| NATIONAL PARKS QUICKLINKS |
Backpacker Magazine – December 2007
Take a winter hike to the steaming pools of Melanie Hot Springs in Gila Wilderness, New Mexico.
Matt Bischoff, a historian for California's Parks and Rec Department, literally wrote the book on hot springs—for California, Nevada, Arizona, and New Mexico, that is. For his updated NM guide (2008), he spent months scouring the Land of Enchantment for its choicest soaks. Here's his favorite, a winter hike to the steaming pools of Melanie Hot Springs.
7:32 Wake at the Gila Wilderness Forks campground, an undeveloped site set among cliffs next to the Gila River. (www2.srs.fs.fed.us/r3/gila)
8:22 Drive .5 mile south on NM 15 to the Gila River trailhead (Trail 724) and begin a 1.5-mile moderate hike downstream. Pack extra socks for hike out.
9:04 Arrive at the seventh river crossing (they're mostly ankle deep). Stay on the east side of the river and continue downstream for .1 mile.
9:11 Reach the springs: two seeps cascading into three spectacularly clear pools at the base of deep red cliffs.
9:20 Soak in the steamy 90°F water, enjoying the contrast of chilly winter air on my face.
11:36 Eat lunch, and check out the warm waterfall cascading between the springs.
1:10 Head back to the trailhead
2:28 Drive five miles northwest on NM 15 to Gila Cliff Dwellings National Monument (nps.gov/gicl). Set out on a 1.5-mile loop from the visitor center to the multi-story stone and mud structures built into caverns in the side of a cliff between 1280 and 1300.
3:32 Keep eyes peeled for petroglyphs.
5:05 Drive back down NM 15 (southeast) 4.5 miles to Doc Campbell's Post (505-536-9551) and sidle up to the snack bar for homemade ice cream.
6:08 Eye steam rising off the Gila Hotspring, a short walk from the store. Go investigate, then strip down for another soak in the 110°F waters (gilahotspringsranch.com).

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READERS COMMENTS
I AM SO EXCITED TO DO THIS! YES. Awesome.
hi
Sounds great, but we norteños have been warned for sometime about soaking that results in contracting the extremely fatal Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis {PAM see http://wikitravel.org/en/Hot_springs#Stay_healthy. I believe this is more common in the lower temperature waters such as mentioned in the first spring at 90º. [The protozoan that cause this disease like water above 32º C [89.6º F]. The simple safety precaution is to never inhale hot spring water, and to keep your ears out of the water as well.
For more info see http://wikitravel.org/en/Hot_springs#Stay_healthy or search the Internet tube for Primary amoebic meningoencephalitis.
We found a waterfall on a small creek that feeds the Gila River below Gila Hot Springs. The fall was a two or three hour hike up the creek. We dubbed it the "Hole-in-the-rock" waterfall, because water fell from above into a natural cistern and then shot out of the side of cliff like a faucet. Has anyone else seen this waterfall or know its real name?
We love the gila. We usually go to the meadows by west fork, then down the river to jordan springs which is awesome and then to little bear before coming out at the scorpion campgrounds where we park the car, a great 5-7 day trip!!
Been there several times. A wonderful spot in a unique area of the southwest.
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