Cuba is a small town in northwestern New Mexico, USA. Although of little interest itself to the traveler, it is a significant gateway to points of interest in the region such as Navajo Nation, the Jemez Mountains, and Chaco Culture National Historical Park.
Understand
Get in
Cuba is on US highway 550 between Bernalillo and Farmington. The nearest air service is via Albuquerque, about 60 miles to the south.
Get around
See
Do
Buy
Eat
- Prescilianos Restaurant.
- El Brunos Restaurant. Operating since 1975, the food is excellent (the 9/12 Albuquerque Magazine declared the chips and salsa here better than any other restaurant in Albuquerque) and the dining room is a wonderful converted old house decorated with the paintings of Taos artist Miguel Martinez.
- Del Prado Restaurant.
- J&D Subway.
- Charlie Biggs Chicken.
- Cuban Cafe.
- Paisanos Pizzeria.
Drink
Sleep
Go next
- San Pedro Parks Wilderness is a significant hiking/backpacking attraction near the Jemez Mountains, with its most accessible trailheads reached via SR 126 east of town. Bring rainwear and wear water-resistant boots; this area gets far more precipitation than you'd expect in New Mexico, and the trails are frequently muddy if not downright submerged. Pleasant scenery, with rolling hills and high mountain "parks" (open, grassy valleys).
- The beautiful Jemez Mountains lie beyond San Pedro Parks (which isn't part of the Jemez, but rather the lower, less prominent Nacimiento Mountains), with numerous points of interest. Warning: SR 126, although a "state highway," gets nasty east of San Pedro Parks. A bucolic-type vehicle is a good idea if there has been recent rain, and the road may be closed following snowstorms or other bad weather. If you're driving a standard sedan, you should be OK in dry weather, but the road has some exposed spots with deep ruts and is not for the faint of heart.