Yeah, Rog, I call that trail the Pipeline, because it follows a small water line. It's sandy and fast, and it swoops around like a bobsled track. There are several fun, easy jumps, too. It's a really fun trail. One of my favorites anywhere.
Another trail near camp is the trail to the Red Sands. It's really fast, fifth- and sixth-gear stuff, with lots of whoops, some of them huge. There are some great jumps there, too. It's exhausting but really fun. Watch out for the mesquite bushes along the sides of the trail. They will bust your knuckles and tear up your forearms if you hit them.
Dry Canyon is a very rocky trail from the foothills up to Cloudcroft. Lots and lots of rocks. There are some places to get a great view of the valley floor; you can see the missile range and the White Sands, Alamogordo, and the Organ Mountains. Very nice.
A great day-long ride takes you from camp to Orogrande and back via some great desert trails. In Orogrande you can explore some abandoned gold mines. Just don't get off the trail, as the cactus will flatten your tires. And don't get off your bike and jump on the steel screens over the mine shafts, like a high school kid did a couple years ago. He was jumping and laughing when the screen broke and he plunged 300 feet to his death. There are some horizontal shafts you can walk into, though, and collect some rocks.
In the rock quarry where we camp, there's a great jump up a long hill into the quarry itself, if you have the guts to climb the hill fast enough to get air at the top.
And there is more. It's always great fun. Anyway, that's the end of this travelogue.
By the way, Rog: welcome back.