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Nature’s Marvelous Monarch Migration during her Coronavirus Scourge

As we live in the Coronavirus hell nature produced, I was reminded of the marvels nature can also produce. A few days ago,  I was out on a properly-socially-distanced walk when my eye  caught some movement that took my breath away and I said to my husband, “They’re here!”  I pointed to two Monarch butterflies alight in their characteristic flight pattern in which they make delightful dips as they determinedly head north. As we watched the pair, they flitted with another butterfly (a bright yellow Sulphur), then stopped to nectar on the wildflowers which have just begun to bloom in nature’s perfect way of timing itself. Fueled, they continued northward, in their relentless search for the milkweed on which they must lay their eggs to survive.

Emerging from my revelry, I grabbed my cell phone and searched Google for “Journey North,” a website into which any of us can be citizen scientists by inputting migration data on not only monarchs but creatures like hummingbirds (who, too, are just arriving here in Texas) and whales. I logged into my account that I’d created last fall when the monarchs were headed south to their overwintering grounds in the oyamel forests near Mexico City. I navigated to “Sightings” and was asked to “Select Species or Event” then scrolled through an alphabetical list that included things like “bald eagle,” “manatee” and “loon” before I found “Monarch Butterfly” and clicked on it. I was taken to a google map of Austin, Texas, where I live,  and asked to move a red marker to my exact location and then report a few simple things: What I saw (adult, egg or larva), when I saw it, how many I saw and my comments.  It also had an option to upload a photo of what I saw. After filling in the data, I clicked “Submit Report.” We continued on our walk. I was filled with both a feeling of joy at witnessing the arrival of these amazing creatures and a feeling of accomplishment at having participated in science.

Two days later, I received an email with the subject line “Confirm Your Monarch Sighting” from the Data Manager, Liz Goering, at Journey North, which is run by Dr. Karen Oberhauser at the University of Wisconsin. She asked me to give her more details about my sighting:

“Did the monarch look faded and worn or bright and new? Is there any chance of a photo? If no photo, please describe its color and condition.  If you haven’t already told us, what was the butterfly doing when you saw it? Is milkweed up and available? If so, have you had a chance to check for monarch eggs on it?”

I was astounded that someone had noted MY observation. She explained that my sighting was on the front end of the migration, which was why it was so important! How cool is that!

As the weather warms this week, we’ll be seeing more monarchs here in Austin, Texas. They are pushed north by warm fronts. When you’re housebound from sheltering from the Coronavirus, take your kids (and your adult self) outside and look for these spectacular harbingers of spring.  Cheer them on during their arduous flight from the mountains of Mexico across the Gulf of Mexico to Canada! Celebrate their arrival and contribute to scientists’ attempts to understand their unparalleled achievement.

Paula Levihn-Coon

Citizen Scientist

p.s. Look for hummingbirds, too!

 

 

 

 
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Posted by on March 22, 2020 in Uncategorized

 

Hard Light 5.30.13

Hard Light by David Mallett

It’s so warm and it’s so nice to lie here in your harbor
And you tell me all the things that you know I need to hear.
Let us rest and do our best to forget the coming morning
Cuz the hard light of the truth of things is the only thing I fear.
 
You can walk in satin shoes and I can march a warrior
Straight into your waiting arms where virtue has no price.
Together at the birth of love the seedling falls around us.
To make it last the night must pass through the fire and the ice.
 
Cuz I have seen the lonely ones who stand on endless corners
Homeless in their homes where days are dark and hearts do die
And I’ve heard tales of forever and I can see what we are after
But in between the laughter I hear echoes of good-bye.
 
It’s so nice and so warm to lie here in your harbor
Can you tell me all the things that you know I need to hear?
So let us rest and do our best to forget the coming morning
cuz the hard light of the truth of things is the only thing I fear.
 
(underlined words I’m not 100% sure of)
Written and sung by David Mallett here: David Mallett – Hard Light
 
Sung by Mallett Brothers Band with David Mallett here: The Mallett Brothers Band – Hard Light
 
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Posted by on May 31, 2013 in Personal

 

Woody’s Corral, Hot Springs, and The Gila Cliff Dwellings

After multiple awakenings to let Zoloft out to go potty, one sleepless period where I listened to my book on tape till I was tired again, I awoke around nine a.m. and arose. I fed Rio and Zoloft then headed a mile back the road we’d come in last night to Doc Hollidays Post, which Barbara Nash, the Continental Divide hiker had told me about. Bought coffee and a book about hot springs in the Southwest and got some scoop on Gila Hot Springs – there is a road to it but trailers can’t go down it, only cars so I’ll either have to disconnect the trailer or walk the quarter whole mile to it. I’ll do the latter because I’ll leave Zoloft in the trailer anyway. Costs $4 and I can’t wait! I also found out if you’re traveling that you can have packages sent to Doc Hollidays – there re about their of then sitting there, waiting for recipients to claim them. I guess being on the Continental Divide Trail, this is how it works.

Then I drove to the National Monument information center and got scoop on horseback rides from a very knowledgeable Ranger who, with his wife, owns a Tennessee Walker and a Missouri Fox-trotter and rides weekly, at least, in The Gila. He gave me a xeroxed copy of the same map I have and highlighted trails and told me about sites, lookouts, hot springs, etc. gave me rough ideas of mileage and also some suggestions for 20-30 mile rides that would require an overnight camp out in the wilderness. I’ll bring Bill back for those. I also bought a National Park Pass for $80 which often lets up to four people in to National parks and will pay for itself easily if you go to someplace like The Grand Canyon with a $25 entrance fee. Even if I don’t make it pay, it supports the system. No personal info required, like with the Texas State Park passes, so it’s transferable, I guess. I also found out that Doc Hollidays has laundry facilities and that Gila Hot Springs are open 24/7 and after ten, most people don’t wear swimsuits. I watched the fifteen minute video on the Mogollon Indians who lived for only one generation in the Cliff Dwellings in the 1200’s.

Came back to the campsite, moved the truck to a better location, and have been writing this till around 2pm when I’ll put Zoloft in the trailer and walk to the Gila Cliff Dwellings so I can spend a couple of hours there when the light is better for photography than it is now, in the middle of the day. While writing, I’m being bombarded by hummingbirds, so I’ll get out the feeder I brought along and see if I have any luck with them coming to it. They really hum! It’s like some sacred divining fork is vibrating over my head. One has the most brilliant red chest, so they must be Ruby Throated Hummingbirds. It’s partly cloudy and a bit cool, perfect for my afternoon hike to the Cliff Dwellings. The rest of the week it’s forecasted to be sunny, so no more sleeping in the truck, I hope.

It was a delightful one mile trek to the Cliff Dwellings which were staffed by retired Volunteers who were super pleasant, knowledgeable, enthusiastic and helpful. Go to volunteers.US.gov and apply for opportunities all over the country. Apparently, the Federal Government pays the rent on wherever you park your R.V. One woman volunteer said she spends winters on Florida and summers at different park sites every year, working four eight hour days per week.

The setting of the cliff dwellings was stunning. The cliffs were colored in layers of sand, tan and rust and a permanent spring ran in front of it then dipped underground before running into the Gila River. The tour consisted of a one mile walk up 180′ or so, through five of the seven rooms of the cliff dwellings, and back down again. The Mogollon Indians (40-60 of them) only lived there about thirty years and no one knows why they left. The caves were cool and deep and talk about a beautiful view!

I walked by to Woody’s Corral, rescued Zoloft whom I’d locked in the horse trailer (with water, of course), fed Rio and Zoloft then changed clothes (into a colored bra and panties since I left my swimsuit in Austin, by accident) then headed in the rig, with Zoloft, to Gila Hot Springs, stopping at Doc Hollidays to see if I could do some laundry, but they closed at 4pm. Gila Hot Springs is both a town (whose buildings are heated by hot water from the springs) and a series of campsites and cabins with hot spring baths. I parked in the Highway 15 turnout next to the Forest Service informational marker for the hot springs, put Zoloft in the horse trailer (not knowing the pet policy), then walked down to the hotsprings campground, paid my $4 day pass fee and sunk into the 106 degree middle pool. there were two other pools, a 102 one occupied by two men and a 109 degree empty one. about three campsites were taken and Kevin, who co-manages the place with his brother, gave me the scoop (and took a couple of photos of me, per my request). The whole neighborhood and town are watered by the hot springs, which are located on some private property across the Gila River, even the goats at the neighboring farm get hot water to drink! businesses pay the owners of the land on which the spring is located a percentage of revenue…. the photos I’ll upload, hopefully, will show the decorative idiosyncrasies of the place (I think most of the decor is stuff that’s been found nearby that washed down the river during thunderstorms! I asked Kevin about the construction of the pools and he told me his brother had built these but next round, he’d learn how. the river floods about every three years and they have to rebuild and it’s been four years since the last flood/rebuild. So, when Courtney and Ryan or Andrew and Sophie and Nikki or Bill and Austen and I ( or variations thereof) ever go there, it may look like a totally different place. I’d brought shampoo, etc., but none was allowed. When I was warmed- out, I put my terry cloth coverup back on and hiked the quarter mile back up to the highway. next time, probably tomorrow after my horseback ride, I’ll drive down and bring Zoloft. Kevin said there’s room to turn around and he only kicks put obnoxious dogs. We’re good to go.

It’s 8pm, getting dark, and I’ve got to get set up for the nights. The sky has still gots some serious-looking clouds but the chance of rain is low, so I’ll set Zoloft and me up in the horse trailer, comme d’habitude. Bon nuit!

good to go!

 
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Posted by on May 12, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Aeroplane Mesa to Gila Cliff Dwellings, All in New Mexico

I just couldn’t get out of bed this morning. When I did, at around ten a.m., I discovered a sheen of frost or sleet frozen on my car. When I last checked, around 8pm last night, the car’s thermometer said it was 42 degrees outside. The problem with cold, is that it makes you NOT wants to get out of your by-now-warm sleeping bags.

I fed the horse and dog but not myself, in the interest of getting’ on down the road. Packed up and bid Aeroplane Mesa Campground good-bye. There wasn’t another soul present, just us. Heade past Snow Lake and followed the signs for Glenwood (39 miles). Two and a half hours later, above Glenwood, I confronted a mail man on his route on the narrow mountain road. I was on the drop-off side and stopped, having no clue how we were going to pass each other without me, Zoloft, Rio and the horse trailer plunging to our deaths. He said, ” You’ve got plenty of room!” I said,”Really?” and scootched drop-off way a bit, allowing him to pass. He said, “Now, all you have to do is smile!” Talk about hairy roads! No rail ANYWHERE. After Glenwood, we arrived in the mining ghost town of Mogollon

, which was not yet open for “The Season” which was too bad cuz boy, could I have used a bathroom and a cup of coffee! They had some “art” stores and the Purple Onion Cafe, but none were open. I some photos and kept moving.

In Glenwood, I stopped at the ranger station, pumped some water for Rio, which he didn’t drink and went inside to check out the literature. bought a $10 map of the wilderness around Gila Cliff Dwellings and proceeded on down the road. Hit Silver City around 4:30, having somehow figured out that the wires for the trailer lights and the emergency trailer brake had abraded on the rough roads and, thus, no longer worked. I didn’t want to be stuck in the dark with no lights and stuck in the mountains without the emergency brake fun functioning. So, what to? I spotted a U-Haul stored, stopped in and was told about a shop that might help me out. Proceeded there and found a helpful man who charged me $20 cash (we don’t need to tell Obama about this) and headed to the feed store to buy a bail of alfalfa ($20 also but they’re telling Obama.) Stopped at the local feed store, bought a $20 bale of alfalfa ( the alternative was a $22 bale of Bermuda grass, of all things. she said it was an 80 lb. bale…In Austin, I never remember the weight being ever mentioned or an issue. The huge square bale of alfalafa they loaded into the trailer was MUCH heavier than the ones to which I’m accustomed. In Austin, the hay we get is “Coastal Hay”. In Albuquerque, Spur Stables was feeding “Timothy Hay”. It’s interesting to see what changes as you travel around.

After the hay purchase, we went downtown to historical Silver City. Just as I parked and got out of my rig, my phone rang and there was Andrew! He’s got one more thing to finish to close out the semester and was doing well towards that goal. Unfortunately, he’s been fighting a cold all week and sounded a bit mirable but how great to hear from him! It’s serendipitous (boy, THAT’S a word to spell!) how I get somewhere where there’s phone service, a rarity in my travels, and someone calls me! I found THE Internet cafe, a VERY happening place called The Javalina, whose internet access code is “sunshine!” I started uploading photos to Picasa with the intent of adding them to my blog posts, made a few phone calls, bought a few local postcards. One of the postcard I bought is of some bikes parked for the Gila something bike tour which took place just last weekend (the first weekend in May) and is probably a really fun ride to do. Talked to Bill, briefly. He wanted to make sure I was doing enough introspection and encouraged me to keep going- not to return to Austin -anytime too soon. (Deliberate introspection takes time and, while moving, doesn’t happen all that easily, so I’m going to stay longer in my next campsite.) I’ve been saving and uploading everything but really need to cull photos prior to this exercise, to expedite the process. The photo uploading took forever and, finally, I had to just leave because I knew that the next fifty miles to Gila Cliff Dwellings are on mountainous roads and would take at least two hours. I walked down a couple blocks of the old main street and took a few photos of the brightly painted stores and the old hotel, which was in the same building as the Javalina Cafe. Sometime it would be fun to take an historical hotel tour, staying one night each in all these small town hotels that seem to have been built between 1890 and 1930 or so. It was 6:30 when I finally left “Silver”, as I found out the locals call it, so I knew I’d be arriving at my destination in the dark. Again. Damn.

The road towards Gila Cliff Dwellings became narrow and wind-ey about two miles out of Silver City. Six miles from “Silver” I arrived at our first tourist destination, Pinos Altos, with an official historical tour loop encompasses the Hearst Church built in 1898 and financed by William Randolph Hearst – which was, unfortunately locked – an opera house, tavern and cemetery. It was getting dusky but I took a few photos. Only 44 more miles to go. Well, the road was good – paved, but very narrow and with drop offs straight down. I only met a couple of cars en route but it took forever to arrive at my destination. I probably stopped ten times along the way to look at the stunning vistas or snap some photos. I’d been wanting to take a photo of lupine and saw a patch with a variety of colors in them – taller and skinnier than Texas Bluebonnets.

It was 8:30 or so when I arrived at the the infamous corrals noted in my “Saddle Up, New Mexico” book, TJ’s and Woody’s. Just like when the book’s authors visited, the water was off in TJ’s, so we pulled into Woody’s. Just when I did so it started raining so Zoloft and I spent the night in the truck. I knew it was raining hard enough that if I was in the horse trailer I would have gotten quite wet.

 
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Posted by on May 12, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Going Home!

Well, last evening as I was sitting in my rocking chair, feet on the footrest, Zoloft next to me, I decided Im tired of being dirty and talking to myself SO, I decided to get up early and head home, back to my wonderful husband and Family and the friends I do have in Austin, Texas. Lifts my heart to think about it. But, wait, what about all the soul searching I haven’t done? What about all the life decisions I haven’t a made? Ah, I guess my answer to that is that there will always be more life decisions to make and more soul searching to do. One of the facts I’ve reconfirmed is the importance of family and friends, my mutual love, respect and caring for Bill, and that I feel confident and ready to move on, Get going, put myself out there. The specifics? Who knows!

 
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Posted by on May 12, 2012 in New Mexico, Texas Travel

 

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Day Two Aeroplane Mesa Campground, Gila National Forest

I knew when we went to bed last night that I wanted to sleep late and, after yesterday’s exertions, it would probably best to allow Rio and Zoloft to take the day off, too. Despite putting a fleece liner in my sleeping bag and a fleece blanket over it, I was intermittently cold and didn’t sleep well. Zoloft woke me at 8am, I let her out, went pee, fed and watered her and Rio, then went back to bed, waking up occasionally but not getting out of bed till 11:30 or so.

Fought the Battle of the Stove and made coffee and dinner-for-breakfast, the one I was too tired to make in the dark last night. It consisted of pasta, canned corn, kidney beans and artichoke hearts, coated with tapenade and roasted tomato pesto. I made enough for about five meals. Oh, and I cut up the rotisserie chicken I’d bought before leaving Albuquerque. The leftovers will be good cold or hot! Throughout the cooking process, I put things away because it was thundering and for sure, a storm was coming. I brought Rio up from the open corral and tied him under a cedar tree, where he’s been resting happily. There were drops of rain just after I’d finished cookings but before eating. I took my food and coffee and Zoloft into the car. After the initial raindrops, it’s hailed small hailstones for a few minutes and has been dripping a little rain on and off till now. I’ve been here about two hours now. It’s kind of like a rainy day in a tent. The sun has finally peeked out and it’s getting warm – it’s 4:30 in the afternoon and I’ve done nothing but cook, listen to an audiobook and write my blog. Nothing wrong and most things right with that!

It’s now 5:30 and raining, enough that I’ve had to almost completely close the car windows to keep out the drops. Rio’s still tied under the cedar tree but looking around as if it’s dinner time, which it is. Zoloft’s asleep in the drivers seat and I’m propped up against two pillows in the backseat, just cracked a beer that I purchased in Reserve two days ago. Been reading about Gila Cliff Dwellings, Gila Hot Springs ($3 for a soak, according to my tour book that must be ten years old) and Silver City, NM – quite that happening place! I think I’ll leave here tomorrow and head that way. It’s Tuesday, May 9th, and according to Bill, Sophie’s arriving back to Austin today after her three week internship in D.C. With her brother, Austen’s company, Fission Strategies.

6:30 now, still dripping and getting cold.

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Posted by on May 9, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Aeroplane Mesa in the Gila National Forest

5/7/12

This morning, just after successfully lighting my stove (only took TWO tries this time) to make hot water for oatmeal and coffee, a lone backpacker entered my field of vision from the right, the direction I did NOT come from last night. Zoloft, of course, spotted her right away and ran towards her barking in her low-bark way, which the hiker thought was aggressive but I reassured her that no, all she wanted was a belly rub and, true to form, Zoloft rolled over for one and the hiker had no choice but to give her one. She was a woman named Barbara Nash, originally from Cleveland, Ohio, who took early retirement from Verizon and now lives in Washington D.C. who has been walking the Appalachian and Pacific Crest Trails (done with those) and came to the Mexican border with a male friend (who decided he didn’t like it and went home yesterday) to start walking the Continental Divide Trail from south to north. She appears to do the walking intermittently, five days at a time… (Beep! Two Forest Rangers just drove by). Anyway, we talked and she wrote her info in my black book so I can tell her sister and ex-walker friend that she was okay if I get phone or Internet service before she does. Apparently, the hike so far was disappointing because the trail was hard to find and you can easily lose yourself in a canyon and the lack of water is a problem. and ow, since her friend deserted her, she was worried about being alone. She was going to make her way to Silver City, NM, and go home from there. Her trail name is Late Start, which she picked because she gets up late and is late for things but has become a moniker more now because she started this hiking later in life than most people – she’s 61 now. After talking, it seems we might run into each other in two or three days at the Gila Cliff Dwellings where I’m thinking of going next.

Zoloft’s, Rio and I finally left camp at 12:30 or so, intending to take a “moderate ” ride but had two false starts. First, I went back to camp to get the tripod then, Wed gone half a mile or so and discovered my map had become detached from the saddle which I had no choice but to return to find. we went on Trail 705 which goes out of the Aeroplane Mesa Campround and has a sign that says “Horse Trail” next to it. A note on signs: This legible sign I found to be an exception all day long. The few signs I saw during the day were hard to read, few and far between, and easy to miss if you were several feet off the trail.

The first part of the ride was delightful. Since we were at 8,000′, it was cool and there was a solid breeze. We crossed a high plain with grass (very dry),cedar and a few ponderosa pine. Rio could get into a running walk for part of the trail because it has only intermittent rocks and a lot of sand and dust. the weather was in the low seventies and I started the ride with my canvas jacket on. After several miles we started the descent into the canyon headed towards the Middle Fork of the Gila River. It soon became steep and rocky and I dismounted and took off my jacket as it was warming up and in the canyon we were sheltered from the breezes on the Mesa. the route has many switchbacks, was quite narrow, very rocky, and had steep drop-offs. We’d been going down about 15 minutes when I realized I hadn’t secured my jacket to the saddle and it had fallen off. Being my favorite riding jacket and knowing I wouldn’t be returning this way, I tied up Rio and Zoloft and hiked back UP, with frequent stops to catch my breath until I found the jacket and returned to my travel companions. Along the way I marveled at the tough little wildflowers, real survivors in this tough landscape. The last time I’d dropped something on the Crest Trail in Lincoln National Forest I hadn’t tied Zoloft up and she’d followed me both ways and arrived back to Rio completely exhausted. This time I learned my lesson and she and Rio could both rest while I exhausted myself! we resumed our descent and arrived in the green valley with a beautiful stream of clear, cool, running water with green grass available door Rio to graze on. Tired and delighted by the green landscape, I decided to check the map, let Rio graze and eat a snack. I took the bit off of the halter bridle, decided to leave the lead line attached to the halter and let Rio eat. I sat on a log and consulted my map and the horse trail book. Oops, ten minutes later I looked up and, at first, couldn’t see Rio. I found her, walking straight UP the trail we’d just come down, evidentially deciding it was time to go home! I couldn’t believe she’d chose the vertical path over the green grass and running water, dropped my book and hustled up the path, huffing and puffing after him, which only made him go faster. Finally, he stepped on the lead rope and was stuck, head six inches from the ground, immobile. I unclipped the rope, pushed him off it it, re-clipped the line back on his halter, turned around on the precarious path, then headed back down to the river. It could have been a very, very long walk back to camp if I’d taken the lead off or if he’d never stepped on it! Lessons learned. I have to learn how to hobble him so he can more safely graze.

We resumed our ride and saw the sign for the turnoff to the Flying V trail, which was the one I’d started off deciding to follow. However, it headed across the river UP and I decided I’d much rather stay along the pretty river where it was easier going and Rio and Zenith could drink fresh water, so we followed the sign that said “Snow Lake 7 Miles” and continued along the riparian zone, with the trail criss-crossing the river. I estimated we’d get back to camp around 6pm. along the way, we met a solo backpacker who said he was a social worker from San Francisco. I asked him to take our picture, I took his and I asked him, “Why the Gila National Forest?” as this seemed an obscure place for someone from San Francisco to come to. He said he used to live in Albuquerque and was a history buff and that he’d hiked to the top of a nearby mountain where there’d been a fight between the Apaches and settlers that he’d climbed up to see the night before. There were two locked up cars in Aeroplane Mesa Campground and one was his. We said our goodbyes and each headed down the trail the other had just been on.

Wed gone half an hour or so when I saw Barbara Nash who jumped in fright as I came close and said hello! Zoloft had been in the river and her tummy was black with mud but she, nonetheless decided to jump up and Barbara and immediately located the snacks Barbara was about to eat, by smell. We talked some about the trail and she told me she’d met someone who was going to call her family tonight, so I was off the hook. I volunteered to go hiking with her sometime and she could call me if she needed a hiking buddy. We seemed to have a similar love for the outdoors and adventures in it. Having said our goodbyes, Rio, Zoloft and I went on down the beautiful trail, criss crossing the river and once finding a frog buried 8″ in the dusty sand which Rio’s step had uncovered. Its dark grey body matched the sand color perfectly. later, where the trail crossed an open field, I spotted a shoe, dismounted, picked it up and tied it to my saddle. It was a men’s size 11 and I figured it belonged to the history buff-social worker and I could return it to him at the campground later tonight. (He wasn’t there so it’s now in my trash bag.)

We’d gone a while (when I felt like we should have seen the trail going up the next canyon to the right) when the trail disappeared. I spent the next hour looking for it, crossing back and forth over the water through some dangerously rocky terrain to no avail. Getting worried about the sinking sun, I decided to go all the way back to where I’d seen a sign and re-evaluate our route. It was obvious that the map I had wasn’t detailed enough. the next time I come here I need to buy the larger-scaled maps of areas I want to explore. On the way back, I saw a trail going up a canyon in what I thought was the right direction and took it, quite nervous by this time as the shadows were lengthening and the sun could no longer be seen when the canyon walls blocked it. I wasn’t 100% sure I’d made the right choice and I knew there was a possibility we’d have to spent the night in the wilderness for which e were completely unprepared. Alleluia, it WAS the right trail and we eventually came out at the back of the damn that formed Snow Lake. On top of the dam was a sign with the the special trout limits for the Gillita River which we’d been following. I thought of my dad, avid fly fisherman he is. Only two trout per day could be taken.

We descended from the dam into the campground and down the road towards the turnoff to our campground. It was a very long four miles back and just dark when we got there. I had to open gates around the cattle guards preventing livestock like Rio from going to Snow Lake. Zoloft was so tired, I lifted her onto to the saddle in front of me (quite a trick, lifting her up then getting my tired ass back into the saddle behind her) and rode that way for about half a mile. Rio was amazingly OK with this but Zoloft is so long, it wasn’t an easy chore. It took us an hour and fifteen minutes to cover the ground and when we finally made it, I fed Zoloft and Rio then we all went to bed. I figured we’d walked and ridden 17 miles, all told. What a fun day but I already knew we’d be resting tomorrow.

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Posted by on May 9, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Albuquerque to Gila National Forest

5/5/12

Damn it’s cold. The wind must be blowing 35 miles per hour and it’s probably in the high 50’s or low 60’s. It’s 10:30a.m. I got up around 8:00 to go riding this morning but haven’t made it on the horse yet. The cooler it stays, the less the urgency.

Stopped at REI for a map of the Gila National Forest (and picked one up for the Valle Vidal Unit of
Carson National Forest north of Taos for the next time) and went to pick up Rio from the Spurs Stables where I’d kept him for four days at $25/day. When I got there it was obvious that his pen hadn’t been cleaned….I’d not specifically discussed it but she knew I hadn’t been back. And I sure think she could have done that. The other thing I disliked was that she didn’t ask for Rio’s “Coggins,” which is a certificate from the vet saying he’s free from equine anemia, which any reputable horse boarder should ask for….

IH25 took us south and then we caught 60 west at Socorro, headed towards Reserve, NM. It was warm and the landscape empty. The only town we stopped in was dusty Magdalena. I ignored the advertised gift shops but stopped in a rock shop at which the proprietor was chatting with the local policeman, who left when I arrived. The owner was a son of a man who had worked his whole adult life mining in the nearby Kelly Mine, which was now closed. Some of the rocks – particularly one that was a vivid turquoise color mixed with a bright green, he said, was only found there and thus could not be bought anywhere else. There were only a few polished cabochons, which is what I was looking for my jewelry making, mostly Arizona turquoise and another milky blue rock found locally. I didn’t write down the rocks’ names – I was pressed for time as I didn’t want to arrive in the dark to our new campsite (which, of course, I did anyway!).

After Magdalena, the next roadside site was the National Radio Astronomy Observatory, with huge dishes all pointed in one direction, in the middle of nowhere. How surreal! The light wasn’t great for photos but the image in my mind is strong. It felt Ike we were trying to communicate with a civilization somewhere far, far away. At Datil we headed southeast on 12 for 68 more miles to Reserve.

At around 5:30, I saw the turn off to Valle Tio Vinces Campground, which is one of the four horse camping areas in the Gila National Forest, so I stopped and read about it in my notes and “Saddle Up, New Mexico” book. It is the most isolated of the sites with water available from Valle Tio Vince’s Spring across the way and north of the campground. At Armijo Spring Campground, theres a spring but horse camping is not allowed there. I decided that I’d rather spend the next few days elsewhere, so kept driving.

We arrived in Reserve at around 6pm, later than I’d hoped. I filled up on gas (my tank was empty) for $4.58/ gallon for the diesel the truck requires then went into Bills Bar and Package store and purchases a six-pack of beer for $8. I told him I was going up to Snow Lake and asked him how the road was. He said the first half is paved and is much worse than the last half which is gravel and that I should watch out for the elk, which I would undoubtedly see. He said someone was driving 35mph, hit an elk and went down the cliff. In a glass case were elk- hunting pictures and on one dead elk was the most unbelievable rack I’d ever seen, on anything. I asked if that was him in the photo, he replied, “I wish” and told me that the elk in the photo probably weighed 1,000 pounds. I went into the general tore that was open (there were two but the other was closed) and bought my first junk food of the trip, some Turtle Chex, and several drinks, then we started up the road to Snow Lake, still, thankfully, in daylight.

It was a two hour drive to go the 54 miles to Aeroplane Mesa Campground and I was glad I wasn’t doing it in the dark. True to what Bill in Reserve said, the paved roadmwas bad with a zillion potholes, undefined edges which dropped off down sheer cliffs, and no lines to define either the center or edge of the road. It would NOT have been an easy trip at night. The gravel road was much better. I saw three separate herds of 6-8 elk on the way up and, just at sunset we traversed a part of the forest that had been burned. With the black and cream denuded trres silhouetted against the pinks and blues of the sunset, it was a fascinating landscape. It was just dark when we toured the almost-empty campsite – Dipping Vat Campground – that has a old fashioned water pump and read the warning sign about the presence of Mexican wolves, which travel in packs of 6-8, leave people alone bit WILL attack dogs. this camgrounf, adjacent to Snow Lake, does not allow horses in it. Four more miles and we arrived at our new home, Aeroplane Mesq Campground. It was now pitch black and difficult to see anything. I put Rio in the corral – a large one about 20′ x 20′ (there are three), fed Rio and Zoloft, ate two hummus and tampanede sandwiches and went to bed. I’ve been keeping Zoloft shut in the horse trailer with me at night as the whole time we’ve been on the road, we’ve been in places with coyote and bear and tonight there was the danger of wolves, which I did indeed hear howling in the middle of the night.

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Posted by on May 6, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Sandia Peak Tramway Albuquerque

This morning Alicia was chairing a Crop Walk* organizational meeting and Greg had to attend a church meeting on child safety during church events (dont want the Lutherans following in the Catholics’ footsteps) so I stopped at the Flying Star Cafe and ate one of their exceptionally good English muffins then headed to the Sandia Peak Tramway, “The World’s Longest Aerial Tramway.” It’s NOT for people afraid of heights, like my dear mother, but is quite spectacular. In the fifteen minute ride, you traverse four climactic zones (as if going from Mexico to Canada, go from ‘ to 10934’? Elevation and, when you get tot the top on a clear day (and today was a clear day) you can see __________,which, the tour guide says, is 1/9th the area of the whole state of New Mexico.

On the way up,one of the sights pointed out is a CCC (Civilian Conservation Corps) cabin (Kiwanis Cabin) that was built during the Depression that’s perched on the very end of a high point that is constructed out of the same material as the rock it sits on, which is a bright, brilliant white. I love works I’ve seen by the CCC, like the cabins at Bastop State Park, so I hiked the mile and a half to get to it and took some photos there and back. En route were some snow drift remains which I climbed through in my purple Crocs as it hadn’t occurred to me that I’d be hiking – another example of the unpreparedness that has characterized this impromptu trip. Ah, well, icy feet felt EXCITING! the cabin was indestructible, with some internal rock benches and two fireplaces. It saddened me a bit, because it wasn’t well maintained – there was a missing guest register for which a place had been specially built and it looked like some metal plaques were missing above the fireplaces. I wondered might they had looked like.

By the time I returned to the Tramway and JUST missed a tram down, it was noon and I was starving. My cellphone had died but I emailed Alicia with my IPad and said I’d treat her to lunch so, when I got back down around 1:30, we went to __________ for stuffed sopapillas. Alicia had bean and cheese and I decided to try the one stuffed with pork marinated in red chilies (). All scrumptious with, of course, a sopapilla and honey for each of us to top it off. From there we headed towards Tent Rock, which you can read about in my next post!


*Crop Walk is a fundraising event chaired this year by Alicia and organized by Albuquerque religious organizations to help alleviate hunger, both locally and internationally. Walkers get money pledges for their four mile walk from a church to a food distribution center called ___________. 2012 is Crop Walk’s thirtieth year and is hoping to raise $30,000. So, when Alicia sends you that email, make a pledge for feeding hungry people!

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Posted by on May 5, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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Not Much Happening Today Which Is Good

Had the best sleep I’ve had. I took two sleeping pills, went to bed at 8pm and woke up fourteen hours later, at ten am. Zoloft and I only had one potty break the whole night. Got up and cooked my oatmeal and coffee, packed up and drove to town for my appointment at Western Auto. I figured out that no! My truck didn’t have major transmission problems; I’d just driven it to town in 4-wheel drive. But I had the air and oil filters changed. When done, they said it looked like the air filter has never been changed which I know is not true because Bill has been meticulous about maintaining his little red baby. That’s the dust from eighty miles of driving in Big Bend!

Spent some time at the TCBY/Schlotskys/Cinnnabon fast food place with free WiFi figuring out my new blog works, with a modicum of success. Picked up bike which was at the brand-new-still-unpacking bike shop. Spent about two hours at the only open restaurant in Ruidoso, Grace O’Malley’s Irish Pub. I haven’t had any food cravings but I ordered and ate a ridiculously-bad-for-me Reuben sandwich WITH fries. It’s like returning to American civilization mandates a return to bad eating and overindulging. Shouldn’t I be better than that? I left the restaurant when it was pushing dark, and arrived to the campground, after several wrong turns, to elk! and deer! which, I’m sure Zoloft has been keeping away. Zoloft was baying, for who knows how long? Since when she heard the truck or earlier? Fed and watered her and Rio, drank a sip of red wine then retired for the night.

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Posted by on May 2, 2012 in New Mexico

 

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