Rest Assured And Feel At Home when visiting Palomas
Mexico
Stay at "Los Milagros Hotel" Located just 3 miles from the border crossing!
Three Miles to Go in New Mexico
By MATT GROSS THE border towns of
Columbus, N.M., and Palomas,
Mexico, lie just three miles apart, but that short distance — what you
might drive to the supermarket, say — encapsulates a world of difference.
Columbus,
New Mexico is sparsely built and sparsely populated: fewer than 2,500
people, living in trailers, RVs and modern ranch homes in the desert, with
low, dry scrub never more than a rabbit’s hop away. Each downtown block
contains at most four buildings, painted yellow, blue or pink, and between
them are dusty lots. From the outside, it can be hard to tell whether
anything — three cafes, a
library, the chamber of commerce — is open, so still is the air and so
empty are the streets. It’s like a well-tended house awaiting its owners’
return from vacation.
By contrast, Palomas is dense and lively. Concrete buildings cluster
around the port of entry into the
United States, and street vendors sell decorative saddles and paletas
(similar to Popsicles) to American tourists. Errant mariachi bands patrol
the streets, and at noon men sit under shady trees in a park to hide from
the sun. When it rains, the streets, many of them dirt roads, flood badly,
and shoeless children appear even more pitiful as they beg for pesos.
Farther from the border, the houses are frequently unfinished gray concrete
shells with “For Sale” signs hanging in glassless windows. A few kilometers
out and you’re back in the desert.
This border zone might not seem like a pleasant place for any traveler,
frugal or otherwise, to spend a few days, yet it appealed to me for two
reasons. First, with immigration a hot political topic, I wanted to witness
life as it’s lived on the front lines. Second, Columbus is home to
Los Milagros Hotel with raves from
TripAdvisor.com (“Charming
& Comfortable,” “An
Oasis in the NM Desert”) and an eminently affordable room rate: $40 a
night, since I was staying three nights. Most nightly rates are $60 to $70.
Los Milagros Hotel
Overnight & Long-term
Lodging
In Columbus, New
Mexico
Just 3 miles from
Palomas!
Call for reservations
(575) 531-2467 |
Just after 5 p.m., following a daylong drive from Odessa, Tex., during
which the front wheels of the Volvo made a worrisome sound like a
helicopter’s whump-whump-whump, I arrived at
Martha’s Place.
It is a wide adobe-style building, with balconies and a homey interior that
lived up to the Web reviews. Martha Skinner, a real estate agent and the
town’s former mayor, showed me to a pale-blue bedroom and gave me my first
tutorial in Columbus life: If I wanted to eat, she said, I’d need to do it
soon — all the restaurants close at six o’clock. Fifteen minutes later, I
was tucking into a “wet” burrito ($7), full of luscious shredded beef and
smothered in red chili sauce, from the Pancho Villa Cafe (327 Lima Avenue,
575-531-0555).
The restaurant’s name, it turns out, comes from the town’s history. The
next morning, I visited the Columbus Historical Society Museum (505-531-2620),
in an old train station full of archival photographs, old newspapers and
other artifacts. There I met W. Lee Robinson Jr., a talkative, balding man
who said everyone calls him Radar because he looks like Radar from
“M*A*S*H.” Back in early 1916, Radar explained, Mexico was in upheaval, and
Pancho Villa, a revolutionary general, was feuding with the federal
government in
Mexico City. This conflict might have stayed within Mexico’s borders,
except that Woodrow Wilson decided to end his support of Villa and back
Mexico City instead. In revenge for this slight, Villa sent his forces
across the border on March 9, 1916, to raid Columbus. They burned buildings,
looted businesses and killed 10 citizens and 8 soldiers before being routed.