Showing posts with label Garwood Trail. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Garwood Trail. Show all posts

Friday, May 5, 2023

Garwood Trail - Cholla

Corona de Tucson

May 5, 2023  

I read that Saguaros are 35+ years old when they bloom.

During the raising children and working stage of our life, we took the usual vacations staying in condos to the Florida gulf and the Smokey Mountains and didn't venture too far from home. In August of 2000 we purchased our first RV.  It was a 28' tow behind.  

Skidaway Island State Park in Savannah, GA...summer 2003

By that time the kiddos had all flown the coop and Helen  (Joe's mom who moved in with us in 1995)  was living under our care.  We think back on those years and are so grateful  for Joe's sister Jo and BIL Chuck who graciously gave up a month of their time every summer to come stay in our home to take care of Helen.  We enjoyed many trips with that little tow behind for 10 years.  It even made a trip from Georgia to Delaware so we could go to the Monster Mile Nascar race in June of 2003.  That was the year I saw Richard Petty and Kyle Petty standing on the corner where we exited the huge field used for parking on race day.  No one had even noticed them standing there and I was the first to get an autograph.  Getting to Delaware, race day, and coming home from Delaware was such a great trip. We adopted Dover in 2007 and that adventure was the reason Dover is named Dover. 

The years flew by, the tow behind was traded for a 5th wheel toy hauler and we retired.  Visiting the desert was not in our radar.  In fact, exploring anything beyond the Mississippi was not on our radar.   It wasn't until we were completely on our own in 2011 that we decided to trade the toy hauler and 2003 pick-up for the MH and said, "Westward Ho !"  What a thrill ride that was...here, there and places in between for nine years.  No matter what the destination...the desert always called us back.   
 
This week we ventured east again towards the Rincon Mountains.  Our choice for desert solitude was Garwood Trail in Saguaro NP-East.   It was a perfect morning...blue skies and 68 degrees with a light breeze when we arrived at the trailhead at 8:00 am.  


Having done this trail a couple of times before, we knew lots of cholla grew here.  The cholla blossoms have been lagging behind the other cacti and we were hoping to see lots of color.  It was great timing... 

golden orange copper...

crimson red

yellow green...

pink red...

Stands of cholla are called cholla gardens.  Individual plants within these colonies often have the same DNA and were "tubercles" from an original plant.  It is impossible to capture all the cholla's collective blooming beauty in a single photograph, but here are a few close-ups...



I also think the woody trunks of the cholla trees are camera worthy.  





About 1.5 miles into the trail, there is a crested growing on the banks of a dry wash. It is doing well.  I love the arms ! 


The photo below was taken from the trail as we approached the wash.





The Rincon Mountains are a nice backdrop on this trail as it meanders up, down, and around in this tiny little section of the Sonoran Desert.  We are happy to call this our backyard...


Back at the oasis it was nice week.
The cart path behind our home at sunset...


Backyard sunrise...


An immature Curve-bill thrasher...very curious

It pondered there for a few minutes...

Decided on a bath..in and out of the birdbath several times and so cute shaking the water off

Details are much sharper if you click on the photo...

Shadows on an early morning walk


Deviled eggs with pork chops and brussel sprouts...

The Flower Moon, said to be a good time for planting seeds for the farming season...


Houghton Rd...heading home

Sally and her purple dino

Jack and plain greek yogurt

Dover sleeping right beside my stool as I write this post...my little shadow

And like others, that's a scroll thru my weekly photos.  Until next time...




Life is good!

HAPPY TRAILS !

Tuesday, October 26, 2021

Garwood Trail

Corona de Tucson

October 26, 2021

In March of 2019, Joe and I visited DeGrazia's Gallery in the Sun.  I won't rewrite about his beautiful gallery or mission (he designed and built both which were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2006) or the life of Ted DeGrazia in this post.  

The Featured Post (top, right side bar) is a link to the blog post I wrote on that visit.   I closed that post by writing "and a return visit someday would be just as enjoyable".  It definitely was! 


There are six permanent exhibits featured in the gallery.  We spent awhile perusing them again, but the reason for going was to see the three rotating exhibits we had not seen.  The photo below shows the entrance to the corridor where the "treasures from the vault" are on display. 


First are the paintings and drawings in a collection named "Dinner with DeGrazia" featuring regional food of the desert southwest.


 























Next is the exhibit titled "DeGrazia Recycled".  




The entire collection of oil paintings were done on ceiling board scraps leftover from the construction of the gallery.  







"Wispy layers of pastel colors had been dry brushed onto rough-sawn ceiling boards before installation, and the resulting cut-off scraps were recycled as ready made, pre-painted backgrounds."  







"Lost in the Flowers"
















The smallest known oil paintings by DeGRazia were done on these ceiling board knots.



The last rotating exhibit,  "DeGrazia's Superstition Mountain Collection" is a collection of essays, drawings, and paintings for his 1972 book Degrazia and His Mountain - The Superstition.  From the late 1940s to the late 1970s, DeGrazia was a frequent visitor to the mountain...exploring the backcountry on horseback and prospecting for gold.  He was inspired by the legends, history, natural beauty, and native cultures of the Superstitions.  

Dr. Thorne (oil on canvas in 1972)













This is one of my favorite paintings in this collection. 

There is Hope


When we visited the gallery in 2019, Mission in the Sun was closed due to renovations.  The mission was the first building DeGrazia constructed in honor of Padre Kino.  It is open 365 days a year. 

Murals painted in the entrance

"The roof is open to the sky, as it should be. You can't close up God in a stuffy room!"  DeGrazia

Moving on,  we explored a new trail.  Our destination was Garwood Dam.  Garwood Dam was built in 1948 by Nelson Garwood, who at the time, owned 450 acres in what is now the northwest corner of Saguaro NP East.  Access to the property was difficult for the Garwoods so they constructed an entrance road on Speedway Blvd..  Today, Douglas Spring Trailhead is located in the same proximity as their road and this is where we began our hike.  






There are lots of intertwining trails off Douglas Spring Trail.  The intersections are well marked and signs are easy to follow so a hike can be as long or as short as you like.


Joe and I were both in awe as we walked along completely engulfed by the desert and all it's beauty. We stopped a lot, just to breath and take it all in.  This is home!




































































We did an in-out trail and the dam was our turning around point.  It is definitely a place we will do more exploring.  

At home we have enjoyed lovely pastel skies,











curious teenagers,










shimmering hues,












early morning smell of rain, 













and lots of cuddles.

















Joe and I got boosted this week.  I found myself on the sofa with a headache and achy muscles from head to toe for a couple of days...not quite as bad as it was when I had the second vax.  Jack stays close by!  

That's a wrap...another week in the memory bank from our little oasis in the desert.  Until next time, 



HAPPY TRAILS !