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Behind the Scenes in Hatch
Photo-Essay by Paul Ross

In a region renowned for chile, at the end of the season of green and in a town synonymous with both, New Mexico has gone red.

The annual Hatch Chile Festival is over and the quiet fields which swaddle the returned-to-sleepy town are newly-plowed and waiting or--dotted with--rich, red, maturing pods of friendly fire.

A few souls gently harvest while their wives and brothers braid ristras in a manner that simultaneously bespeaks tradition and belies time.

With the tourists departed, most of the shops are shuttering-up for the winter. Senor Villegas is a notable exception. He remains and roasts and packs while relating tales of his abuelo's enslavement by no less than Pancho Villa.

Down the street and around the corner, the B&E restaurant serves up fresh and hearty pots of both red and green now to locals--both Anglos and Hispanics--the townsfolk of Hatch, self-professed "Chile Capital of the World."

Harvesting Red Chile
Harvesting Red Chile
 
A Truckload of Red
A Truckload of Red
 
Roasting the Last of the Green
Roasting the Last of the Green
 
In the Kitchen
In the B& E Kitchen
 
Folk Art
Folk Art on the Porch
 
Tying a Ristra
Tying a Ristra
 
A Multi-Colored Ristra
A Multi-Colored Ristra
 
Home Decorations
Home Decorations
 
 
To read an article on the Hatch Chile Festival, go here.
 
 
 
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