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Follow the signs on NM 22 to Cochiti Pueblo and Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument. From Santa Fe – South on I-25 and take the Cochiti Pueblo Exit 264 off I-25 onto NM 16. Turn right off NM 16 onto NM 22, and follow the signs to Cochiti Pueblo and the National Monument. Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument: Beautiful Hike on Slot Canyon Trail - See 1,562 traveller reviews, 1,919 candid photos, and great deals for Cochiti Pueblo, NM, at Tripadvisor. Tent Rocks Slot Canyon Trail, Sunbeam Long Slot 2 Slice Toaster Ta4520. Hiking in Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument:! Add anything here here or just remove it. Cochiti Pueblo, New Mexico Lake Cochiti Campground If you read our last blogpost, you know that we re-routed our trip back to Arizona so that we could stop in this area to hike the slot canyon Ingrid told me about. It is a magical place. Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument is managed by the BLM and is about 40 miles SW of. This three mile loop through a slot canyon with hoodos and striated rock formations is a religious site of the Cochiti Pueblo. The Slot has beautiful examples of rock strata, hoodos, the effects of wind and water. It’s a nice climb-about 750 ft climb in about 3 miles. Going though tunnels and up ledges.

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New Mexico > Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument
Amazing volcanic formations - tall, pinkish white cones made of pumice and tuff, lining the edge of a remote valley (Peralta Canyon). Narrow ravines wind between the pinnacles, and the ground is scattered with shiny pieces of obsidian
Santa Fe, 35 miles
All year
★★★★
The Tent Rocks were a little known BLM site before their elevation to national monument status in January 2001, but now the area has improved access and facilities, and sees a steady stream of visitors. Kasha-Katuwe is a Keresan phrase meaning 'white cliffs', Keres being the traditional language of the pueblo tribes of northern New Mexico. The teepee-like formations cover a small area but are quite remarkable, unique in the Southwest - hundreds of white, pinkish or grey spires, sharply conical in shape, lacking any covering vegetation, that occur in several groups on the east side of Peralta Canyon, on the Pajarito Plateau 40 miles west of Santa Fe.
The rocks were formed by erosion of thick layers of pumice and tuff, and since the overlying sandstone strata are more resistant to erosion, residual pieces form caprocks over the ash, which, being so soft, erodes rapidly downwards, creating the tall spires. If a cap rock is dislodged, the spire quickly (in geological timescales) weathers away, though new ones gradually form further up the hillside. The tuff is a remnant of explosive volcanic eruptions of between 6 and 7 million years ago, as are pieces of obsidian, a translucent, brown/black volcanic glass known locally as Apache Tears, which can be found scattered over the washes and cliffs of the monument and especially around the river in the main valley, though collecting samples is not allowed.


Approach Route

Tent Rocks Slot Canyon Trail Cochiti Pueblo Colorado


The national monument is somewhat isolated but well signposted, starting from exits 259 (NM 22) or 264 (NM 16) of interstate 25 between Albuquerque and Santa Fe. Both roads are relatively busy, and converge at Pena Blanca after which NM 22 is narrower, passing through several sleepy settlements. The highway turns north in front of the 4.5 mile wide, 250 feet high

Tent Rocks Slot Canyon Trail Cochiti Pueblo Bonito

Cochiti Dam across the Rio Grande - a rather incongruous sight in the otherwise natural, unspoilt valley, this was completed in 1975 and now contains the 7 mile long Tent Rocks Slot Canyon Trail Cochiti PuebloCochiti Lake, popular for fishing and boating. The main road bends back to the southwest into Pueblo de Cochiti, the main village in the 53,779 acre Cochiti Indian Reservation.

Road from Cochiti Pueblo


The pueblo has a few facilities including a store and gas station, and is a welcoming place, with opportunities to view the life and history of the native peoples. The one main regulation is a ban on photography and all forms of recording, even drawing and painting. The last 5 miles of the route to the tent rocks is along BIA 92 (later FR 266) - once a bumpy gravel track, this was paved in 2010 as far as the rocks. Although the track continues through large areas of public BLM land in the Santa Fe National Forest and the Jemez Mountains, the country surrounding the national monument is privately owned, so various signs warn of no trespassing and other land use regulations. In the monument, the main activity is hiking along one of the two maintained trails. As of 2009, dogs are not permitted.

Tent Rocks Slot Canyon Trail Cochiti Pueblo State Park

The 1.2 mile Cave Loop Trail around a side valley and the 1.5 mile (one-way) Slot Canyon Trail, through a narrow ravine and up to the plateau

Stripy formations


Dryfall

Bandelier National Monument (90 miles) - ancient dwellings in a volcanic canyon
Petroglyph National Monument (55 miles) - thousands of petroglyphs carved on volcanic boulders
Santa Fe (45 miles) - the historic state capitol of New Mexico
Similar places

Valley of Fire State Park, Nevada - eroded rock formations and slot canyons
Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks is part of the New Mexico Highlights itinerary
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