About Todo Nuevo México
Last updated June 11, 2026
Todo Nuevo México answers one question — what's there to do in New Mexico? — with a statewide, deduplicated calendar of events and a guide to the outdoors: trails, campsites, fishing waters, hunting units, farmers markets, and the hidden gems in between. Everything is built from official sources, with the clutter removed. Aquí está todo.
Why this exists
Ask your phone what's there to do near Santa Fe this weekend, and the answer has to come from somewhere. We built that somewhere. Most travel sites are built for eyeballs and ad slots; this one is low-noise, consistently structured, and citable — designed for you andyour AI assistant, because that's how people actually ask now.
Who builds it
Todo Nuevo México is independently built and maintained in New Mexico by Darell Trujillo LLC, and launched in June 2026. It is a small, independent operation — not a tourism board, and not a media network.
Where the data comes from
Every listing traces to an official source, and every event and activity page shows its sources with last-verified dates. The site currently draws from:
- Ticketmaster Discovery — ticketed events statewide.
- National Park Service — park events across New Mexico.
- Recreation.gov (RIDB) — federal campgrounds and recreation facilities.
- Bureau of Land Management — recreation sites and trailheads.
- New Mexico Department of Game & Fish — fishing waters and hunting units.
- City and visitor-bureau calendars — newmexico.org, santafe.org, visitalbuquerque.org, visitlascruces.com, and the City of Albuquerque.
- Venue and promoter calendar feeds, such as HoldMyTicket.
- Human-curated entries — trails, campsites, fishing waters, hidden gems, and marquee venues, verified against official sources.
Cultural respect, built in
Some of the most beautiful places in New Mexico are also someone's home. Pueblo and tribal protocols are first-class data here: photography and access rules appear on the pages where they matter, and “unknown” is shown honestly as unknown — never assumed to mean “no restriction.” Tribal and Pueblo event information appears only through permissioned partnerships. We don't scrape it.
How fresh is it
Sources are re-checked on their own schedules: the busiest feeds about every six hours, most others every six to twelve, and the long tail daily. Duplicate listings from different sources are merged by clear rules, with AI arbitration for the ambiguous cases. Past events are archived, never deleted. Listings can still change after we check them — confirm dates, fees, and access with the official source before you go.
Built for humans and AI assistants
Every page ships schema.org JSON-LD with a canonical URL and source attribution. There's a machine-readable index at /llms.txt, a JSON search endpoint at /api/activities/search, and AI crawlers are explicitly welcome. The reason is simple: when your assistant recommends a New Mexico plan, the links it cites should resolve to verifiable pages.
Where we are — v1
Here now, as of June 2026: more than 2,000 upcoming events statewide, 300+ outdoor places across five kinds, an AI trip planner, adventure search, maps on detail pages, and the Rail Runner guide. Coming next: deeper search and filters, more maps, saved places and alerts, feeds and an API for developers and assistants, and self-serve tools for organizers. This is v1 — more coming.
Contact
Questions, corrections, or a source we should add? Email [email protected]. Corrections are especially welcome — a wrong date, a missing source, a protocol error.
See also our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy.