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Sloths arrive at Alamogordo zoo

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Sarah Rubinstein
Artesia Daily Press

Two new animals will be hanging around the Alameda Park Zoo.

Two Linnaeus’s two-toed sloths were revealed to the public on Jan. 3, and since then they’ve had about 500 visitors, according to Palmer Shelton, the zoo’s education coordinator.

He said staff haven’t named the sloths yet because they want to get to know their personality more. He noted the five-year-old female sloth has a more social personality than the three-year-old male.

The sloths arrived from the Hemker Park Zoo in Minnesota, a zoo Alameda frequently works with, Shelton said, adding that the collaboration puts Alamogordo on the map, with sloths being very rare at zoos in New Mexico.

“It’s like the coolest thing ever,” Shelton said excitedly. “Almost nobody in the state has sloths.”

The Linnaeus’s two-toed sloths are found natively in the Northern half of South America like Colombia, Argentina and North Chile. These sloths are nocturnal and spend most of their lives upside down. They like to munch on leafy greens and vegetables but typically don’t make much noise, only sometimes hissing or giving a low growl.

“Their limbs are super strong, they can hold themselves up with just one finger,” Shelton said.

Shelton said the zoo hopes to train the sloths so they can eventually take them to events at schools or the library.

What else is happening at the zoo?

The Alameda Park Zoo has just updated its winter hours from January through February. The zoo will be closed Mondays and Tuesdays and be open Wednesdays through Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Plus, every Wednesday at 10:30 a.m. staff will hold Zookeeper talks with a new animal. Animals will be revealed on the zoo’s Facebook page on Sundays or Mondays.

Opinion: Movies give us heroes. History gives us flawed giants

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Sherry Robinson
All She Wrote

I’m starting 2026 by rethinking – and maybe even changing my mind about – an old issue.

After Taos Pueblo objected to the name of Kit Carson Park in Taos, the town council voted in November to change it to Red Willow Park; this pueblo calls itself the Red Willow People. To the town’s credit – and unlike the harebrained responses to similar issues in Española, Santa and Albuquerque – the Taoseños deliberated and discussed the question for months.

At least some did.

The name-change demand has stirred controversy three times since the 1970s, according to the Albuquerque Journal. Last year the town council organized a committee to rename the park, chaired by Councilor Genevieve Oswald. Because previous discussions didn’t include the pueblo, the council named a pueblo official, Jesse Winters, to the committee. The group met monthly last year and heard presentations, held forums and issued surveys. Winters gathered opinions from pueblo members.

From the beginning Oswald wanted to change the name, but she did enough reading to decide that she didn’t care for Kit Carson and believed the government made bad choices. She saw the renaming as an opportunity to “do better going forward.”

Kit Carson was a famous scout, soldier, Indian agent, rancher and trader. In 1862 and 1863 Gen. James Carleton ordered a reluctant Carson to undertake brutal, scorched-earth campaigns against the Mescalero Apaches and the Navajos. After their surrender, Carleton sent them to what became a concentration camp at Bosque Redondo. The Navajos’ terrible journey, called the Long Walk, and Bosque Redondo are traumas passed through generations of tribal members.

Kit Carson was then a hero in Taos, where Hispanic settlers had fought the Navajos for 200 years. But Carson’s stature in history hasn’t weathered well over time.

Carson’s biographer Hampton Sides has said, “He was on the ‘right’ side of history at many times and in many places in his lifetime.” Sides told the Journal that Taos Pueblo “just hated the Navajo, absolutely hated them and feared them” because of Navajo raids. I would add that Navajos, Apaches and Pueblos had a complex network of allies and adversaries. Navajos and Apaches might befriend one pueblo but raid another, and the pueblos fought amongst themselves.

History is what actually happened, not what you wish had happened. Taos Pueblo today may object to the park’s name, but historically the pueblo had good relations with Kit Carson.

However, in November Sides said: “(P)eople have a perfect right in subsequent generations to decide how they want to furnish their public parks and other public spaces – as long as the process is done with some thought.”

I’m a journalist and a historian. Wearing my historian hat, I have argued that figures like Kit Carson, Don Juan de Oñate, Geronimo and even Billy the Kid were products of their times. We can learn from their lives and their decisions, but we can’t view them through the lens of our own times.

Still, Sides’s comment made me think. Some communities have decided that they no longer want to honor Confederate generals, that those ubiquitous statues in the park are an affront to segments of the local population. New Mexico’s history is more complicated, but these are our debates too.

When I mentioned this change of heart to a historian friend, she responded: “If communities have the right to make changes – and I can see some of that logic, especially if they find new information or things were lopsided in the first place – but then 20 years down the road does a community again have the right to change and how much? … Change can be good or disruptive and cause people to renew their anger and hatred toward groups … And do we judge the times by our own era, or theirs, or a combo or what?”

It’s tricky, but I salute Taos for wading in.

Councilor Oswald said that “our work has always been about more than just a name, and we approached this task with care, recognizing the need to address historical harms and foster civic relationships. Our process was designed to be inclusive, transparent and rooted in community values.”

Mayor Pro-tem Marietta Fambro, who voted against the change, noted that only about 150 people among the town’s 5,000 residents and Taos County’s 33,000 took part in the renaming process. Most people likely don’t care.

And neither would Kit Carson himself. A shy and unassuming man, he was never comfortable with his national celebrity. “One of the ironies of this whole debate is that he probably just wouldn’t give a damn one way or the other,” Sides said.

I say that for communities, for the people who do give a damn, it’s a discussion worth having, and Taos has now given us a model.

Sherry Robinson is a longtime New Mexico reporter and editor. She has worked in Grants, Gallup, the Albuquerque Journal, New Mexico Business Weekly and Albuquerque Tribune. She is the author of four books. Her columns won first place in 2024 from New Mexico Press Women.

Murder trials to watch in 2026

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Adrian Hedden
Artesia Daily Press

Several Carlsbad area murder suspects could stand trial this year in Eddy County District Court.

All defendants in criminal cases are considered innocent of the charges against them until proven guilty as determined by a 12-person jury or through a plea deal with prosecutors.

Here are the top Eddy County criminal trials to watch in 2026.

Alexee Trevizo – 1st-degree murder

Trevizo was accused of murder in the January 2023 death of her newborn son at Artesia General Hospital. Police said Trevizo gave birth to the child in a bathroom at the hospital, then put him in a trash can where the child suffocated.

She was charged with first-degree murder on Jan. 27, 2023, and was released from custody ahead of the trial to attend her high school graduation and visit family in New Mexico.

The criminal case was delayed after former Judge Jane Shuler Gray ruled police body camera footage taken at the hospital and allegedly showing Trevizo confessing to a doctor that she killed her son was inadmissible.

In her ruling, Shuler Gray wrote that Trevizo’s statements in her hospital room were protected by doctor-patient privilege. The Fifth Judicial District Attorney’s Office appealed the ruling to the New Mexico Supreme Court, which heard oral arguments on the matter Sept. 4, 2025.

The Supreme Court has yet to rule on the evidence.

Jayden Mendibles – child abuse resulting in death

Mendibles’ 3-month-old daughter was found dead at the defendant’s home in November 2023, and police accused him several months later of beating her to death.

Mendibles, 23, of Artesia was arrested on June 21, 2024, and charged with a single count of child abuse resulting in death.

He initially told police the child suffered from fatal brain injuries after falling off a bed, but an autopsy of the infant listed “blunt force trauma” and homicide as the cause of death.

Prosecutors withdrew a motion to hold Mendibles in custody ahead of trial but he failed to appear in a subsequent hearing and a warrant was issued for his arrest on Oct. 31, 2025.

He was not in custody as of Wednesday, Dec. 31, and was scheduled for a preliminary hearing on Jan. 12 before District Judge David Finger.

Manuel Sanchez – 1st-degree murder

Sanchez, 44, was charged in 2020 with shooting and killing 42-year-old Brian Runnels then burying his body in a remote area of Eddy County in 2014.

Runnels was reported missing for six years, until the case was reopened in 2020. Investigators relied on the confession of co-defendant Brett Roark, 48, who said he witnessed Sanchez shoot Runnels and helped him bury the body.

Roark was also charged with murder but pleaded guilty to voluntary manslaughter in a deal with the Fifth Judicial District Attorney’s Office and was sentenced to seven years in prison. The prison time was suspended by the court, and Roark was released to a halfway house.

A jury failed to reach a verdict in Sanchez’s trial on Oct. 23, 2023, and a new trial is scheduled for Feb. 9 before District Judge Eileen Riordan.

Manuel Guillen – child abuse resulting in death

Two-month-old Khalanie Sue Moreno was found dead Sept. 7, 2024, in a shallow grave dug in a remote area off State Road 137, also known as the Queen Highway, in Eddy County.

The girl’s mother Brianna Stallings, 25, and her boyfriend Manuel Guillen, 32, were arrested after a months-long investigation into the death when Stallings confessed the child was smothered by Guillen.

Stallings said Guillen purposefully sat on the child to stop her from crying, contradicting her initial story that she accidentally rolled on top of the baby while the three of them slept in a car near the burial site.

Stallings told police the couple “panicked,” according to a criminal complaint, and buried the body nearby. She was charged with a single count of tampering with evidence.

An October 2025 jury trial for Guillen was continued and he was slated for a pretrial conference on Jan. 12. Stallings was charged with tampering with evidence and scheduled for a jury trial on May 1.

Leonard Tidwell – 1st-degree murder

Tidwell, 34, was originally charged with two counts of aggravated battery and possession of a firearm by a felon on Sept. 12.

On that day, at about 12:12 a.m., police found 39-year-old Carlos Montoya suffering from stab wounds at an apartment in the 800 block of McKay Street in Carlsbad. Montoya died at the hospital on Oct. 22 from his wounds, and Tidwell’s charges were upgraded to murder.

Tidwell was arraigned Nov. 24 and scheduled for a jury trial on July 1 before District Judge David Finger.

Managing Editor Adrian Hedden can be reached at 575-628-5516, or @AdrianHedden on the social media platform X.

Candidates file for March Artesia city elections

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Mike Smith
Artesia Daily Press
msmith@currentargus.com

 Some familiar names could return to the Artesia City Council and a new mayor will take office after the March 3 municipal elections.

Tuesday was filing day for candidates seeking office in city government as candidates turned in paperwork with the Artesia city clerk’s office to secure places on the ballot.

District 3 councilor and current mayor pro tem Jeff Youtsey filed to replace outgoing mayor and State Rep. Jonathan Henry as did Terrance L. Todd, former site director of the Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Artesia.

Mayoral Candidate Terrance Todd

Youtsey, who ran unsuccessfully against Henry in 2022, said his 14 years as a member of the city council have prepared him to lead Artesia for the next four years.

“I understand the budget, I understand how the city works and I feel I’m the most qualified to take up the reigns and finish up some projects that we’ve begun that are very important and I feel like I have the knowledge and the tenacity for it and I’m ready to hit the ground running,” he said in an interview after submitting his paperwork to City Clerk Summer Valverde.

Council seats in Districts 1, 2, 3 and 4 are on the ballot. All the candidates are seeking four-year terms except District 4 incumbent Michael Bunt, who is running to serve the final two years of a vacancy he was appointed to fill. No other candidate filed for the seat.

Artesia Mayor Pro Tem Jeff Youtsey filed paperwork to run for mayor during the March 3, 2026 Artesia Municipal Elections. Mike Smith | Artesia Daily Press

District 4’s other incumbent, Dickie Townley, is not seeking reelection. Two candidates filed for the post, former councilor Terry L. Hill and Charles Morgan Wagner II.

In District 1, longtime councilor Raul Rodriguez filed for reelection. No candidate filed to oppose him.

In District 2, incumbent George Mullen chose not to seek another term. Donovan Jacob Garcia, Nathan Norman Ryno and Joseph W. Wright filed to replace Mullen.

District 3 incumbent Wade Nelson decided not to run for a second term. Former District 3 representative Allen K. Bratcher filed to regain the seat he relinquished to mount an unsuccessful campaign for mayor in 2022.

The city clerk’s office still must verify the candidates’ paperwork before their names are officially placed on the ballot. Valverde said she expects the verifications to be completed by Jan. 9.

Other important election information

The last day for a candidate to withdraw from the election is Jan. 13, according to New Mexico Secretary of State Maggie Toulouse Oliver.

Write-in candidates will be accepted until Jan. 13.

Mike Smith can be reached at 575-628-5546 extension-2361.

Artesia wins in rout over Pojoaque Valley

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JT Keith
Artesia Daily Press
jtkeith@elritomedia.com

Just 10 games into its season, the Artesia boys team made the game of basketball look easy. The Bulldogs pummeled Pojoaque Valley 72-34 on Saturday at the Bulldog Pit.

Charlie Campbell IV led the Bulldogs with 17 points, and Braylon Vega had 11 points, along with three other players who scored in the double digits.

“We did what we were supposed to do,” Artesia basketball coach Michael Mondragon said. “Our beginnings were the topic of our discussion. Taking care of the ball and guarding have been inconsistent in our quarters at times. I thought we played pretty well for four quarters. In the third quarter, we were a little tired, and we weren’t rotating well with our press. We gave up some open looks with the 3-pointers. We are doing the little things and getting better. We are happy about the 4A win.”

Mondragon said his team is getting better, the football players are getting their basketball legs and overall, the team is doing the little things that will help them win. One thing Mondragon said he was happy about was the way the Bulldogs share the ball.

“That’s what makes it hard to stop,” Mondragon said. “We are a team. These guys love each other, and that makes this team so unique. They don’t care about accolades. You cannot do what we have done and are doing, and you don’t have selfless guys. As long as they play together, we will be tough to beat. Our guys care about one thing, winning and playing for each other and making sure they are doing things for each other.”

The Bulldogs have a big stretch of games coming up, with Carlsbad visiting the Bulldog Pit at 7 p.m. Tuesday. The teams met earlier this season, when the Bulldogs led the Cavemen until the final four minutes of the fourth quarter. Artesia lost that game 60-54 on Dec. 19.

Mondragon said the Bulldogs look forward to protecting the Pit in the game against Carlsbad. He said he would like the team to come out and play with energy, improving on the last time the two teams played in Carlsbad.

“We want to play our best basketball come the end of February and early March,” Mondragon said.

JT Keith can be reached at 575-420-0061, or on X @JTKEITH1.

Artesians look ahead to 2026

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Mike Smith
Artesia Daily Press
msmith@currentargus.com

As Artesia rolls in 2026, community leaders such as longtime City Councilor Raul Rodriguez are pondering the city’s future and setting goals for the new year.

Rodriguez, who has served the residents of District 1 for 24 years, said things are looking bright for Artesia with ongoing infrastructure projects and increased business activity.

“I hope not to slow the process down (and) to continue at a steady pace and to finish the projects that we’ve got going on,” he said.

Rodriguez said finishing up construction work on 26th street along with remodeling the former Artesia Police station at 702 W. Chisum Ave. and the current Artesia City Hall at 511 W. Texas Ave. are some of the major projects the city is working on this year.

“We have a bright future ahead of us,” Rodriguez said. “We are also looking at housing projects for the future. We’re trying to entice more businesses to come into the city.”

With the pursuit of fossil fuels continuing unabated in the Permian Basin of southeast New Mexico, Rodriguez said, Artesia has developed a progressive attitude when it comes to growth and meeting the demands of an increased population.

“Being progressive makes you want things to get done and it’s going to help the economy,” he said. “Just think, the future of technology, the future of everything is going to get larger and expand and we need to grow into it.”

Hayley Klein, Artesia’s brand-new city administrator, agreed with Rodriguez and added city government was pushing toward efficiency in local government.

“A smooth transition of responsibilities to a new administration will be at the top of the list. The newly created city administrator position is designed to help the administration meet its goals, work with the community, and represent the city’s interests around the state,” she said.

Klein said the community was on track to have a successful 2026 and looked forward to collaborating with community partners and citizens.

Artesia Police Chief Kirk Roberts said crime has decreased in the community since 2021. He is looking for that trend to continue this year.

“Operations will also include new progressive patrol and investigative tactics while leveraging software and new training capabilities intended to increase efficiency in operations,” Roberts said in an email to the Artesia Daily Press.
“Over this same period Artesia Police has been effective in recruiting and retention efforts that have resulted in moving from 40% of our allotted positions being vacant to only about an 8% vacancy rate. The increase in personnel available at all hours of the day will greatly improve the department’s ability to reduce crashes and conduct expanded crime prevention operations, Artesia PD’s second main goal for 2026.”

For State Sen. James Townsend (R-34), protecting jobs and creating additional employment for future generations are top priorities in 2026.

Townsend said funding public safety and helping area schools will be among the challenges facing the New Mexico Legislature in its upcoming session starting Jan. 20.

“We are blessed in southeast New Mexico with natural resources, great companies and caring educators and dedicated law enforcement officers,” he said in an email. “One of our jobs as legislators is to listen to them and help them succeed.”

Tommy Salsberry, general manager of the Spark by Hilton hotel at 203 North Second Street, says helping his family thrive and the hospitality industry grow are among his goals for this year.

“I get a great joy of being able to provide and be available for my family, whether its financially or motivationally,” he said. “Whether it’s immediate family or friends, I want to be able to be there.”

Salsberry has spent 10 years in the hospitality industry and has served as general manager at the Spark by Hilton for 10 months.

He’s hoping for growth not only at the Spark but for Artesia’s hospitality industry in general.

Stayce Smith, a popular radio personality who can be heard on KWMW 105.1 FM, said extra music is not the only item her 2026 to-do list. One big resolution: complimenting one person every day. Another: compiling her official “bucket list,”

“Even if I know I will never complete many of them the dreaming about it part can be almost just as fun,” she said. “I am also going to make sure I smile more than I frown and eat at least one green thing a week,” she said.

Mike Smith can be reached at 575-628-5546 extension-2361.

Caraway announces candidacy for probate judge

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Staff reports

John Caraway announced his candidacy for the office of Eddy County Probate Judge.

Caraway previously served two four-year terms as Probate Judge from 2011-2018.

He will be on the ballot for the Nov. 3 general election, hoping to replace Jay Francis who is term limited after serving two terms.

Probate judges preside over issues such as will execution, validating and appointing executors, along with conflicts that may arise between beneficiaries.

“My experience in previously serving as probate judge will be of benefit to the citizens of Eddy County,” Caraway said in his announcement of candidacy.

“As judge I was sensitive to those in need in difficult times following the death of a relative or loved one. My prior experience of practicing probate and estate law additionally equips me to perform my function of presiding over different estate matters.”

He also noted a penchant for helping train new judges during his previous term in office.

“My previous terms in office also included the teaching and instruction of my fellow Probate Judges during our required annual training,” Caraway said.

Anyone with questions related to my candidacy may reach out to Caraway at johncaraway@yahoo.com.

First Launch Pad Lecture of 2026 goes to the moon

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Sarah Rubinstein
Artesia Daily Press

New Mexico Museum of Space History Education Director Michael Shinabery gave an impassioned presentation Friday at the first Launchpad Lecture of 2026. As part of the series of free monthly lectures at the museum, he spoke on Apollo 11, the mission to land on the moon.

Shinabery, who was only 12 years old during the moon landing, watched alongside his grandfather, who was born in 1892.

“That was huge for us,” Shinabery said. “In school, we would read science fiction books and literature like ‘Planet of the Apes.’ When I was in high school, it was a lot of Ray Bradbury. It was talked about in science.”

Shinabery, who will be retiring in May, connected several space topics to Alamogordo.

For instance, German aerospace engineer and architect Wernher von Braun came to White Sands Missile Range (formerly White Sands Proving Ground) conducting live firings with V-2 rockets. This helped lay the groundwork for the National Aeronautics and Space Administration’s (NASA) lunar missions.

The 1956 film “On the Threshold of Space” was partially filmed at Holloman Air Force Base, he said.

Shinabery also spoke on using the former pool at the New Mexico School for the Blind and Visually Impaired in Alamogordo during the 1950s. Inside the pool, studies were done to tell if people could tell directions in weightlessness, ultimately discovering that they cannot.

“Men were put in scuba gear, put down in the pool, blindfolded and spun everywhere,” he said.

When discussing the Apollo 11 mission, Shinabery shared lesser-known facts. For instance, “contact light” were the technical first words spoken on the moon by Buzz Aldrin. Also, Neil Armstrong carried pieces of wood and fiber from the Wright brothers’ plane on the mission to the moon.

What’s coming up?

Executive Director Karen Kincaid Brady announced the museum will be celebrating its 50th anniversary with a gala in October.

Plus, the museum is also bringing back its free monthly “Science Saturdays.” The first Science Saturday will be held on Jan. 31 from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. The event will be themed around Ham the Astrochimp, the first great ape launched into space.

Participants will learn about the role chimpanzees played in the Holloman Aeromedical Center program and how their flights helped prepare humans for space.​ Museum educators will lead hands-on great-ape themed crafts designed for students from second to seventh grades.

Artesia High bowlers victorious in Rio Rancho

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Ken Clayton
Special to the Artesia Daily Press

The Artesia High bowling team opened the second half of its New Mexico High School Bowling Association season by traveling to Rio Rancho with the idea of continuing its strong year.

The Artesia No. 1 Advanced team came out not looking like they had been on a three-week break, rolling team games of 981 and 1008 for a 1,989 total and a 119-pin lead over Bernalillo High.

The Bulldogs’ No. 1 team took no chances entering the Baker game section of the tournament by throwing the first seven strikes on the way to a tournament-high 258 Baker game. Artesia followed that with games of 239 and 204, locking up its third victory of the season.

Leading Artesia No. 1 was Ayden Gomez with games of 237-225 for a total series of 462. Ayden leads all bowlers in the state with a 226 average halfway through the season. Chase Collins added a team-high 258 game to go with his 437 series, and Jace Miles (213), Brenden Depew (189) and Payton DeMerritt (178) rounded out the winning effort.

Artesia Advanced No. 2 made a strong Baker game effort after opening the scoring with team games of 942-880 to enable it to tie Bernalillo High for second place. Baker game scores of 192 and 213 allowed Artesia No. 2 to make up 147 pins in seven games to move to second place.

Leading Artesia No. 2 was sophomore Ayden Dean with games of 214-214 and a 428 series. Damian Lopez added games of 191-187 to the Bulldogs’ runner-up effort.

“We are proud of the progress our bowlers are making as we keep moving them up in divisions and they continue to be competitive,” said Bulldogs coach Ken Clayton. “New bowlers competing in the Intermediate Division are not regulars, but it does not intimidate our kids; they take the challenge.”

Artesia Intermediate No. 4 competed in the 11-team division and came home with a second-place finish, trailing Valley High School by only 26 pins. Jack Erbacher led team No. 4 with 179-155, with help from Ashlyn McIntire (168-156), Edwin Villarreal (176), Adam Longoria (163) and Maggie Morris (147).

The Artesia Bulldog Rookie Division team of Ethan Longoria (145-136), Mia Duran (137-136), Kenzie Cabezuela (163), Daniel Alcocer (139) and JC Apodaca (105) won its third tournament of the season, taking first place by more than 400 pins.

Other leading scores by Bulldog bowlers were Justin Rodriguez with 226, Zeke Sanchez with 186-180, Brent McIntire with 177, Peyton Troost with 172, Destiny Powell with 170, Diego Molina with 170, Jurijah Gonzales with 167, Drake Thurman with 160, Ale Bahena with 160, Phoebe Green with 141 and Colton Sandmann with 141.

The Bulldogs travel to Albuquerque on Jan. 10 before hosting the Bulldog Invitational at Artesia Lanes on Saturday, Jan. 17.

Snow chances looking good for ski resorts

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Mike Smith
Artesia Daily Press
msmith@currentargus.com

New Mexico ski resorts are hopeful snow may be on the way, according to an online ski forecasting service.

Julien Ross, a meteorologist for Colorado-based OpenSnow, said conditions looked promising for Jan. 8-10.

“Models are in agreement on a moist and cold storm tracking near New Mexico. At a minimum, this storm should provide a light refresh to all mountains and cold temperatures for snowmaking,” he said.

Ross said snowfall in the northern mountains could be in the double digits.

“In the best-case scenario, this could help open resorts (and) get more terrain open, and closed resorts might get a shot at staying open,” he said.

Christy Germscheid, executive director of Ski New Mexico, was looking forward to the snow after a dry first half of the winter ski season.

She said ski resorts have relied on human-made snow to supplement natural snow that has fallen in New Mexico’s ski areas.

“Snowmaking has been limited by warmer temperatures this year,” Germscheid said.

Six of New Mexico’s eight ski resorts were open as of Jan. 8, according to the Ski New Mexico website.

Pajarito Mountain and Ski Sandia near Albuquerque have yet to open this season, Germscheid said.

She said more storms and colder temperatures could help resorts as they look toward long weekends for Martin Luther King Jr. Day and Presidents Day.

A resident of Angel Fire, home to the 10,677-foot Angel Fire Resort, Germscheid said temperatures around Christmas were well above normal, in the 50-degree range with sunshine.

“It was not what we wanted,” she said. “Temperatures have dropped this week. Everyone’s gone snowmaking, full bore.”

Germscheid said the colder temperatures allowed Ski Santa Fe to produce more synthetic snow.

“Everyone is able to expand more terrain,” she said.

Germscheid said more natural snow along with artificially produced snow would allow more trails to open for potential visitors.

“There’s lot of questions about the season. Ski resorts are positive,” she said, noting that visitations have been solid despite the lack of snow. “There’s a lot of the season left. It’s a great time to get on the ski slopes.”

Reported ski conditions as of Tuesday, Jan. 6

(Information provided by Ski New Mexico)

Angel Fire has a base of 6 inches with 11 of 95 trails open.

Red River Ski and Summer Area has a 20-inch snow base with 15 of 64 trails open.

Sipapu Ski and Summer Area has a base of 12 inches with 10 of 44 trails open.

Ski Apache has a 6-inch base with 2 of 55 trails open.

Ski Santa Fe has a base of 18 inches with 32 of 90 trails open.

Taos Ski Valley has an 18-inch base with 22 of 120 trails open.

Note –  snow conditions can change after this report is compiled.

Mike Smith can be reached at 575-628-5546 extension-2361.