311 Old Santa Fe Trail
Santa Fe, NM 87501
Santa Fe County
Phone: (505) 982-1851
Fax: unknownWebsite: Visit our websiteEmail: no email on fileHours: unknown
Garrett's Desert Inn - About Us
No Description Available for Garrett's Desert Inn.
Website Description and Information
Visit beautiful and historic Santa Fe New Mexico and stay at Garretts Desert Inn, a charming, affordable Southwestern Inn that rests on the legendary Old Santa Fe Trail.
by Elvis Chaput on
No children running around! Libations(okay, maybe they could improve the quality of these)! Good music. Telescopes (I saw the moons of Jupiter) Tropical birds and toxic butterflies. Feeling on starfish. Seahorses.
by Timmy Seisler on
Opera what can I say about this place. Good memories good times. Now I can honestly say their Sat nights are the best. Have been on a thurs and fri night and both crowd and music stunk. Havent had a bad sat night their yet. Now as for the door goes, I can relate to people being rejected at doors in hollywood clubs I have before many times haha. But this place has a tight door only to ensure that their is a good crowd for the most part now they do have a good crowd on SAt nights. I like it at least. Pretty women everywhere. Good ratio. Drinks are good. You got to know a promoter or someone at the ropes. Where even slightly above average women wont be let in. Guys this place is tough to get in unless you riding solo or are justin timberlake your not getting in. HAve a ratio of more girls then guys and keep the group small. Best way to get in other than tables. Which is my favorite. Waiting in line doesnt gurantee you entrance either. Have seen people wait for a hour!!! and still not get in. If you need some guidance at this place shoot me a PM.
by Todd C. on
This is a frugal to moderately priced wine bar that seems to be a little schizophrenic when establishing a mood. There's a portion of exposed brick, an area with high tables and stereotypical wood paneling characteristics of many wine stores, and a long bar with an odd scattering of wine bottles on a giant pedestal. The sort of pedestal you would expect jewelry stores to maintain on their windows. The wines were decent, and the flight of wines were generous and reasonably priced. The food was palatable, but the grapes tasted freeze-dried, in that 'fruit cocktail' sort of canteloupe-honeydew-grape concoction. We managed to find a great St.-Emilion featured in a cabernet flight (Very soft and complex for a Cabernet?!). The problem with the place was the human atmosphere. The usual wine store crowd was present: 1. The 3rd date couple - the woman fawning over the wine, the guy just guzzling it up and feeling her breasts. 2. The mid-life crisis group - Hawaiian shirts and wide-brim hats come standard. The servers, however, were pretty much waitresses and cashiers and clearly hired on the priority of their appearance in a skinny tank top. They knew extremely little about the wines, offered no details (except "$16.99 with tax"), did not talk about the wines, and generally treated you like the retarded cousin of their high-school crush. Plus, the music was club hip-hop, making the entire atmosphere add up to a mid-life crisis sex-oozing aging sorority house feel. Cougar Central, perhaps.