There are places that quietly rearrange your sense of scale, and Aguirre Spring Campground is absolutely one of them. Tucked into the eastern foothills of the Organ Mountains — those dramatic, saw-toothed peaks you can see from almost anywhere in Las Cruces — this Bureau of Land Management campground sits at roughly 5,600 feet elevation and delivers a kind of rugged serenity that is genuinely hard to find anywhere else in New Mexico. And yet, somehow, it remains refreshingly uncrowded.
Getting there is half the adventure. Head east out of Las Cruces on Highway 70 toward Alamogordo, then turn south onto Aguirre Spring Road, a winding paved route that climbs steadily into the Organs. The drive itself is worth the trip: you pass through yucca flats, then piñon and juniper scrub, and finally into the cooler shade of the mountain proper. By the time you reach the campground entrance, the city feels like it belongs to another world entirely.
The campground hosts 55 individual sites, all non-electric, which is precisely the point. There are vault toilets, picnic tables, fire rings, and a day-use area, but the real infrastructure here is natural. The Organ Mountains rise almost vertically above you, their needle-like granite spires catching the last amber light of the afternoon in a way that will stop you mid-sentence. Bring a wide-angle lens if you have one, because no phone camera really does it justice.
Two trails depart from the campground, and both are exceptional. The Baylor Pass National Recreation Trail is a moderate 6-mile round trip that cuts through a high mountain pass and connects to the west face of the Organs — on a clear day, you can see the white gypsum dunes of White Sands shimmering on the horizon. The Pine Tree Loop Trail is a gentler 4-mile circuit through pine and juniper, perfect for a morning walk before the desert heat builds. Wildlife sightings are common: mule deer, javelinas, raptors, and the occasional roadrunner that always seems mildly offended you interrupted its commute.
But the absolute crown jewel of Aguirre Spring is the night sky. With minimal light pollution and an elevation that puts you well above the valley haze, the stars here are outrageous in the best possible way. The Milky Way arcs overhead like something from a planetarium show, except it is completely real and completely free. Bring a red-light headlamp, recline in a camp chair, and let your eyes adjust. Give it twenty minutes and you will be pointing at constellations you forgot you knew.
The day-use fee is just five dollars per vehicle, and overnight camping runs a very reasonable seven dollars per site. No reservations are required — it is first come, first served — so arriving on a Thursday or Friday gives you a solid shot at your pick of sites. Spring and fall are the ideal seasons, when temperatures at elevation hover in the comfortable sixties during the day and cool pleasantly at night. Summer afternoons can bring monsoon thunderstorms rolling in from the south, which are dramatic and beautiful as long as you are prepared for them.
Las Cruces has no shortage of good food to fuel an Aguirre Spring weekend. Stock up at a local market before you go, fire up your camp stove under those cathedral peaks, and eat dinner watching the sunset paint the Organs in shades of rose and gold. It sounds like a cliché until you are actually sitting there, and then it just sounds like a very good decision.
This is the kind of place that reminds you why people fall in love with the desert Southwest in the first place. Raw, quiet, and genuinely spectacular — Aguirre Spring Campground is worth every mile of that mountain road.