Cover Kids Q&A – Fankie, Martin, Penelope & Stevie

Meet Cover Kids Fankie, Martin, Penelope & Stevie The Chavez children are coyotes, campers, and cute! Frankie age 8, Martin age 6, Penelope age 4 and Stevie 4 months old....

Cover Kids Q&A – Xavier & Lucia Garcia

Meet Cover Kids Xavier & Lucia Garcia Santa Fe photographer, Kitty Leaken, captured these beautiful photos of the Winter 2023-2024 Tumbleweeds cover kids! 5-year-old Xavier...

Cover Kid Q&A – Raffi Paglayan

Meet Cover Kid - Raffi Paglayan!  Raffi loves to breakdance at Santa Fe Breakin’ Academy, Santa Fe's very own School of Breakin and Hip-Hop Culture. Also featured is fellow...

Cover Kid Q&A – Kristiana Martinez & Lauren Gonzales

Cover Kids Q&A - Kristiana & Lauren Meet Kristiana Martinez, age 11, and  Lauren Gonzales, age 9, Tumbleweeds Magazine Cover Kids for the Spring 2023 issue. How do you...

Cover Kid Q&A – Saoirse & Rasa

Cover Kids Q&A - Saoirse & Rasa   Meet Saoirse & Rasa Moore, 9 year old twins from Carlos Gilbert Elementary, and Tumbleweeds Magazine Cover Kids for the Winter...

Cover Kid Q&A – Alma Murphy-Chavez

COVER KID Q & A Meet the Fall 2022 Tumbleweeds Magazine Cover Kid Alma Murphy-Chavez, age 11! How do you like to spend your time? I like playing video games, hanging out with...

Cover Kid Q&A – Franki Maestas-Chavez

How old are you in this photo?  How old are you now? I was 11 in this photo, I am 19 right now. What school do you attend?   I attend New Mexico State University. Do you remember...

Cover Kids Q&A – Jasper & Mateo

Jasper, age 7 1/2, and Mateo Ciano, age 9 1/2, are brothers who enjoy spending time together swimming, playing in the snow, hiking, biking, playing chess and ambushing their...

Winter 2021/2022 Cover Kid – Tau Durán y Jennings

Winter Issue Cover Kid Tau Durán y Jennings (Tau), 8th grade, attends Santa Fe Waldorf School.  Tau believes that it's important to leave things better than you found them, and...

Cover Kid Q & A

Cover Kid Q & A Layla Hope Madrid (Layla), age 5 1/2, just completed three years at Garcia Street Club and will be starting kindergarten at Rio Grande School in the fall. She...

Submit A Cover Kid
Interest Form

Local Kids Help Us Tell Local Stories

Tumbleweeds Magazine has a long tradition of featuring local kids on the cover. We are looking for our Winter 2021 / 2022 Cover Kid. If you are interested in having your child on the cover of our next issue, please complete this form, and tell us what you love about New Mexico!

ON THE FALL 2021 COVER: Layla Hope Madrid (Layla), age 5 1/2, just completed three years at Garcia Street Club and will be starting kindergarten at Rio Grande School in the fall. She swims on the Northern Aquatic Club swim team and loves swimming underwater doing mermaid body-dolphin. She loves traveling to the ocean in an airplane and she also loves ballet, bugs, dinosaurs and riding her bike. Photo © Tumbleweeds Magazine 2021. Cover Kid photograph taken at Genoveva Chavez Community Center Pool.

Submit an interest form for future consideration!

Submit An Article

Local Writers Keep Our Content Relevant

Are you interested in contributing an article? Or do you have a story idea?

Whether you’d like to write or just want to propose a topic, please let us know as soon as possible to help us plan.

Length: 1000-1200 words. Photos (three to six) are greatly appreciated.

Contact Jen Schroer
Jen@TumbleweedsMag.com

Tumbleweeds Article Submission Guidelines

Tumbleweeds exists to foster community among people in the Santa Fe area who care about children and families. Our writers share stories, news, opinions and practical ideas about raising children and supporting a healthy community for families. Even after shifting to a digital format in Summer 2020, with a reach that now extends around the world, our focus is on articles anchored in northern New Mexico.

We release digital issues four times a year (Spring – March 1; Summer – June 1; Fall – Sept. 1; Winter – Dec. 1), with news briefs and short articles in between.

We look for articles grounded in the writer’s personal experience and expertise. Some of our writers are professional writers; most are parents, teachers or others who have experiences they want to share. Our editing process is a very respectful one, centered on helping you communicate your story clearly without losing your personal voice and feeling.

 

Suggestions

Be personal. How did you feel when your child got the measles, fought with another child or started special education classes? What do you tell your children when they ask about your divorce? What has worked for you as a parent, teacher, grandparent or friend of a child – and what hasn’t? How have you changed? What has changed you? Share your feelings challenges and changes, not just advice.

Be specific. If you want to encourage reading with young children, describe the routines you’ve adopted to make reading a part of your family life. If you want to encourage children to spend time outdoors, tell us about, say, a favorite creek or trail in the Santa Fe National Forest that you visit with your kids and what it means to your family.

Be local. Tell readers about the people and organizations that have made a difference for your family or class. Where do you turn for support or to meet other parents? What resources do you use with your children? We only accept articles written by people who live in Santa Fe or northern New Mexico, or who have other strong ties here, because we want articles to speak to our local community.

Be helpful. Where relevant, include the books, videos, organizations and websites that have been particularly useful. We’d love to know the ones you actually use, the ones you’d recommend to a friend, whether or not they are the acclaimed “best in the field.” Of course, some digital resources may not be local, but wherever possible we want to share local resources with new parents and those new to the area.

On occasion we present controversial topics in a pro/con format, but there some topics that we will not accept, including those that encourage use of illegal substances or practices, or corporal punishment.

Length: Generally, 1000-1200 words for articles, 250-350 for news briefs.

Photos: Always appreciated, anywhere from three to 10. Be sure to include a headshot of yourself for your bio.

Deadlines

fall print issue deadlines
winter print issue deadlines
Spring print issue deadlines
summer print issue deadlines
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Submit Student Artwork

Call for student artists!

We love to share kids’ art with our readers!  Tell us a little about you and why you like to do art. Tumbleweeds Magazine may feature your artwork on social media and the quarterly print publication!  

Submit your masterpiece! Click here.