We had no fixed agenda for today so we did what we normally do in this situation; we picked a direction and went west. We turned out of our park and headed west on AZ-82, up over the local ridge and into some magnificent mequite grasslands that had many hawks lurking on posts and poles waiting for some scurrying yummies to come into view. One of the handsome raptors was nice enough to show us how predation works right as we drove by.
Soon we passed through the town of Patagonia. Outside town are large ranches with copious grasslands pocked with massive rock formations of all colors. We were guilty of driving too slowly for existing conditions as we passed through this little wonderland. We stayed with AZ-82 another 20 miles or so to Nogales, AZ, not to be confused with Nogales, Mexico, across the border. The ugly sheet pile wall installed by a paranoid senator right through the middle of town is plainly evident from most of the U.S. side.
We turned around before entering Mexico and headed back toward our park near Huachuca City. During the drive, we got a text from our daughter, Dana, who reminded us we were to get a rewards for some unknown reason so we drove into nearby Sierra Vista and pulled into Rodolfo’s, a Mexican food place. Their beef burritos are very tasty and Peggy was impressed by their beef tacos. To make sure we were adequately rewarded, we took some tamales, to go.
We got a few pix you can see if you click here
Monthly Archives: January 2017
January 2 Bisbee
Two years ago this month Peggy and I visited this area on our way east. One of the places we enjoyed the most was the town of Bisbee so we returned today. We left Quail Ridge RV Park and headed south on AZ-90 until we got to the town of Sierra Vista. Once downtown, we turned east on AZ-80 and started a climb into the mountains.
There is very little air pollution here and the vistas are almost endless. As we climbed up to Bisbee, we found ourselves plodding along about 15 miles under the speed limit because the scenery along the way was stunning. Sunsets are pretty spiffy here, too. We finally arrived at the upper end of Bisbee.
Bisbee has probably the best space utilization and most bizarre zoning regulations of anywhere on the planet barring refugee camps. There is very little flat ground in Bisbee so all the houses appear to be built right on top of each other. Very steep and narrow one-lane streets slither between the residences although it looks like some houses do not have direct access to the street. Some of the buildings are built across the aqueduct that ushers the local creek through town. It appears like a city for Hobbits.
We stopped in at both the Bisbee Renovation and the local mining museum and they were both great. Peggy found many stores that had stuff she found interesting like glass ornaments, jewelry and copper things. Nearby copper mines are the reason for Bisbee’s existence, or at least they were before mining crapped out here. There is the gigantic Lavender Pit just at the edge of town, along with a pretty massive mountain of spoils. There are benches with liquids of many unnatural colors in the pit and visible from the mine viewpoint next to the highway. Swimming looks to be right out here.
We drove back home to Quail Ridge getting some magnificent views of the terrain and the vivid sunset. The temperatures have been pretty low at night since a few nights back when a big storm blew through the area. I have filled our (heated) on-board water tank and disconnected our outside water piping since it is dropping below freezing at night.
There are a few Bisbee pics (along with some other days’ photos due to ineptitude on the part of the operator) to see if you click here
January 1 2017 New Year’s in Huachuca
It is the first day of 2017 and, again, we find ourselves on the road. We woke in Huachuca, Arizona, where there was a raging storm for a good part of last night. Fortunately, our trailer was warm and dry.
We stayed in the trailer for most of the day because the weather was an impressive mix of high winds, torrential downpours and dense fog. In the morning we could see the nearby rocky mountains. After a particularly noisy downpour the same mountains had a covering of snow. The outside temperature went down 9 degrees F in about a half hour. Later in the day, the heavy cloud cover started breaking up and by halftime of the afternoon football game there were big sections of clear sky and the nearby mountains were again free of snow. Things change very quickly here.
We will go exploring around this area tomorrow.
December 31 2016 Last day of 2016 in Huachuca
Last night the clouds got thicker and more menacing before opening up and engaging in some downpour fun. For a while, the sound in the trailer was not unlike having your head inside a snare drum during a rock concert but the rain finally quit and the clouds started to break up around dawn.
Things were pretty dull today. We hobnobbed with our neighbors, Lois and Fred, since we caught them outside their motor home with their gorgeous puppy, Tanner. We did our laundry. We walked over to the RV park office and found it was closed before we got in today and won’t be open at all tomorrow. We watched Star Wars, thanks to a fistful of thumb drives with pirated old movies. We loafed. It was great.
At 5:00 PM, we took a big tray of cornbread, a dish of honey-butter and a big vat of barbecued beans over to what we believed was the clubhouse in order to participate in the Quail Ridge RV Resort’s New Year’s Eve potluck dinner. We don’t usually participate in RV park events but we decided to give it a try this time.
We arrived a couple minutes before 5:00 and were quite surprised to find we were the first suckers on site. Just after 5:00, Peggy and I were sitting at a big, round table munching cornbread and bbq beans, all by ourselves. I tried to turn on the wide screen TV but was unsuccessful. After a bit, I noticed an ad for some homeless pastor that comes to the park on Sundays to tend to the spiritual needs of a few devout folks and he holds his plate-passing rituals in something called the Back Clubhouse. We were only slightly aware of there being a back anything in this RV park.
Soon, we were loading our contributions into our truck and we went exploring. There is a big back something to this park and one thing in that something was a larger clubhouse, filled with elderly people, like us, gorging themselves on a variety of tasty foods. We took our stuff out for the second time, set it among the other food selections and sat down with some very nice folks from Montana named Bob and Carol. They seemed much happier with the chilly weather here than the 30 below back home.
The weather looked ominous all day. Some scattered clouds but mostly overcast. Later in the day, it looked like Sauron was shading an advancing army of Orcs coming from the west. I suspect we may be in for a real storm. Weirdly, the nighttime temperature here (4100′ elevation) is not as cold as it was down in Catalina (el.=3100′).
December 30 2016 Catalina to Huachuca
We gathered up our stuff and departed the Wishing Well RV Park, turning south on Oracle Road into the commercial areas of the Tucson metropolis. We stopped at many signals before turning west on Ina Road towards I-10. Many more slow-cycling and needless signals delayed our passage but eventually we made it to the freeway. From that point we turned east on I-10 through downtown Tucson and continued on 10 up the slow incline to Benson, AZ, at about 4000′ elevation. There we turned off the freeway and continued south toward the Quail Ridge RV Resort at the intersections of AZ-90 and AZ-82, north of the towns of Huachuca City and Sierra Vista. The whole drive today was less than 100 miles although it took almost as long to get onto the freeway as it did to cover the remainder of the distance.
We stayed at Quail Ridge and made a brief visit to this area early in 2015 on our way to the east coast. The park is basically gravel spaces with full (50 amp!) hookups in the midst of a mesquite tree forest on flat land. However. the park is also located in a wide valley between the Dragoon Mountains to the east and the Whetstone and Huachuca Mountains to the west. The vistas from Quail Ridge are absolutely stunning, the light changing constantly as the fluffy clouds sail over the area.
Also in this area is Tombstone (mecca for those believing they are really seeing the OK Corral), the amazing town of Bisbee, the gigantic pit at Lavender Mine, an amazing bird viewing spot in Ash Canyon, the nearby town of Patagonia where Peggy wants to go and Fort Huachuca. Fort Huachuca is featured in many old western movies but none of the old wood stockade remains although the DoD still maintains a large military reservation at this site. There are graveyards and interesting-looking objects here.
Looky-loos can also drive down to the nearby Mexican border and see a sheet pile wall extending east to west from horizon to horizon. It is an impressive testament to stupidity since Mexicans, just like us in the USA, know how to operate ladders.
Quail Ridge has nice, clean spaces but no wi-fi. The say there is wi-fi at the local Shell fuel station. The elevation is at about 4100′ so there is no pool but they have great restrooms with ample seating space and nice showers. They also have a small assembly room and a very nice laundry. We are members of RPI so we get to stay for $10 per night plus a $3 surcharge for electricity. We are glad we have returned to this area. The views, the birds and the quiet here are treats.
We got some pix along the way which you can see if you click here
December 29 2016 Catalina AZ
Today was our last full day in the Tucson area but we were lazy and didn’t get much done. We took a drive through the town of Catalina, AZ, where we are camped. We found that the Wishing Well RV Park is near the center of activity in town because it is next to the Circle K.
We did find a store Peggy wanted to visit called Tractor Supply. We have seen them advertised but have never visited one before. I know – we need to get out more. Anyway, the Tractor Supply here in Catalina is great. If we still lived in a real house instead of a fifth wheel trailer, we could happily spend a great deal of money in this place. This store had a clothing section where they sell Carhartt shirts cheap.
Only about $60 later, we escaped with three shirts and a big bag of black sunflower seeds for birds. Last time we were in Texas, a bird-feeding neighbor stated that cardinals love the black seeds and the dozens of birds hanging out at his feeder indicated that he was right. We should be in Texas in a week or two but we’ll be ready to hang out our feeder so we can watch these easily-baited but gorgeous birds. We have at least one more stop here in Sierra Vista and maybe a couple stops in New Mexico before we get to Texas.
About a week ago, I guessed that we were set up at about 2500′ elevation in the Wishing Well RV Park in Catalina. Our GPS unit says I am wrong. The park is actually located at 3100′. From up here, if there are any clouds west of us, the sunsets are spectacular.
December 28 2016 Mount Lemmon
We did an old trick to start our explorations of stuff around Tucson today. We got in the truck and went east, stumbling our way through places we have not seen previously. After 25 miles of driving on Tucson city streets, we turned off on the road to a place called Mount Lemmon. Not long after turning, we started climbing through some foothills with very fancy houses built on them before entering the Colorado National Forest.
The road climbs steadily from about 2500′ at the bottom through switchbacks and many turns to an elevation of over 8000′ near the top of Mount Lemmon. Alongside the road are many turnouts and viewpoints which is fortunate because the terrain is spectacular. In some places are grand vistas of Tucson, arroyos and distant mountain ranges. Other spots offer magnificent views of massive rock ridges, hoodoos and steep-sided chasms. There is even a pullout for a gorgeous group of waterfalls called 7 Cataracts located in a narrow stone gorge.
At the top end of the road we entered a town called Summerhaven which we guess was named because it is higher and cooler than Tucson below where the temperatures in the summer can be torrid. The area around Summerhaven and areas above about 6500′ were blanketed with a thin layer of snow. The road was good but it would be an extremely poor place to have brake problems. Once you start down, it is all downhill for about 20 miles.
We ended up our day by swinging in to Trader Joe’s and purchasing more food that is probably not very good for us but it sure is tasty.
We got some pix that you can see if you click here
December 27 2016 West Saguaro NP & Tohono Chul
The western unit of Saguaro National Park and the nearby Arizona Sonoran Desert Museum were our planned destinations for today. We started the day with breakfast at the Sunny Side Up Cafe here in Catalina. The meat portions were microscopic but the biscuits and gravy were good. Peg’s pastrami and rye sandwich was reported as dry. The prices were good and so was the service but nominal food will win few hearts. A two-and-a-half star joint. We then drove west through Tucson and/or Oro Valley (not sure which – it is hard to tell the difference) across I-10 and up the screwy one lane road into the western unit. This portion of Saguaro National Park is just as stunning as the eastern unit but it looks like a bit more water lands here because everything was very green.
We took our time as we passed through the park but eventually emerged on the other side and passed into a Pima County desert park where we pulled off at the Arizona Sonoran Desert Museum which was packed. Folks were even lined up back into the parking lot awaiting a chance to purchase entrance into the museum so we moseyed right through the parking lot and set the Garmin again for the Tucson Camping World. This time they were open and sold me much stuff.
We then set the Garmin for a small local botanical garden or park called Tohono Chul. It is another of our favorite spots in the Tucson area. It sits on a small piece of land right in the middle of a big commercial district. The place is packed with all kinds of desert plants, little scurrying reptiles and fabulously colored birds all visible from the narrow, plant-lined pathways wandering through this serene retreat. There are great sculptures and fountains throughout the gardens along with buildings in the great southwestern architectural style. What a terrific legacy the original land owners left to the city.
On the way back to our RV park we stopped at a place called Tucson Tamales and purchased a variety of tamales to take home. At $3.25 a pop they ain’t cheap but they are very tasty, particularly their masa.
We took some photos you can see if you click here
December 26 2016 East unit of Saguaro NP
Although it is not yet 2017, we started our explorations for our early 2017 travels today. We drove south down Oracle Road and through Tucson on our way to the eastern unit of Saguaro National Park. We have been here a couple times before but the scenery here just never quits being dazzling.
I am old and since I am, we now have a permanent old geezer’s pass for Federal parks and monuments that allows us free access. We showed the pass to the Ranger in the booth and he gave us the “move along” gesture. We rolled right onto the park’s 9-mile one-way loop road for another pass through this enormous cactus garden. Virtually all the plants here have formidable defenses, particularly the sharp, pointy kind.
We pulled off the road at almost every wide spot in the pavement, shut down the engine and listened for animal life. Initially we could not see anything moving but after we hung out for a while, we would start to hear a variety of birds singing and would get glimpses of little scurrying things speeding across the scarce clear ground between prickly forests. Strangely, we even spotted a squirrel and a woodpecker both perched in a scrawny ocotillo cactus just like good neighbors. The scenery here is spectacular.
After our slow pass through the east unit, we set the Garmin for the nearby Camping World which was inconveniently closed for the holiday that occurred yesterday. We need a new tank washer hose and some other stuff but I guess we’ll be getting them some other time.
We headed back to the Wishing Well RV Park and our dry, warm trailer. It is cold at night with no nighttime temperatures above 40 degrees since we got here. We love our electric heaters.
There are some pix available if you click here
December 25 2016 Xmas at the Wishing Well
Today is Christmas and we did very little other than hang out in our nice warm trailer. All last night a rainstorm raged and temperature were in the 30’s but, due to the gigantic range of mountains east of us, the sun came up at about 8:30 and drove the storm away. The Catalinas were all dusted with snow this morning and just gorgeous. By about 5:00 PM, it didn’t look like much had melted. It was in the 40’s outside today in our RV park but our brand new Vornado heater seems to be up to the task of keeping it 70 inside.
We got to speak with both of our kids on the phone today. That was nice.
There are some pix available if you click here