Monday, January 24, 2011

Joshua Tree Rocks!

Sara and Julienne with Joshua

75 years ago President Franklin Roosevelt signed a proclamation creating Joshua Tree National Monument.  In 1994 it became one of the newest National Parks.  Throughout this year there will be activities celebrating its 75th anniversary.  When I visited the park in November with Julienne and Sara I bought a Senior Pass.  It cost $10 and is good for free admission in all National Parks and all Federal Recreation Lands for life.  ALSO, I can use it for all occupants of a single, private, non-commercial vehicle.  Think about the monetary opportunity for an unemployed senior who doesn't mind hanging around the entrance to a National Park. I like it. I may just celebrate the park's anniversary by providing discounts to 75 cars who would like a short time passenger. 

The park is named after Yucca brevifolia, a member of the Agave family.  Rumor has it that Mormon immigrants in the mid-1800's nicknamed this odd looking tree after the biblical Joshua with its welcoming arms outstretched in greeting for the weary westward travelers. Nothing about this particular yucca looks welcoming to me.  Kinda like the Teddy Bear Cholla, it's not something you want to hug. 
Juju not hugging Teddy Bear Chollas
Advancing Chollas. Yoiks!


This big!
Pencil Chollas
With Sharpies

Mastodon Peak to the right of big toes





  Next to the chollas the boulders seem quite safe.
Looking down from Mastodon Peak











From the top, Salton Sea in the distance
Air hair in the foreground



It takes no more than 25 minutes to get to the park entrance from our home in Desert Center.  It takes 30 minutes to get back if there's no line at Chiriaco Summit for a Foster Freeze Rootbeer.  Longer if
you try ordering in espanol.




Joshua Tree Rocks!



Wednesday, January 19, 2011

"Winston, Arizona, don't forget Winona."




New Years Day, two weeks after returning from Mexico, during a high stakes game of Yahtzee, Tad threw out the dice and the bait.  Anyone for a road trip, say, New Mexico?  Hook set and three days later we were off to Santa Fe via Rice, Earp, Parker, Yucca, Peach Springs, Winona, Winslow, The Petrified Forest, Gallup, Thoreau, Navajo Nation, and La Cienega.  Our objectives were simple.  Tad wanted to see Santa Fe for the first time.  DB was looking forward to return visits to Flagstaff and Sedona. I was eager to follow the route to Lake Havasu taken by all the toy haulers that screamed past Magoo's on Friday afternoons.  And Sevi, she's happy just getting in the car. (Boxer preferred staying near the Casa Verde kibble buffet.) Not ones for pre-road trip research, we were surprised to find much of our route on the old Route 66,  12 degrees and snow in Flagstaff, and better enchiladas in New than regular Mexico.



Lines and curves dominated our road trip.
You can't drive the Rice Road without the image of a long straight line and you can't drive to Sedona without thinking of a poorly stored extension cord. Obviously, this isn't unique to these places.  Most flat roads take you from here to there in the shortest distance and mountain ravines require turns, lots of them. Please note the handy, dandy, GPS visuals.

We stayed at the pet friendly Flagstaff La Quinta Suites our first night.  Very prophetic. In this part of the country, flags are ubiquitous. All kinds. Flags that are used to sell politics and nostalgia but mostly American and BIG. These flags remind us that this is America. This bridge may have once spanned the Thames but now it resides in Lake Havasu City, Arizona, USA.  Powerful groups who lived in balance with this harsh climate and were here long before Betsy Ross took up sewing, have become the symbols for American consumption.
  The flags remind us that the names of cities, towns, missions, streets may be in the language of a previous conquering nation, but gosh darn it, we raise the American flag not bandera.

Another theme of our trip was color.  Santa Fe means "Holy Faith."  It was founded 400 years ago and at 7,000 feet above sea level is the highest of all US state capitals. Yikes, you'd think these facts would top the list of memorable Santa Fe  information, wouldn't you?  No. Remember BROWN and BLUE.  Think all shades of brown: tan, sand, muddy, taupe.


Built of adobe, a combination of clay, water, sand, and fibrous organic materials like sticks or straw, Santa Fe is literally the earth. Think blue: the most brilliant, eye-squinting, can't quite believe it could be so blue, sky. Add street musicians, silver jewelry, art, more art, and you've got what we witnessed. Santa Fe: a very old, high, blue, brown, experience. What we didn't explore but will on a future whim, are the native cultures of the Santa Fe area. Our two day, one night stay only captured the brown/blue saturated surface.

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Peligroso. Cuidate!

Mr. Kurtz, he dead?

Mangrove trees are the He-Women of coastal ecosystems.  

The term “mangrove” refers to a variety of trees and shrubs growing in coastal saline sediment generally found in the Jimmy Buffett latitudes of 25’N to 25’S.

Mangroves exist in delta or swampy conditions where fresh water meets salt.  Add heat, insects, jungle sound-track noises. 
Add animals that prefer their meals rotten.
Fresh water meets salt

Surprise, Sara.
Click to enlarge for full effect

Our large paddle propelled wooden canoe carried two know-it-all amateur biologists, one ex-pat chef and her heavily make-upped niece from the Bronx, Dave the guide, Francesco the paddle wielder, DB the faithful, Sara the friendly, Julienne the afraidy-cat, and me, the one who makes other people do educational things at dusk in a tippy canoe and crocodiles, too, swamp.
  
Francesco shoves off
(Crocodile teeth constantly regenerate.)

Mangroves are important: 2/3rds of fish populations worldwide need them for survival.  Mangroves are diminishing:  fish and shrimp farming, resort land development, and ignorance of the mangrove’s merit have contributed to the destruction of 20% of the world’s mangroves during the life of my 26 year old.  Ergo, sit up straight and pay attention.  










El Manglar of Tenacatita Bay teems with wildlife- over 300 iguanas, 350 species of birds of which 75 are native, hundreds of endangered cocodrilos americanos.  
Probably ibises and spoonbills








It is the nursery grounds for fish, crab, shrimp, mollusks, and the habitat of numerous creepy crawly slithery things.  


But the really cool and immensely significant part of the ecosystem picture is that the mangrove tree/shrub itself uses a snorkel to breath. Yup. 
Moon under Anhinga
As we wove past the overhanging branches Dave pointed out green and ringed kingfishers perched above and orange-fronted parakeets flocking to distant tree tops.  Social flycatchers inspected our group from a very sociable distance. We caught ourselves yawning at oh, not another neotropic cormorant.  We were tested on snowy, cattle, and great egrets. Three kinds of herons.
Nighty night egrets
Not only do mangrove provide the filtration of saline and fresh water toxins but they do so with air-breathing roots which surface from the oxygen deprived mud from which they grow.  The leaves of the mangrove actually excrete salt.
Imagine very strong sulfur smell: endless composting
Mangrove babies

Boat-billed Heron perhaps
Not so creepy in daylight
And, don’t get me started on the ingenious way they reproduce- picture nutrient rich pods floating off from momgrove.  But sadly, no real drama during our expedition.  No tick-tocking beneath our low riding canoe. No snakes dropping from overhead limbs.  Just beauty.

Monday, January 3, 2011

Sun, SEA, and Sandals

Egret and fish (regret)
They're everywhere!
Fish and Jellies
Pelicans Smelicans
December 2010 Calendar
Sara and Commander Nancy
Helado!
How could you not fall in love with Tenacatita Bay?  Yes, the water was slightly cooler than last year.  Yes, the abundance of marine life made swimming "interesting." Yes, you could get dumped by an occasional grande wave. So, how could you not fall in love Tenacatita Bay?