NEW MEXICO ROADRUNNERS
  • HOME
  • Sponsors
  • Fundraising
  • Meet the Coaches
    • Head Coach Jen Harvey
  • Contact
  • Calendar of Events
  • Archery Links
  • Coaching Classes
  • Tournaments
  • Contact Rio Rancho Roadrunners
  • 2018 Registration

Welcome to the New Mexico RoadRunners JOAD Archery club. 
New and Returning club members please visit our 2018 registration page to download the Archery club documents, and agreements.  




Honoring the history of the New Mexico Road Runner

The Hopi and other Pueblo tribes believed that roadrunners were medicine birds and could protect against evil spirits. Their unusual X-shaped footprints are used as sacred symbols to ward off evil in many Pueblo tribes-- partially because they invoke the protective power of the roadrunners themselves, and partially because the X shape of the tracks conceals which direction the bird is headed (thus throwing malignant spirits off-track.) Stylized roadrunner tracks have been found in the rock art of ancestral Southwestern tribes like the Anasazi and Mogollon cultures, as well.
Roadrunner feathers were traditionally used to decorate Pueblo cradleboards as spiritual protection for the baby. In Mexican Indian tribes, it was considered good luck to see a roadrunner. In some Mexican tribes, the bird was considered sacred and never killed, but most Mexican Indians used the meat of the roadrunner as a folk remedy to
cure illness or to boost stamina and strength.


Proudly powered by Weebly
  • HOME
  • Sponsors
  • Fundraising
  • Meet the Coaches
    • Head Coach Jen Harvey
  • Contact
  • Calendar of Events
  • Archery Links
  • Coaching Classes
  • Tournaments
  • Contact Rio Rancho Roadrunners
  • 2018 Registration
✕