Manzano Mountains State Park
State park in New Mexico, United States
34°36′12″N 106°21′41″W / 34.60333°N 106.36139°W / 34.60333; -106.36139
Manzano Mountains State Park is a state park of New Mexico, United States, located 16 miles (26 km) north of Mountainair on the eastern slope of the Manzano Mountains.[2] The park is popular for camping, bird-watching, hiking, and photography.
The Manzano Mountains are a part of the same geological feature that formed the Sandia Mountains to the north, but the Manzano Mountains are more remote and less developed.
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External links
- Manzano Mountains State Park
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Protected areas of New Mexico
- Camino Real de Tierra Adentro
- Old Spanish Trail
- Santa Fe Trail
- Aldo Leopold
- Apache Kid
- Bandelier
- Bisti/De-Na-Zin
- Blue Range
- Bosque del Apache
- Capitan Mountains
- Carlsbad Caverns
- Cebolla
- Chama River Canyon
- Columbine–Hondo
- Cruces Basin
- Dome
- Gila
- Latir Peak
- Manzano Mountain
- Ojito
- Pecos
- Sabinoso
- Salt Creek
- San Pedro Parks
- Sandia Mountain
- West Malpais
- Wheeler Peak
- White Mountain
- Withington
- East Fork Jemez River
- Pecos River
- Red River
- Rio Chama
- Rio Grande
- Bluewater Lake
- Bottomless Lakes
- Brantley Lake
- Caballo Lake
- Cerrillos Hills
- Cimarron Canyon
- City of Rocks
- Clayton Lake
- Conchas Lake
- Coyote Creek
- Eagle Nest Lake
- El Vado Lake
- Elephant Butte Lake
- Fenton Lake
- Heron Lake
- Hyde Memorial
- Leasburg Dam
- Living Desert Zoo and Gardens
- Manzano Mountains
- Mesilla Valley Bosque
- Morphy Lake
- Navajo Lake
- Oasis
- Oliver Lee Memorial
- Pancho Villa
- Percha Dam
- Rio Grande Nature Center
- Rockhound
- Santa Rosa Lake
- Storrie Lake
- Sugarite Canyon
- Sumner Lake
- Ute Lake
- Villanueva