You’ll wander Santa Fe’s historic eastside with a small group and local guide, learning how Pueblo and Spanish Territorial styles shaped these quiet streets. Pause for stories and neighborly greetings along the way before finishing at Hotel St. Francis for Gruet champagne tasting — it’s less about facts than feeling at home in someone else’s city for a morning.
“You know, adobe walls are like bread — they need care or they crumble,” our guide Maria said, patting the side of a sun-warmed house as we started out in Santa Fe’s eastside. She had this way of talking that made you want to listen, even when the street was quiet except for a crow somewhere overhead. I’d never really thought about what holds up a city before. Here it’s mud, straw, and a lot of patience. The morning air smelled faintly of piñon smoke and old wood — not sure if that’s just Santa Fe or if someone nearby was making breakfast.
The walking tour wound through narrow streets where each building seemed to lean into the next. Maria pointed out Pueblo-style corners and then switched to Spanish Territorial details — honestly, I still mix them up, but she never made us feel silly for asking twice. My shoes scuffed on gravel as we paused by a blue-painted door; she told us stories about families who’d lived there for generations. At one point a neighbor waved from her porch and offered us water — people here actually notice you walking by. That stuck with me more than the architecture facts, in a way.
I didn’t expect to end up inside Hotel St. Francis (the lobby smells like old books and lemon polish) for Gruet champagne tasting. We sat down at the bar and the first sip was cold and sharp after all that sun — maybe I was just thirsty but it tasted better than most things do after a walk. Someone made a toast in Spanish that I only half understood, but everyone laughed anyway. Looking back, I remember the feeling of dust on my hands from touching those old walls more than anything else.
The tour lasts about 3 hours and covers 2 to 2.5 miles on foot.
You’ll see Pueblo, Spanish Territorial, and Northern New Mexico styles during the walk.
The tour ends with a Gruet champagne tasting at Hotel St. Francis and includes bottled water during the walk.
No hotel pickup is included; you meet your guide at the starting point in Santa Fe’s historic eastside neighborhood.
The minimum age is 21 years due to the alcoholic beverage included at the end.
This walking tour isn’t recommended for travelers with poor cardiovascular health or limited mobility due to distance covered.
The tour operates on Thursday and Friday mornings only.
The group size is up to 8 people per tour.
Your morning includes a guided walk through historic Santa Fe neighborhoods with bottled water along the way, all taxes and fees covered, plus an end-of-tour Gruet champagne tasting inside Hotel St. Francis before you head out again into town.
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