Saturday, December 31, 2011

10 PM NEW YEAR'S EVE

If you like RV park living with spacious, quiet, all-the-frills topping your list, Tombstone Territory RV Park, northwest of Tombstone, AZ.  is the flagship you've been looking for.

Clubhouse~~Live music dancing, pool, cards, darts and all the chit-chat you can stand.

This is, after all, a mobile retirement village.  Note the New Year's Eve party ends before midnight.

Female House Finch

Juvenile Canyon Towhee

Savoring the noonday sun.

Later everyone, time for me to take my morning nap and get rested up for the party.  I haven't stayed up past 9 O'clock in a long, long time.

HAPPY NEW YEAR!

Friday, December 30, 2011

LOCKED AND LOADED

We're in the Queen Mine RV Park here in Bisbee, AZ.  The place has 25 spaces in an area that should by all rights only accommodate a dozen.  Claustrophobic!  I guess if you don't mind that sardine feeling, listening to your RV neighbor fart and snore or hear their dogs howl, it's the place for you.  For me, it double-sucks.  We are here  because this place is the ONLY RV park in town and there is no where near to dry camp.  OK, enough bitching.  The saving grace was our neighbor J.J.

Originally a fine arts graduate of the Chicago Fine Arts Institute, which over 30 years evolved into computer programing, J.J. now buys land in New Mexico for later selling to augment his upcoming retirement from programing with a Las Cruces firm.

"I'm never without this," He says, as he pats his Smith and Wesson 357 double action pistol.  "Do you mean *everywhere,* J.J.? I ask.  "Yep, everywhere, 24/7," He assures me.  I give him a sideways guy-smile and continue, "What does your wife say to that when you turn out the lights?"   Without missing a beat, he replies, "Oh, she carries too."  I can just hear the metal clashing at midnight.

                                        Main Street in downtown Old Bisbee. 

We rode our bikes from the RV park to the highest part of old town, where the courthouse and St. Patrick Church are perched.  Ironic, the rule of man and the rule of God, side by side atop Calvary hill.  It was a, spill the guts, hard ride by bike, we'll need a day of rest after that spin.

St. Patrick

"LOVE"   The 60's lives on in Bisbee.

We'll be pealing the lid off this sardine can of an RV park in a couple of hours and heading for open spaces.  One stop in Sierra Vista's Walgreen for some script meds and then on to see if we can find a little  people'less BLM bliss.  Not that I don't like people, nor am I  antisocial...I just need a place to fly my kite for a couple of days.  Jackie too is feeling the crush of idiot surround-sound and it just plain old wears a person down after a while. 











Thursday, December 29, 2011

HIPPIES, YUPPIES AND COPPER

We left the flat lands of Geronimo's old stomping grounds and traveled Highway 80 south to Douglas, AZ., border sister city of Agua Prieta, Sonora Mexico.  Our cruise into the city, with a first stop for Propane off the main Pan American Hwy,  revealed a small army of green and white Border Patrol cars examining the surroundings with field glasses.  Even at our next stop, Walmart, no less than three of the Border Patrol vehicles were on the alert.  Our Border Boys were either on the chase or this is one high area of illegal activity.  Either way, it's comforting to see a force *hopefully* keeping the drug cartels confined to the south.  If you're at all interested in the Mexican Cartel drug round-up activity, go to http://www.borderlandbeat.com/ for daily updates.

After stocking-up with supplies, we continue west on Hwy 80 along the border for a few miles and then up into the mountains, 5,500 ft, of Bisbee, AZ.

The wealth generated by copper minds in the late 1800's and early 1900's made Bisbee the most cultured town between St. Louis and San Francisco.
After 8 billion pounds of copper were mined from the Mule Mountains, they ceased all operations by 1975.  What saved Bisbee from extinction was a large influx of "hippies" in the late 70's.  Many of the hippies turned "Yuppies" and created a tourist mecca out of cast-off tailing's.

What's left of  Old Bisbee today is a turn of the century community with very narrow streets and almost as many curio, do-dad and rocks shops as Dollywood. 








Wednesday, December 28, 2011

STONE PONY

The Crescent Moon

and the Rusty's Stone Pony

It's time to gather in our teathers and wander down the road. 
My brain isn't working this morning.  Jackie forced me into the "cups" last night and I'm a bit foggy this morning....Where's the Advil?

Goodbye ducks, see you next year.




Monday, December 26, 2011

THE BATES MOTEL

With temperatures finally easing into the mid 50's, Jackie and I hopped on the bikes and rode to the town of Rodeo, NM, 7 miles to the south on Highway 80.  We went looking to pick up a quart of milk but the town was closed up tight for the Holidays.  The winds were at our back going, making for an easy ride, but the return to the park called for pushing hard on the pedals, almost twice the effort.....Which put me in mind of a cross-country tour I had made with my riding partner Earl Norman, about 10 years ago.

March 8th 2002 85 miles

Douglas, AZ to Crossroads Hwy 80 and Interstate 70 (20 miles west of Lordsburg, NM

Five miles north of Douglas,AZ we picked up a most benefiting tail wind. On the level we were effortlessly gliding along at twenty to twenty-five miles an hour. I’m so inspired with the breathless beauty of this spiritual country that I mentally log it into my “Places to retire” book.
Leaving Douglas, AZ

Just over the Arizona state line, 50 miles north of Douglas, is the town of Rodeo, NM.   With about 40 full time residents, an art gallery, and small grocery store, it's a welcome oasis here in the high desert.  The grocery store is small, mostly canned and dried food, no produce and prices are generally quite inflated, but the old rule stands, “Supply and Demand. Just the fact that something is available here in the barren land is comforting and the price becomes unimportant.
Leaving north out of  Rodeo, the wind we loved this morning, was easy to hate this afternoon. We were already tired from 60 miles of ups and downs and now we have to fight an ever-worsening rough road, with banging headwinds, for another 25 miles onto The Crossroads. The wind churns and swirls, confused, not knowing which way to jar us next. It is strong and violent, slapping our faces red.

We make it to the Crossroads. If you've ever been down this road you'll remember it as nothing much to remember.  It's where Hwy 80 from the south ends and intersects with Interstate 10, about 20 miles west of Lordsburg, NM.

We had finished a punishing day of into-the-wind riding and were ready for a good
rest. The plan had been to push hard and stay at a motel, no tenting in this wind. Someone during the day had told us we would find a motel when our hwy 80 hit Interstate 10.
A greasy spoon truck stop sign lit the night sky as we pedaled in but no anticipated motel neon shown on the now fading horizon. Rolling closer to the corner we noticed a rambling sprawl of about 30 connected units with a center court that had battled and lost to a now healthy profusion of weeds. Sidewalks were well guarded by untrimmed cactus and required keen attention of ones elbow placement. The motel  appeared to be deserted.

From the corner of my eye I noticed movement in the far back corner of the weed infested court. Moving forward and to the right I was able to see a woman that looked to be hanging clothes on a line. I walked quickly, but carefully toward her, being aware of the reaching cactus arms. “Hello,” I said and extended my hand to shake hers. She said nothing and continued to attach clothespins and clothes to the line ignorning my hand. I said, “Any rooms available for a couple of guys to stay for the evening?” “Nope, they went out of business a year ago,” she answered, short and curt. I could see the maintenance crew had long ago abandoned their duties and that the place was locked up. It was also apparent that this person was indeed living here, albeit not in luxury. Just then a man emerged from a room near where the woman and I were talking; better said, where I was talking. He came over, not in a threatening way, but not exuding friendliness either. His hand accepted mine for a handshake and I asked him what I had had asked her. He said, “ The bank foreclosed on this place some time ago and we are the caretakers.   Now I’ve kicked around in the underbelly of many parts of this country and have, not only a firsthand understanding of bullshit; I was also given the gift of a sixth sense. His “caretaker” line was wishful thinking, the truth probably being he hadn’t been run off because no-one cared if he was there or not. I followed my intuition, produced a twenty-dollar bill (Which would, by the looks of his puffy face and shabby clothes fetch him a drink or something better than dried bread to eat.) and asked, “Being the caretaker, could you loan us a key to one of the rooms for an evening.” “Ain’t no electricity or water,” He said, stiff necked and business like, enjoying his recognized authority. “That’s OK, you’ve got the best rooms in town,” I said, giving him a wink and a smile. He motioned me to follow him back to the room from where he had just emerged. His, and his ladie's room was not messy or neat but sort of an organized heaping of many items. A partially used brown candle was setting atop a mound of many candlelight hours of  multicolor wax.  A two-burner Coleman stove served as their kitchen range and a large open steel pot with five single gallons of water served as the sink. The two beds were made, one used for storage and one for sleep. There weren’t any offensively telltale odors, so I imagined (given their circumstance) they were somewhat clean of body and not breeding too many tiny livestock. Besides, she had presence of mind to wash clothes. He said, picking up a key and pointing, “six doors down on the same side, Barbie will clean it up for you.” “Thanks, my partner and I will be back in half an hour. We need to go over to the truck stop and call our people, they get worried when they don’t hear from us by sundown,” I lied, thinging, “That is about the best security, short of an all night, pepper spray armed sentry, that we have."   I handed him the twenty-dollar bill and Earl and I wheeled the bikes down the sidewalk, pass the arms of the spiny cactus and into the cracked asphalt parking lot. We mounted our bikes and rode across the dark highway to the all-night truck stop.

An overpriced, over greased platter of Mexican burritos was served by an over weight, overly bossy waitress. The shining part of dinner was a telephone at our booth; No cell phone back then.  I called to alert my friend back home of our tenuous circumstances and to have the New Mexico State Police come looking for us if I didn’t call her by seven o’clock the next morning.

Pedaling back across the unlit highway to the even darker motel, I could feel the Mexican grease in my stomach. I couldn’t help but wonder if the all night chef was cooking with an extract from the famous southern Jumping Bean. The grease was working pronto, looking for a way out; which direction it was planning it’s exit, I wasn’t sure. I hoped it would stay with me at least through the night; I needed to replace the day’s expended energy.

Our twenty-dollar key opened room 206. The beds were made, complete with pillows, and that is the way they stayed. Neither Earl nor I were adventurous enough to place our bodies inside of the mystery sheets. Lamps sat on night tables, plugged into wall sockets long void of any electricity. A large wall mirror was a little dusty but we were able to make out the two oddly dressed guests. The sink, closet and bathroom were jammed with assorted, non-motel related items our housekeeper Barbie had no doubt removed from floor and beds. No big deal. Any clothes we did take off could be stuffed into bags or draped over the bikes.  Our drinking water was safe in plastic bottles and a since all water had long ago been shut off, a shower could wait for another day.

                                               Our room at the Bates Motel

I'll admit, thoughts of Hitchcock’s Bates Motel did have me a little on edge when I noticed, under a flap of cardboard in the sink, a large pool of dried blood. After seeing that,  I made sure an intruder would have to knock down, and then climb over, Earl’s bike if they attempted to gain access through the door. I figured that would give me ample time to hoist and aim my  pepper spray. Comfortable in our sleeping bags atop the beds, we turned out our flashlights and sank into a deep 85 mile, uneventful nights sleep.

A relieved goodbye in the morning.

In the morning we called our friend in Iron River to let her know we had survived the evening.


























DUCK FEET AND TEETH

The hydrodynamics of ducks feet are truly amazing.  When pushed back, for propelling forward in water, the web between their toes spreads for thrust.  When drawn forward the web closes lessening drag.  Once out of the water they are not Olympic runners but do manage to waddle about and forage for a meal.
Duck Feet
Duck Teeth


This guy is telling me to back off, he's the big chief and will protect his harem.

Bob's Christmas finery.

Meadowlark warming in the morning sun.

Old farts Christmas Dinner at Rusty's RV Park.

Our back yard, the Scelopus (Spiny Lizard) Mountains










Sunday, December 25, 2011

MERRY CHRISTMAS FROM RODEO, NM

Snow in the desert is mysterious, beautiful and somehow disconcerting.  The temps gained enough above freezing to melt the road ice and allow our escape to Rodeo, NM.

Ah, at last, sunshine.

A young Lark Bunting was finding slim pick'ins in the snow.

SAINT CATHERINE CHURCH

Traveling west from Columbus, NM along the utterly barren Highway 9, we turn off

at Hachita (Little Hatchet) to take a break and have a look at the closest living thing to a ghost town and yet still have a few inhabitants. The silver and copper mines of yesteryear have shut down, the train tracks pulled and all commercial life boarded and still.


Saint Catherine, The Patron Saint of Italy, known for her "Mystical Marriage" with Jesus wasn't even able to save the town of Hachita from it's slow demise. 

The church is in a ramshackle disarray, with windows busted out and doors boarded. The the statue of St. Catherine has even been stolen from her outside perch.  

The town is but 4 miles from a wide open Mexican border and sees a lot of green and white Border Patrol vehicles.  I was out of the rig prowling around looking for a good photo-op, on the sunless side of the church, when I came on fresh footprints in the snow.  My first thought was the tracks were mine but quickly realized I hadn't yet been here.  The prints ominously ended at an open window on the church.  I backtracked much more quickly than I had come.

Rusty's daddy.
The owner of Rusty's RV Ranch

From Jackie and I
Merry Christmas
Rodeo, NM




Saturday, December 24, 2011

VOICE OF REASON

One doesn't normally think snow when visualizing a cactus but here it is, the 24th of December, Christmas Eve, and indeed, snow is on the cactus.



Our plans to be in Rodeo, NM were thwarted by slippery roads, we instead boosted the thermostat a few degrees, snuggled in and stayed put.  Another day in Columbus, NM.  I'm fairly certain we could have inched along Highway 9 west using our Yooper winter driving skills but as Jackie says, "These people down here just do not know how to drive on ice."  I deferred to the her voice of reason.

Two sheriff cars and six Border Patrol vehicles were zooming in and around the main (only) intersection just outside of the park this morning.  They stopped every car and truck coming and going, checking the drivers papers and giving them a good going over. 

For the flora in the park this snow is a welcome drink.  Southern New Mexico remains well below normal precipitation and is slowly dying, Even a cactus needs some water.

Just another day in the life of a House Finch.

We can all take a lesson from this guy.  Take life as it comes and deal with it.  Don't fret, don't worry and most of all, don't project into our lives problems of which we have no control.

~~MERRY CHRISTMAS EVE~~


Friday, December 23, 2011

IT'S BEGINNING TO LOOK A LOT LIKE......

Sand Hill Cranes on their way to Mexico fueled-up from their last stop along the Pratt River in Kansas.
Sand Hill Crane

                     
            
Of all the water towers across the U.S. these are my favorites.
In 1916 Pancho Villa, after shooting-up the town of Columbus, NM, probably stopped and had a drink supplied by the little tower built at the end of the 19th century.


"Hi, I'm Marine Sargent John Sullivan Retired. I survived the French Indochina War because I can kill and I like whisky," this proud, if not a little tipsy, man tells me with a straight back and a snappy salute.

As evening fell a black band of ominous clouds moved in from the North.

The long, beautiful arm of Mother Nature reached all the way to Columbus, NM and is giving us a little snow….and it’s still coming and coming…..Santa will be happy not having to hitch up 8 tiny four-wheelers and can stick with Rudolf and the gang.

It's beginning to look a lot like we'll be spending Christmas with the spirit of Pancho Villa.



Thursday, December 22, 2011

TACOS ON THE WIND

Driving along Highway 11, a few miles north of Poncho Villa State Park, Columbus, NM where the land is flat and dry and the winds carry aromas along the sand for distances, Jackie turns toward me and says, “Do you smell that?” I was busy keeping the rig between the lines, watching for soaring hawks and other birds to add to my growing sightings list. “No, what are you smelling, burning wires, a gas leak, human methane,” I replied. “Tacos, I smell tacos,” she said with a smile a mile wide. Jackie is the consummate taco aficionado and can sniff-out a roadside taco stand miles downwind with the best of them. Sure enough, a mile down the road and there it was on the side of the highway, a rather faded sign proclaiming, “Mexican Food” with an arrow pointing to the left.

We turned left onto a dirt road that took us to the fringes of Columbus proper, a community of 1,800 inhabitants that’s seeing hard times in the face of the Mexican border drug wars. Last year the Mayor and police chief were among 10 people arrested for gun smuggling. 

 
We pulled the rig up, across the narrow street from the brightly painted grocery-restaurant and Jackie was out the door and headed toward the taco counter before I had the shifter in park.  This was no 7-11, she had once again sniffed-out the real McCoy.  Sombreros off to you Jackie, you've scored the best tacos within a 100 miles.

After lunch Jackie reminisced, "Remember the tacos at that place in Tucson." 

Black throated Sparrow

Cactus Wren building a nest in the serrated edged Desert Spoon

The inner part of this plant and the core of the flower stems are edible and can be used to make an alcoholic beverage.  Noted!


Canyon Wren


Curved Billed Thrasher

Dasylirion wheeleri – Common Sotol or Desert Spoon

Immature White Crowned Sparrow

The spirit of Pancho Villa bids us all goodnight.







Wednesday, December 21, 2011

QUADRUPLE-GAZILLION

Winter weather, as it should is normal, hangs on our heals here at Rock Hound State Park, 14 miles south of Deming, NM.


We selected our space high above the other campers and next to the foot trail that leads up the wash into the good “rock digging” area.   Just off to the east storm clouds shroud the Little Florida mountains, not a fair weather omen.



Climb this mountain, traverse to the far side and you will be in the land where geodes abound. Beware it takes a trained eye to identify these little nuggets that collectors so prize. So study-up before you take the exhausting climb or you’ll return with the same thing I returned with, “just another Indian Love Stone.” ~ Ask me privately what an Indian Love Stone is, this is, after all, a family type blog.



Canyon Towhee


Cactus Wren



This place is one of the few (maybe only) state or federal parks that turns a blind eye to rock collecting. There is usually a big sign posted that shouts, “REMOVAL OF ROCKS OR ARTIFACTS IS STRICTLY PROHIBITED.” Maybe it’s the obvious fact that no matter how many souvenir rocks are taken by the campers, there will remain a quadruple-gazillion metric tons for the next camper to take home. 

Goodnight