Wednesday, September 12, 2012

America the beautiful

All good things must come to an end.

We're back home, trying to remember our normal routine, catching up with friends and family, sorting through thousands of photos, catching up on sleep. We've been privileged to have seen a wonderful part of our world.

We've also experienced a different culture and note the following:
  • Americans like guns, knives and hunting. It's a bit of a shock to see people walking around with knives hanging off their belts, hunters dressed in camouflage gear in parks and reserves, the number of gun shops, bistros with gun door handles.
  • It's very hard to find good bread and cheese.
  • The same country that embraces a city like Las Vegas stopped a girl from graduating high school because she used the word hell in her graduation speech.
  • Americans are very friendly and polite, and it's genuine... even on the highways (they let you merge!!)
  • Americans must be religious. There are huge churches everywhere.
  • Americans are patriotic if the number of flags flying in suburban front yards and outside small businesses is an indication.
  • They love the Australian accent but can't understand what we're saying.
  • Paul Higgins' weather reports run rings around any we saw in the US. (I'm not parochial, no way!)
  • They are big consumers ... of food, assets, water, resources. I'm generalising.
Have a good day.

Tuesday, September 11, 2012

Cabrillo

There is a monument, on a high point on the coast at San Diego, to Juan Rodriguez Cabrillo. I'd never heard of him but I've been educated - there's a very good information center on the point as well. He was the first European to set foot on the west coast of the USA having built and captained the ship that sailed up the coast from Mexico in 1542.

There is an added advantage to having a large reserve on the coast. Rare plants and animals are protected as is a coastal habitat that is endangered.



We drove north to Los Angeles from San Diego along sections of the old coastal road rather than the freeway. If it wasn't for a naval reserve there would be continuous coastal communities between the two cities but I have to say that the beach and the beach towns are delightful. We were there on a weekend and the weather was very pleasant so it seemed that everyone was out and about - lots of people on the beaches, in cafes, playing on grassed areas, riding bikes. It must be a good place to live I think.






Saturday, September 8, 2012

Southern California

California, southern California, Sunny California. The navy has an air base here because they can fly almost every day and Yuma has the Guinness record for the sunniest place on earth.

We drove through a section of a sandy desert just west of Yuma, the Imperial Sand Dunes Recreation Area, where hundreds of people each year injure themselves badly or kill themselves in the name of recreation - dune buggies, motor bikes and 4-wheel drives in large numbers and unregulated. It's a horror story.


Also winding its way through the sand is the Coachella Canal, built 80 years ago, that takes water from the Colorado River almost 200 km north for irrigation. It's wide, cement lined and surely must fill with sand, leak and evaporate.





To get to San Diego we had to go over a steep mountain pass 4000' high. There were radiator filling tanks every mile or so.
The country is naturally dry but any areas that can be irrigated are. I wonder if they have salt problems like we do. They certainly have water supply problems - or will have in the future.

PS All of the above photos were taken from the car as we were zooming along at 75 miles an hour. They don't have pull overs on the National Highways.

Friday, September 7, 2012

Weather

As we left Tuscon to head west there were dark clouds and lightning all around and we noticed the dust starting to lift in the valley. We were soon in the think of it and struggling to see. Traffic slowed down marginally. We saw a news item later that showed a huge dust storm rolling in over Phoenix not far to the north.



Dust limits visibility on International Highway 10 west of Tucson.
Then it started to rain. Heavily. We couldn't see a thing. Traffic slowed down, marginally. It rained for the next 150 miles as we drove west through the desert. There were flash floods in some places I heard, and one person is missing believed drowned.


The desert was awash. 
And then the sunlight lightened the clouds and I could see the sun through the dust that was blowing up again near Yuma on the Californian border. What I had thought would be an uneventful three-hour road trip turned out to be quite dramatic.



Arizona Sonora Desert Museum

Up in the hills west of Tuscon is an excellent desert museum. It's the Arizona Sonora Desert Museum and if you're ever in the area, (late winter or early spring would be best), don't miss it. We went to see it but there were lightning thunderstorms around and it was very hot and muggy so we didn't explore it all by any means but what we saw was excellent. Sonora is a type of desert. Here they've added bird aviaries, reptile houses, live desert animals, plant collections, pollination gardens, bee nesting posts, caves, fish etc etc.

Bee nesting post
Bird nest on cactus


Hummingbird 
Hummingbird
 Hummingbird


San Xavier del Bac Mission

A Spanish Catholic mission in Tucson, the San Xavier del Bac church was finished in 1797. There had been an earlier church but it was destroyed by Apaches.

The exterior is white and Moorish inspired. The interior is intricately decorated and colourful. It's considered by many to be the finest example of Spanish Colonial architecture in the United States.




Aviation history

The Pima Air and Space Museum is big, showing over 300 planes both in the open air and in big sheds. Phil went on an hour-long trolley tour of the grounds and said it was excellent (I sat in the cafe and used their free wifi) and the museums were also excellent. I would guess that all of the volunteers there are ex military and they're so enthusiastic and knowledgeable.



And for an extra few dollars we did the bus tour of the boneyard a few kilometres way. Since 9/11 the security has been stepped up and we had to show identity before we were allowed on the bus - it's a working base and 800 people work there. I thought it was just a place to store old planes but no. Many of the planes go back into service and many more are used for parts so they all have to be maintained. Certain parts of each plane (windows or instance) are covered in a thick latex to protect the interiors and even the old planes that have been 'robbed' are supported and tidy. It's a very organised base. Our tour guide showed us some of the stars of the show - old champions - and even a plane that was awarded a purple heart for services in Vietnam! Do a search on GoogleEarth, just east of Tuscon, and you'll see the row upon row of helicopters and planes of various sizes. It's a remarkable sight.





Thursday, September 6, 2012

Saguaro NP, Tucson

"Sah-wah-ro". That's what the National Park pamphlet says is the correct pronunciation of Saguaro. And it was confirmed by the park's ranger at Saguaro NP east of Tucson ("Toos-on"). 

We arrived late in the afternoon and shared the 8-mile loop road with several groups of bike riders. They obviously enjoy the circuit too, and they were friendly so we didn't mind dodging them (and several times they had to dodge us stopped on the road because I'd spotted something interesting).

I hadn't realised that the cactus deserts (Sonoran desert), and the Saguaro cactus in particular, occupy such a small part of the continent. Tucson is a cactus hot spot. We were too late to see the bulk of the cactus flowering but I found a few.






Desert Cottontail
And now for the Saguaro Cactus itself. Probably the most famous cactus in the world. They are very slow growing so the tall multi-branched specimens are several hundred years old. Their flowers open at night and researchers have discovered that the main pollinators are White-winged Doves (which are still allowed to be hunted in USA and Mexico!). 




A crested (or montrose) saguaro - sometimes a normal plant branches in this unusual way.
A tiny grasshopper amongst the spines.

Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Tombstone

Boothill Cemetery, Wyatt Earp, Tombstone, the wild west - the little town of Tombstone down near the Mexican border is doing a good job of attracting tourists to what would otherwise be a ghost town. They're making the most of their notorious past by closing off the central streets to traffic and encouraging tourists to wander along the recreated late 1800s streetscape. We didn't hang round for the daily shootout, or, talking about hanging, go to see the local gallows.





I don't think they had bottled water n 1880.
We also went out to Boothill Cemetery which used to be neglected until it too was 'recreated' using historical records. It's surprising how many residents met their death in a violent way - we were given a very informative little handout detailing such deaths for our self-guided walk. The cemetery is also a very good 'garden' of desert plants.