The South Riding RV Travels

543

11th June 2009 - Tinkertown, Albuquerque to Santa Fe, New Mexico Architecture

Every town has some attraction and just outside Albuquerque is Tinkertown. Tinkertown is a collection of all sorts of things but mainly carved figures, and was the work of one man, . It is situated near Sandia Crest to the east of Albuquerque.
Many of the walls are constructed from glass bottles stacked then cemented together but it is the hand carved people which are the main attraction.
Not all the characters are carved, some are collectible characters like Snow White seen here with the Seven Dwarves and many other characters.
Many of the scenes are set up as doll's houses with all the furniture one might find in a pioneer town early in the century.
Many of the scenes have simple automation and the characters move either by the push of a button or by insertion of a quarter.
This one looks like a store selling tourist items with minute baskets and pots.
The undertaker is off to boot hill but there are angels and devils all around. Some of the characters are quite fanciful.
A different set of scenes depict a three ring circus. Here we have the band and banners advertising some of the attractions.
There is so much going on in some of the scenes. You would need to spend ages looking to spot all the little mini-scenarios.
He obviously had an interest in boats at some time. This is a 35 ft wooden boat, built in 1936 in Maldon, Essex, despite the fact that we are currently about 1000 miles from any sea and rather further from England.

There are many signs with altruisms. The one on the right is interesting since it reflects a view held by many Americans.

To counter it is the sign just above these ladies. 'Travel is fatal to prejudice and narrow mindedness and many people need it badly!' Attributed to Mark Twain in 1869.
Quite what the connection is between the carved characters and this collection of angled spanners, I have no idea, but it reminded us of the Harold Warp Pioneer Museum we visited last year. Collecting collections seems to be an American thing.
I did like this face on a cast plaque just built into a wall.
Outside are a few more artistically arranged sets of ironwork and a few more truisms.

The guy who built it has died now but Tinkertown is run in his memory by his family.

We continued on towards Santa Fe only 60 miles away amidst more of the same scenery we have been in for over a week but this time including hills rising to over 10,000ft.
We could have travelled by the interstate but we chose to travel by a byroad known as the Turquoise Trail.
We stopped off at Madrid, not the capital of Spain but a tourist trap along the way. Today it is full of artists of all sorts and art and craft shops selling their wares, expensive as these arty places tend to be. One of the cafes was featured in a biker movie called Wild Hogs so that now also makes it a place of pilgrimage for hogs (Harley Davidson riders).
It began life as a mining town where both hard and soft coal were dug out of the same mine (there are only two other such mines in the world). It became a ghost town when mining ceased, but there is a small museum which was unfortunately closed today. I'm always a sucker for an old steam engine.
As we travelled on we started to run parallel to the railway line and were overtaken by a rare Amtrak passenger train. Almost all rail traffic in the US is freight.