A different kind of marker graces the pit stop near Camel Rock in Tesuque Pueblo. “Seated clay figurines known as rain gods or ‘rain catchers’ spring from Tesuque Pueblo’s deep-rooted figurative pottery tradition,” the marker reads. “Popularized in the 1880s, Tesuque women made and sold the figurines in a variety of colors and designs, and earned income by selling them to curio dealers and tourists. Rain gods typically hold pots while other gods hold children, animals and other objects. The tradition is practiced to this day.”