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Приключенческий тур для небольших групп на электровелосипеде по скрытому Санта-Фе

Обзор
Электровелосипеды — это то, что определяет F-U-N! У них есть встроенный двигатель, который предлагает гонщикам опцию помощи педалям, чтобы при необходимости придать дополнительный импульс. Это тренировка с немного меньшим количеством работы. Ассистент педалирования избавляет от необходимости ездить на велосипеде по большой высоте и взбираться на холмы, поэтому водители могут просто наслаждаться поездкой. Электровелосипеды — это универсальный вариант для велосипедных туров, который дает возможность семьям из разных поколений и группам с разными физическими способностями кататься вместе, открывая совершенно новый взгляд на путешествия.

Попробуйте один из наших созданных велосипедов. экскурсии по городу, во время которых вы исследуете менее известные уголки Санта-Фе, погружаясь в культуру и пейзажи. Наш вдохновляющий гид проведет вас по окрестностям и лесным массивам, которые служат основой культуры и истории, создавших эти уникальные и очаровательные города. Пусть наши гиды позаботятся о навигации и оживят ваш тур рассказами и советами!
Город: Санта-Фе
Sat 28 Dec
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Начинается с $189.99
Sat 28 Dec
Начинается с $189.99
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Что включено
Bike Helmet
E-Bike Rental
Bike Trunk Bag & Safety Reflective Triangle
Bike Helmet
E-Bike Rental
Bike Trunk Bag & Safety Reflective Triangle
Bike Helmet
Дополнительная информация
  • Не рекомендуется беременным путешественникам
  • Не рекомендуется путешественникам с плохим сердечно-сосудистым здоровьем
  • Путешественники должны иметь как минимум средний уровень физической подготовки
  • Парковка есть. Сообщите парковщику, что вы приехали на экскурсию, и они проинструктируют вас о дальнейших действиях.
  • Маски для лица, предоставленные путешественникам.
  • Дезинфицирующее средство для рук, доступное для путешественников и персонала.
  • Снаряжение/оборудование. дезинфицируется между использованием
  • Требуются направляющие для регулярного мытья рук
Что ожидать
1
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
2
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
3
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
4
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
5
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
6
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
7
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
8
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
9
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
10
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
11
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
12
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
13
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
14
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
15
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
16
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
17
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
18
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
19
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
20
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
21
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
22
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
23
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
24
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
25
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
26
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
27
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
28
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
29
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
30
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
31
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
32
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
33
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
34
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
35
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
36
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
37
Cross of the Martyrs
A 25-foot-tall reinforced concrete cross sits on top of Paseo de la Loma Hill in Fort Marcy Park and commemorates the 21 Franciscan priests and many more Spanish colonists who died during the Pueblo revolt of 1680. Easily accessible via a gently sloping staircase that starts on the eastern corner of Paseo de Peralta, the summit provides both a close-up of the adobe walls and giant cottonwood trees of downtown Santa Fe and giant vistas of the Jemez Mountains in the west beyond.
38
Randall Davey Audubon Center
Explore above Upper Canyon Road on this short gravel entrance to the Audubon Center. The property was part of the Talaya Hill grant given in 1731 lo Manuel Trujillo. Far from the Plaza in Spanish days, it was used only for grazing and woodcutting until the first sawmill in Santa Fe was built there by the U.S. army quartermaster in 1847 to provide lumber for Fort Marcy, then under construction. The main house still shows the stone walls and huge, hand-hewn timbers of the mill on the interior, carefully preserved by the late owner, Randall Davey, an artist of international reputation.
39
Santa Fe River Park
The Santa Fe River is a tributary of the Rio Grande in northern New Mexico. It starts in the Sangre de Cristo mountain range and passes through the state capital and spills into the Rio Grande River.
40
Santa Fe Railyard
Cruise through the Railyard District, a 50-acre arts district. When the City of Santa Fe purchased 50 acres of underused land along Guadalupe Street and Cerrillos Road and further south near Baca Street, its citizens came together to plan the future of the Railyard and decided on developing a vibrant new urban space that would serve all Santa Feans, celebrating their history, arts, recreation, landscape and environment.
41
Frenchy's Field Park
Frenchy’s Field Park Labyrinth was created in 2001. The project was sponsored by the Santa Fe Interfaith Council in 1998, and led by community organizer Michael Hopp and his team of artisans. This 7-circuit Classical labyrinth is made of a modified adobe mix, called “cobb.” The mounds are molded with clay-rich soil, straw, and water. This labyrinth needs to be maintained on an annual basis, a process called “mudding.”
42
The Spa at Loretto
Founded in 1975 by the Kirkpatrick family, the Inn and Spa at Loretto sits on the former site of the historic Our Lady of Loretto Academy and is adjacent to the famed Loretto Chapel featuring the miraculous staircase. Now one of the most photographed buildings in the state, the Inn is a Santa Fe icon and testament to the city's modern history. From its beginnings as a unique adobe style Best Western to the property it is today, the Inn remains true to its roots - imparting casual sophistication with sincere Southwest hospitality and authentic Santa Fe style.
43
Крест мучеников
Железобетонный крест высотой 25 футов находится на вершине холма Пасео-де-ла-Лома в парке Форт-Марси и увековечивает память 21 францисканского священника и многих других испанских колонистов, погибших во время восстания пуэбло в 1680 году. До него легко добраться по пологой лестнице, которая начинается в восточном углу Пасео-де-Перальта, с вершины открывается как крупный план глинобитных стен и гигантских тополей в центре Санта-Фе, так и гигантские виды на горы Хемес на западе за ними.
44
Рэндалл Дэйви Одюбон Центр
Исследуйте улицу Аппер-Каньон-роуд на этом коротком гравийном входе в центр Одюбон. Имущество было частью гранта Talaya Hill, предоставленного в 1731 году Мануэлю Трухильо. Вдали от Плазы в испанские времена он использовался только для выпаса скота и рубки леса, пока первая лесопилка в Санта-Фе не была построена там квартирмейстером армии США в 1847 году, чтобы обеспечить пиломатериалами форт Марси, который тогда строился. В главном доме до сих пор сохранились каменные стены и огромные, обтесанные вручную бревна мельницы внутри, бережно сохраненные покойным владельцем, Рэндаллом Дэйви, художником с мировым именем.
45
Речной парк Санта-Фе
Река Санта-Фе является притоком Рио-Гранде на севере штата Нью-Мексико. Он начинается в горном массиве Сангре-де-Кристо, проходит через столицу штата и впадает в реку Рио-Гранде.
46
Железнодорожный вокзал Санта-Фе
Круиз по району Рейлъярд, району искусств площадью 50 акров. Когда город Санта-Фе приобрел 50 акров малоиспользуемой земли вдоль улиц Гуадалупе и Серрильос-роуд и южнее возле улицы Бака, его жители собрались вместе, чтобы спланировать будущее железной дороги и решили создать новое яркое городское пространство, которое будет обслуживать все Санта-Клаус. Feans, прославляющие их историю, искусство, отдых, ландшафт и окружающую среду.
47
Френчи Филд Парк
Лабиринт Френчи Филд-Парк был создан в 2001 году. Проект спонсировался Межконфессиональным советом Санта-Фе в 1998 году и возглавлялся организатором сообщества Майклом Хоппом и его командой ремесленников. Этот 7-контурный классический лабиринт сделан из модифицированной глинобитной смеси, называемой «кобб». Курганы сформированы из богатой глиной почвы, соломы и воды. Этот лабиринт необходимо поддерживать ежегодно, процесс, называемый «загрязнением».
48
Спа в Лоретто
Отель Inn and Spa at Loretto, основанный в 1975 году семьей Киркпатрик, расположен на месте бывшей исторической Академии Богоматери Лоретто и примыкает к знаменитой часовне Лоретто с чудесной лестницей. Сейчас это одно из самых фотографируемых зданий в штате, гостиница является символом Санта-Фе и свидетельством современной истории города. С самого начала своего существования в качестве уникального отеля Best Western в глинобитном стиле и до того, чем он является сегодня, гостиница остается верной своим корням, придавая повседневную изысканность искреннему юго-западному гостеприимству и аутентичному стилю Санта-Фе.
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Отзывы (137)
AlleHericks
Oct 2021
Our guide was incredibly knowledgeable about the area. The day was beautiful and the spots we stopped were very cool and interesting. Unfortunately a couple bikes had some troubles (battery stopped working on one and another got a flat tire). Felt bad for the guide who had to try to fix the bikes on the fly. He stayed calm under pressure but it was clear he didn’t have any backup to call. Might be helpful to have a backup guide able to bring another bike out!
KGLG
Sep 2021
Great way to see Santa Fe and learn a little of the history of the town. 15 miles was no problem with the e-bikes. Really enjoyed it. Merrill was a great guide.
Vicki M
Sep 2021
Great tour of Santa Fe with Tyler. The e-bikes were easy to ride and we were able to see many historical sites and parts of the city we had missed on our own. Highly recommend!

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