lifestyle, in the same
general vicinity.
Less sedentary tribes, such as the Navajo and the Apache , are thought to
have migrated into the Southwest from the fourteenth century onwards. They adopted local
agricultural and craft techniques and appropriated vast tracts of territory, which they in
turn soon had to defend against bands of European immigrants. The first such, in 1540, was
a party of Spanish explorers led by Coronado, who spent two years searching for
mythical El Dorado-style cities of gold. Sixty years later, Hispanic colonists founded the
province of New Mexico , an ill-defined region that covered not only all of the
Southwest but much of modern California and Colorado; many of the Catholic missions they
established remain intact. Not until 1848 - by which time New Mexico had spent thirty
years as a neglected backwater of the newly independent nation of Mexico - was the region
forcibly taken over by the United States . Almost immediately, large numbers of
outsiders began to pass through on their way to Gold Rush California.
Thereafter, increasingly violent confrontations took place between the US government
and the Native Americans. The entire Navajo population was rounded up and forcibly
removed to the barren plains of eastern New Mexico in 1864 (though they were soon allowed
to return to northeastern Arizona), and the Apache , under warrior chiefs Cochise
and Geronimo, fought extended battles with the US cavalry. Though the nominal intention
was to open up Indian lands to newly American settlers, few ever succeeded in extracting a
living from this harsh terrain.
One exception were the Mormons (or the Church of Jesus Christ of Latterday
Saints), whose flight from religious persecution brought them by the late 1840s to the
alkaline basin of Utah's Great Salt Lake . Through sheer hard work, and the
cooperative management of limited water resources, they established what amounted to an
independent country, with outlying communities all over the Southwest. Even here they met
with resistance, and until the Civil War intervened, there was a real possibility that the
US might declare war on them. They still constitute seventy percent of Utah's population
and maintain virtual control of the state's government.
Despite their common heritage, each of the four Southwestern states remains quite
distinct. New Mexico bears the most obvious traces of long-term settlement, the Native
American pueblos of the north coexisting alongside towns such as Santa Fe, Albuquerque and
Taos, which clearly retain their Spanish colonial identity. In Arizona, the history of the
Wild West is more conspicuous, in towns such as Tombstone , site of the legendary
shoot-out at the OK Corral. Over a third of the state belongs to Native American tribes,
such as the Apache, Hopi and Navajo, most of whom live in the red-rock lands of the
northeast corner, notably amid the splendor typified by the Canyon de Chelly and Monument
Valley .
The canyon country of northern Arizona - even the immense Grand Canyon - won't
prepare you for the uninhabited but compelling landscape of southern Utah, where Zion
and Bryce canyons are just the best known of a string of national parks and
monuments. Moab , poised in the east between majestic Canyonlands and the
surreal Arches , has become a top destination for youthful outdoors enthusiasts.
Nevada, on the other hand, is nothing short of desolate; gamblers are lured in the
millions by the bright lights of Las Vegas , but away from the casinos there's
little to see or do.
You can count on warm sunshine anywhere in the Southwest for nine months of the year,
with incredible sunsets most evenings. Summer is the peak tourist season, for no good
reason - air temperatures topping 100°F can make outdoor life unbearable, while in late
summer awesome thunderstorms sweep in without warning, causing flash floods and forest
fires. By October, perhaps the best time to come, the crowds are gone and in the mountains
and canyons the leaves turn red and gold. Winter brings snow to higher elevations -
there's excellent skiing in northern Utah and in the Sangre de Cristo Mountains
of New Mexico - while spring sees wild flowers bloom in otherwise barren desert. Note that
the climate varies sharply according to elevation, with mountains often 30°F cooler than
the plains.
More than almost anywhere in the US, the backcountry wildernesses of the Southwest are
ideal for (well-planned) camping and backpacking expeditions. It's vital to be
prepared for the harshness of the desert, where even the most basic needs can be hard to
fill: always carry water, and if you venture off the beaten track let someone know where
you're going and when you'll return.
Unless you have your own vehicle, many of the most fascinating corners of the region
are utterly inaccessible. Scheduled public transportation runs almost exclusively
between the big cities - which are not at all where you should aim to spend your time.
Reserve a Hotel Room in The US Southwest States Region
|