Guidebook for Taos

Jessie
Guidebook for Taos

Food Scene

Very popular place for breakfast in Taos. There is often a waiting line.
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Michael's Kitchen Restaurant and Bakery
304-C Pueblo St Rd
70 personas locales recomiendan
Very popular place for breakfast in Taos. There is often a waiting line.
Our favorite place for good Mexican food, frozen margaritas. No ambiance at all.
53 personas locales recomiendan
Guadalajara Grill
822 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
53 personas locales recomiendan
Our favorite place for good Mexican food, frozen margaritas. No ambiance at all.
High end, excellent special-occasion restaurant located in an historic building on a quaint street near the Plaza
97 personas locales recomiendan
Lambert's of Taos
123 Bent St
97 personas locales recomiendan
High end, excellent special-occasion restaurant located in an historic building on a quaint street near the Plaza
My favorite place for pizza anywhere in the US
44 personas locales recomiendan
Taos Pizza Out Back
712 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
44 personas locales recomiendan
My favorite place for pizza anywhere in the US
Lovely, romantic ambiance. Excellent food
139 personas locales recomiendan
The Love Apple
803 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
139 personas locales recomiendan
Lovely, romantic ambiance. Excellent food
Tiny and quaint restaurant. Just four tables, plus dining on the patio. The best New Mexican food in Taos.
45 personas locales recomiendan
La Cueva Cafe
135 Paseo Del Pueblo Sur
45 personas locales recomiendan
Tiny and quaint restaurant. Just four tables, plus dining on the patio. The best New Mexican food in Taos.
Said to have excellent chile rellenos. The building has historical significance in the life of Taos.
43 personas locales recomiendan
Doc Martin's Restaurant
125 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
43 personas locales recomiendan
Said to have excellent chile rellenos. The building has historical significance in the life of Taos.
Good menu. Close to Casa Milagro
37 personas locales recomiendan
Martyrs Steakhouse
146 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
37 personas locales recomiendan
Good menu. Close to Casa Milagro

Essentials

Organic whole foods. free range meat.
123 personas locales recomiendan
Cid's Food Market
623 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
123 personas locales recomiendan
Organic whole foods. free range meat.

Sightseeing

The quentessential example of southwestern architecture. Over a thousand years old and the oldest continuously inhabited residence in America
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Taos Pueblo
228 personas locales recomiendan
The quentessential example of southwestern architecture. Over a thousand years old and the oldest continuously inhabited residence in America
The historic Plaza, established in the 1700s, a trading market on the early American Santa Fe Trail.
86 personas locales recomiendan
Taos Plaza
North Plaza
86 personas locales recomiendan
The historic Plaza, established in the 1700s, a trading market on the early American Santa Fe Trail.
Kit Carson lived here with his young Spanish wife Joséphina. A true American adventurer and hero.
22 personas locales recomiendan
Kit Carson Home & Museum
113 Kit Carson Rd
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Kit Carson lived here with his young Spanish wife Joséphina. A true American adventurer and hero.
The site sits on an escarpment that originally defined the defensive boundary of Old Spanish Taos. Includes a family chapel built in 1835.
14 personas locales recomiendan
The Couse-Sharp Historic Site
146 Kit Carson Rd
14 personas locales recomiendan
The site sits on an escarpment that originally defined the defensive boundary of Old Spanish Taos. Includes a family chapel built in 1835.
Built in 1804, gives a rare glimpse of rugged frontier life. The oldest child of the original family was famous Padre Martinez, a social reformer and advocate for native American people.
21 personas locales recomiendan
Martinez Hacienda
708 Hacienda Rd
21 personas locales recomiendan
Built in 1804, gives a rare glimpse of rugged frontier life. The oldest child of the original family was famous Padre Martinez, a social reformer and advocate for native American people.
The Rio Grande Gorge Bridge, locally known as the "Gorge Bridge" or the "High Bridge",[2] is a steel deck arch bridge across the Rio Grande Gorge 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Taos, New Mexico, United States. Roughly 600 ft above the Rio Grande, it is the tenth highest bridge in the United Stages.
226 personas locales recomiendan
Puente del Cañón del Río Grande
226 personas locales recomiendan
The Rio Grande Gorge Bridge, locally known as the "Gorge Bridge" or the "High Bridge",[2] is a steel deck arch bridge across the Rio Grande Gorge 10 miles (16 km) northwest of Taos, New Mexico, United States. Roughly 600 ft above the Rio Grande, it is the tenth highest bridge in the United Stages.

Arts

Whether your tastes range from prehistoric pottery to contemporary jewelry, the MRM is the place to experience all the cultures of the Southwest—and all under one roof. As you walk through our 20 galleries and exhibition spaces, you too will make your own discoveries about the heritage of the Hispanic, Native American and Anglo arts and cultures of the Southwest.
61 personas locales recomiendan
Millicent Rogers Museum
1504 Millicent Rogers Rd
61 personas locales recomiendan
Whether your tastes range from prehistoric pottery to contemporary jewelry, the MRM is the place to experience all the cultures of the Southwest—and all under one roof. As you walk through our 20 galleries and exhibition spaces, you too will make your own discoveries about the heritage of the Hispanic, Native American and Anglo arts and cultures of the Southwest.
84 personas locales recomiendan
Harwood Museum of Art
238 Ledoux St
84 personas locales recomiendan
9 personas locales recomiendan
Blumenschein Studio Gallery
222 Ledoux St
9 personas locales recomiendan
16 personas locales recomiendan
Mabel Dodge Luhan Historic House
240 Morada Ln
16 personas locales recomiendan
43 personas locales recomiendan
Taos Art Museum
227 Paseo Del Pueblo Norte
43 personas locales recomiendan

Day trips

An Earthship is a type of passive solar house that is made of both natural and upcycled materials such as earth-packed tires, pioneered by architect Michael Reynolds. Click on image to enlarge The Earthship archecture concept began to take shape in the 1970s. The architect Michael Reynolds wanted to create a home that would do three things: first, it would utilize sustainable architecture, and material indigenous to the local area or recycled materials wherever possible; second, the homes would rely on natural energy sources and be independent from the “grid”; thirdly, it would be feasible for a person with no specialized construction skills to build. Eventually, Reynolds’s vision was transformed into the common U-shaped earth-filled tire homes seen today.
7 personas locales recomiendan
Earthship Community
82 Star Ln
7 personas locales recomiendan
An Earthship is a type of passive solar house that is made of both natural and upcycled materials such as earth-packed tires, pioneered by architect Michael Reynolds. Click on image to enlarge The Earthship archecture concept began to take shape in the 1970s. The architect Michael Reynolds wanted to create a home that would do three things: first, it would utilize sustainable architecture, and material indigenous to the local area or recycled materials wherever possible; second, the homes would rely on natural energy sources and be independent from the “grid”; thirdly, it would be feasible for a person with no specialized construction skills to build. Eventually, Reynolds’s vision was transformed into the common U-shaped earth-filled tire homes seen today.
Whether you’re a believer or not, there’s something about the serenity of small churches that makes them inviting. Add an unusual history or legend, and the attraction doubles. So it is with El Santuario de Chimayo, a small church in Chimayo, N.M., between Taos and Santa Fe. Founded in 1816 by Bernardo Abeyta and other residents of the then-separate village of El Portero, it was purchased by the Spanish Colonial Arts Society in 1929 and donated to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe.
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Chimayo
31 personas locales recomiendan
Whether you’re a believer or not, there’s something about the serenity of small churches that makes them inviting. Add an unusual history or legend, and the attraction doubles. So it is with El Santuario de Chimayo, a small church in Chimayo, N.M., between Taos and Santa Fe. Founded in 1816 by Bernardo Abeyta and other residents of the then-separate village of El Portero, it was purchased by the Spanish Colonial Arts Society in 1929 and donated to the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Santa Fe.
23 personas locales recomiendan
The O'Keeffe: Welcome Center
21120 US-84
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