Damsite Historic District thanks you

Damsite Historic District thanks you

The three parking lots at Damsite began to fill early and remained full all day long.

The main purpose of Damsite Day (February 18) was to make locals as well as visitors aware of its presence. And hoo boy it did just that. To say the day was a huge success is the epitome of understatement. Starting the festivities were the polar bear plungers, their usual number of about a dozen now at 42, all emerging chilly but happy from the waters of Elephant Butte Lake.

Damsite Historic District — located just 5 miles east of TorC — is already planning next year’s event to be bigger and better.

It’s safe to say the resident squirrels never had to dodge as many cars as they did on Saturday — unofficially 250 to 300, vehicles that is, not squirrels.  Each car held an average of 3 passengers, so do the math.  The weather was New Mexico perfect, and even the food vendors didn’t complain when they sold out — a nice problem to have they said, and something to consider for next year. People crowded around the SCRAGS gems and minerals table all day, which was a highlight of the Welcome Center. The 20 Casita Crawl vendors did gangbusters and were very happy with their digs — all said they would return next year. And speaking of next year, plans are already under way for bigger and better: more music, more food, beer, wine, tours, and a few surprises.

Artist Don Hallock, based in casita number 5, was one of the day’s happy vendors.

Thanks to all who made the day successful. For those who missed it, mark your calendar for next year. This was Sierra County at its best.

TAGS

Share This Post
Durrae Johanek
Durrae Johanek

Durrae Johanek is a Pennsylvania native, transplanted to Montana in 1992, who has fallen in love with T or C, where she snowbirds with her husband, John. To keep her off the streets, John forces her to create art for his ZIA Gallery. In a shoebox under her bed is a diploma from Kutztown State University (yes, that’s a real school) that says she was qualified to write 4 books on Montana and work as an editor for Bird Watcher’s Digest and assorted medical publishers for way too long.

Posts: 14

One comment

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Comment Fields

Please tell us where you live. *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.