The beautiful red-stem Filaree, Pinweed, Common Stork's-Bill (or Mexican
alfalfa as it's affectionately called in Arizona and New Mexico, is in full bloom . Its creating quite a stunning roadside display. BUT it is an invasive plant
introduced in the 1800. Beauty or the Beast?
s.
I currently write, garden, forage, travel, and chronicle my encounters with wild lives and wildlife in the Southwest.
Wednesday, March 27, 2019
Saturday, March 2, 2019
Unimportant Questions
- Do twins ever realize that one of them is unplanned?
- What if my dog only brings back my ball because he thinks I like throwing it?
- Which letter is silent in the word “scent.” The s or the c?
Thursday, October 4, 2018
Monday, September 24, 2018
Shy Moon Poem
There.
I see you hiding,
Floating between cloud islands.
Searching for the sea,
Open dark waters where
You illuminate my garden
With your bright,
Steady beam.
Finally.
You are in place,
Like a great ship
Sitting on the ocean
Of dark blue silence.
Surrounded by a mass
Of tiny, twinkling rafts.
Your starlight companions.
Sunday, September 23, 2018
Celebrate Banned Books Week
The last week in September is Banned Books Week - 2018. Time to Celebrate!
Read a book that’s been banned. Here's a potential list: Uncle Tom’s Cabin, To Kill a Mockingbird, Stranger in a Strange Land,
The Red Badge of Courage, The Catcher in the Rye, Their Eyes Were
Watching God, and Moby Dick.
Tuesday, September 18, 2018
Watch Out for Blister Beetles
It's that time of year again...
The
blister beetles are doing their dance to make more blister beetles, and I
suggest we all put on our old shoes and stomp until they are all flat
and dead! You can ID them by their flat head, long bodies and legs, and
thread-like or beaded antennae. Here are photos of species we see most
often around Paulden, in Yavapai County, Arizona.
Every horse owner should know what they look like because it just takes a few in a flake of hay to
cause a horse to suffer digestive and urinary tract damage, inner
hemorrhages and even death if they are unlucky enough to ingest too
many. The beetles are capable of synthesizing cantharidin, one of the
most poisonous compounds known to humans AND this chemical causes terrible blisters
on the skin (see last photo).
The last (sorry it's gross) photo is when one got to me while I was cleaning out an
old shed in NM. I never even knew I rubbed against its body until later.
I had seen the beetles in the shed and did not recognize the species. The blister lasted 3-4 months and the doc felt it was at risk of infection if she lanced, so I kept it clean, bandaged, covered with a pants leg.
Beautiful bugs aren't always beneficial. This one is not one of my favorites.
Sunday, September 16, 2018
Lagged NOT Logged
Now, LISTEN to a story I helped write for KNAU Earth Notes that involved traveling to see some of the remaining trees in the Kaibab National Forest, AZ.
Paul and I try to incorporate physical searches for lagged lookout trees when we travel the forests of Arizona and New Mexico. Included in our research is:
With our travel history we have learned:Paul and I try to incorporate physical searches for lagged lookout trees when we travel the forests of Arizona and New Mexico. Included in our research is:
- Historical trees that died or fell, including the Overgaard tree, which succumbed in 2002 to the Rodeo-Chedisky Wildfire.
- Gathering GPS coordinates for the old trees using historical locations and compass data.
* How lagged trees were designed and used. These important wonders of history, tell stories of firefighters that located fires in the early 1900’s by sitting like birds for hours in the tops of these trees.
* Specific information for Arizona visitors and explorers about the
lagged trees that are still accessible to backpackers, hikers, photographers and natural
history enthusiasts.
These amazing old trees have many stories to
tell. Their historical value, condition and location is important – before
they all fall to the ground.
One of the easiest trees to access, view and photograph is the Tusayan Tree in Tusayan, Arizona, at US Forestry Dept, 176 Lincoln Log Loop, Grand Canyon, AZ 86023. (Follow US Hwy 69 to the USFS station and ask for updated to the tree. It is unmarked and near an APS Sub-station off first round-about in town).
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Hull Tree, Kaibab NF 2017
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Hull Tree 1950's
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998 High Country News: Lagged Not Logged, by Christine Haese
"Climbed Delodo Tree. Had a bad feeling, so dry and hot. Storm last night brought plenty of lightning, little rain. Spotted smoke to south, blowing northeast and picking up ... Caught hobbled mare and saddled up. Rode to Little Nelson Lake Tree, saw smoke again. Looks like a big fire ... May need extra folks on this fire." - from Firefighter Journal of U.S. Forest Service fire spotter July 1935
Before the fire lookout tower, there was the "lagged" lookout tree - so named for the steel lags that provided steps to the top of the tree. The Civilian Conservation Corps created a network of these tall trees that spanned ridges and mountaintops across the national forests. Nimble fire spotters climbed to their tops on the spiked steps of tempered steel or wood ladders, then checked the horizon for smoke. Some lookout trees, such as the Hull Tank Lookout Tree on the Kaibab National Forest, still have their wooden platforms. On the Mogollon Rim of the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest in Arizona, a 60-foot-tall ponderosa pine known as the Overgaard Tree still stands, its rungs grown high. And on the Kaibab National Forest, several lookout trees have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
While lookout trees were left standing across the United States, they were most common in the Southwest. For more information, contact the Kaibab National Forest, 928-635-8272, Black Range Ranger District of the Apache-Sitgreaves National Forest, 928-535-4481 or the National Historic Lookout Register, 1-800-476-8733.
Sunday, September 9, 2018
Adventure Day
Demonstration at Rockin' R Ranch State Park
A packing/tack-up demonstration was held on Sept 7th in Camp
Verde at the new Rockin’
R Ranch State Park. This was a large
national and International (Canadian National Parks Directors) event.
Paul and daughter, Tara, took our mules and helped Back Country Horsemen of Central Arizona show how
to pack animals and transport trail, construction tools, food etc. into the back country for workers.
Monday, September 3, 2018
Overland Road Historic Trail
This route was laid out and built in the summer of 1863 by the Army. It connected the Beale Road with the growing community of Prescott, which experienced a short-lived gold rush. This road left the Beale Road near where Flagstaff is today, and continued west through Garland Prairie to Lockett Spring. Then, it turned southwest to cross Hell Canyon and from there south to Prescott. About 30 miles of the route is located on the Kaibab National Forest. The road was used by the military, immigrants, and freighters between 1863 and 1882, when the railroad was built across northern Arizona. Much of the Overland Road has been covered over by the present-day Forest Service road system, but portions are still visible.
NOTE: The Forest Service has developed the Overland Road into a recreational trail. The route makes use of
forest roads and trails which have been marked with rock cairns, brass cap
markers, tree blazes, and 4" by 4" wood posts. A treadway has not
been cleared on the trail sections, so it can be a challenge to follow.
Trailheads with interpretive signs are provided. The trail sections are open
only to hikers and horseback riders. Portions of the historic route that are
part of the forest road system may be accessed by any means, including motor
vehicles and mountain bicycles.
Saturday, September 1, 2018
From Paul McCartney to Me
The page is old now and turning a bit yellow, but then it's been hanging in my office for almost three decades. I took this out of the concert book from when I attended the Paul McCartney World Tour in Tempe, Arizona and it is still an inspiration to me.
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