Southeast Arizona with Jutta – Day 3

On Gleeson Road driving east to Gleeson, Arizona

Decided on a detour today and are driving east on Gleeson Road out into nowhere, but it’s beautiful out here where there is nothing.

Jutta Engelhardt in Gleeson, Arizona

We didn’t expect to find anything out this way on our way to Bisbee, but then this sign pointed down another road to Rattlesnake Ranch, and, well, there was something about it that we just knew we had to go. Good thing we did because I’m certain this will be one of my favorite photos of Jutta for the rest of my life.

Southeast Arizona with Jutta – Day 2

Jutta Engelhardt at Mi Sueno Bed & Breakfast in Tumacacori, Arizona

Our stay last night was at the Mi Sueno Bed & Breakfast in Tumacacori, Arizona, and it was a beautiful place with a great host.

Jutta Engelhardt, Caroline Wise, and John Wise at Mi Sueno Bed & Breakfast in Tumacacori, Arizona

One of those rare moments when I hand the camera over to someone else and pray they frame the photo halfway decently and in this instance, our B&B host captured the scene perfectly.

Tumacácori National Historical Park south of Tubac, Arizona

Tumacácori National Historical Park, south of Tubac, Arizona, is the home of the Mission San José de Tumacácori, which was originally built in 1691, but in 1751 it was moved to its present location. Our original travel plans had us stopping at San Xavier Del Bac Mission near Tucson and the Titan Missile Museum in Green Valley, but those ideas have proven too ambitious, so they were pushed off to a future visit. After we visited the mission here, we headed south to Patagonia for a quick stop at their fall festival and then a little further south.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise in Tombstone, Arizona

We reached Nogales, Arizona, on the Mexico border this afternoon before turning the car northeast for our overnight here in Tombstone. We are staying in the Buford House Bed & Breakfast, which was built back in 1880. It is purported to be haunted.

Southeast Arizona with Jutta – Day 1

Colossal Cave in Vail, Arizona

Had I never been in another cave, this would have been seriously cool, but as that’s not the case, our visit to Colossal Cave in Vail, Arizona, was a bit of a disappointment. If you have the means to go to Carlsbad Caverns in New Mexico, spend the extra time and money and go there or visit Kartchner Caverns State Park in Benson, Arizona, when you are in the Southwest. If you have kids and you are in the Tucson area, then Colossal Cave will delight them otherwise, save your money.

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt at Saguaro National Park in Pima County, Arizona

On the eastern side of the Saguaro National Park, we see what must be one of the tallest specimens of cactus we have ever seen. On this particular road trip, we are on a discovery drive of southeast Arizona to places we’ve not visited before.

Desert Botanical Garden with Jutta

Desert Botanical Garden Phoenix, Arizona

When the flora and fauna of a desert are distributed sparsely across a vast landscape, it can be difficult to be at the right place at the right time to see the diversity of life that inhabits such a place. Visitors to a desert cannot be blamed for being under the impression that the place appears to be painted in swaths of tan and shades of brown. It so happens that in pockets where conditions are right and at various times of the year often dependent upon a very short burst of growth following rare rains, color can explode across the environment. Even for those of us who dwell in deserts, catching these sporadic displays of nature’s natural fireworks can be an elusive task, but fortunately for residents and visitors alike, Phoenix has the Desert Botanical Garden that has amassed examples of this rainbow out of the desert.

Desert Botanical Garden Phoenix, Arizona

With Caroline tending to other things, Jutta and I went over to pay a visit to the garden today. After our recent trip to Yellowstone and the vast open landscapes, I decided to focus on small details today that gave the best example of things not frequently seen. When people come to Arizona in May and June, they will likely get to see the prickly pears and saguaros blooming, but seeing some of the other examples of cactus flowers can be a rare event, such as with this beautiful orange and red specimen.

Desert Botanical Garden Phoenix, Arizona

Aside from the sky and mountains, purples and hues of pink are hard to come by. Here are some tiny splashes of color that may have taken an example from our sunsets, which are known to bathe the desert with the most grandiose light.

Desert Botanical Garden Phoenix, Arizona

Beware the needle as it is often present though not all cactus needles are equal. Some needles are purely cosmetic and soft to the touch, but would you dare tempt that by running from a distance into a thicket of cacti? Then there’s our peccary of some notoriety called the javelina that makes meals out of prickly pears, and the Arizona state bird called the cactus wren that lives in the protective grip of thorns most of us would like to avoid.

Jutta Engelhardt at Desert Botanical Garden Phoenix, Arizona

While not a flower by a long shot and probably more akin to a cactus, this is a specimen of desert visiting mother-in-law that only makes an appearance about every other year. Its thorns come in the form of a sharp barbed tongue, though at times, it can be deceivingly sweet. They lie dormant, much of the time appearing almost lifeless until a sweet meal of sugar is presented. While the mighty saguaro can live to be nearly 200 years old, the mother-in-law, while seeming ancient, has a lifespan of just under approximately 100 years. I should also point out that this particular species of mother-in-law comes in many colors, including black, brown, tan, white, and many hues in between.

Yellowstone with Jutta – Day 8

Caroline Wise and Jutta Engelhardt flying back to Phoenix, Arizona

While we didn’t incur the extra cost of flying into Twin Falls, Idaho, this time and instead had direct flights to and from Salt Lake City, Utah, and Phoenix, Arizona, I think it would have been better to simply drive. The 11 hours between the two cities by car is a long haul, but it’s also a beautiful stretch of the country down there, or so it looks like from the sky.

Grand Canyon National Park in Arizona from the air

The mighty Grand Canyon National Park, where we spent our honeymoon back in 1994 just six years ago. Someday, we hope to be able to visit the river that cuts right through it. We’ll be home well before 9:00 a.m., and I wish that we’d caught the latest flight out of Salt Lake so we could have spent one more night in Yellowstone. We’ll figure out this traveling thing sooner or later.

Yellowstone with Jutta – Day 6

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Dissolved minerals in waters heated by processes deep underground flow, and when they do they have the potential to pool in places. As these calcium carbonate-rich waters deposit their chemical soup, they start forming travertine. Layer upon layer, the molecules bind to other nearby molecules of similar makeup, while at the edges of where the water pools, ridges form faster than on the bottom of the pool that has a larger surface area and before you know it (in geological terms) you are left with terraced pools of cascading water that are laying down floor tiles and countertops for people well into the future.

Here at Mammoth Hot Springs, the process of making travertine is happening right before our eyes. Things are not working like a perpetual machine of great efficiency because the heavily mineralized waters are not guaranteed to always be running. Maybe the plumbing below is broken, or winter didn’t deposit enough snow, changing the water table? Whatever the reason, it is likely the travertine pools we see on our trip will not be the ones you see on yours. The mineral deposits will still be here, but the water that is feeding them may have dried up or is flowing over another part of the mass that has been forming.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

From the steam billowing off of the hot springs, the water condenses on nearby stuff, in this case, these pine needles, and as it freezes, the water molecules can build up, forming these mini ice knives that show you which way the wind was blowing.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

I find it interesting how the colors shift across this dry travertine and am intrigued, although it is only basic chemistry, at how the particulate mixture of the hot spring waters while making delivery of its runoff drops off the molecules that will shade one section with darker hues while on an adjacent pool, the water’s darker molecules now depleted leave the water to deliver a cleaner whiter calcium just next door. It all makes me wish I’d paid more attention in class and taken some advanced chemistry classes.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The cave has escaped its dark prison and turned the world inside out while psychedelically presenting itself to us to test if we believe what we see. Every day, we search for novelty in our own lives, try to find something new to entertain us, need to see a new movie or play a new video game, and yet here is nature offering us infinity while challenging the mind to find a vocabulary to adequately describe what we perceive. Even when presented with all the time we might need or like to analyze but a small corner of our world, we could spend a lifetime trying to accumulate the poetry of expression and scientific knowledge to remotely describe the beauty and complexity in that which we are attempting to comprehend. This then begs the question of when we encounter the nearly alienesque universe of the truly psychedelic how, if we only rarely encounter those states, can we begin to describe what they are when we can barely explain the totality of what’s occurring when an ocean wave breaks on a sandy shore?

Jutta Engelhardt at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

The old lady in the tree troll is from an old German fairy tale first noted by the Brothers Grimm almost 200 years ago. It was one of the scarier stories made all the worse as the spirit occupying the tree was left there with the passing of the cursed person’s mother-in-law.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Maybe you are getting the idea that I’ve run out of impressions to write about from our trip out here? Well, maybe I have.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

While moss tendrils growing out of lichen and bark are not something you see every day, it’s also something that, once it has been described and shown, what more could be said? I could drone on about the molecular structure or its place in the scheme of evolution, but maybe that geeky stuff gets tiring. Oh well, then here goes the nerd out about the scene pictured. The green tendrils are Wolf Lichen, a.k.a. Letharia Vulpina. The turquoise lichen are filaments of fungi that colonies of cyanobacteria, a.k.a. algae, take up residence in living symbiotically as a happy family. As for the bark that these lichens are living on, well, that’s obvious: it’s a conifer. Why is this so obvious? It’s because the Wolf Lichen grows on the bark of these trees in particular. Finally, do not try to eat this lichen as it is toxic, especially to wolves and foxes, but it is a good source of dying fabrics and yarns. Now, you probably know considerably more about lichen than when you started reading this blog entry.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

I’m not pulling a rabbit out of my hat regarding telling some interesting tidbits about these ice cycles; I just thought they looked cool, especially with that carbonated-looking water below them.

Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

Took off down the Grand Loop Road to visit a corner of the park we’ve not been in yet, but at the Tower General Store, we reached the end of the road as it was already closed for winter. While we did get this view of the Yellowstone River, we won’t get to visit Mt. Washburn on this trip, maybe someday.

Jutta Engelhardt and Caroline Wise at Yellowstone National Park in Wyoming

So, instead, we drove back out to the Lamar Valley and dipped our toe into Montana. As we already have a photo of Jutta and Caroline in front of a Montana state sign, we instead snapped this one upon reentering Wyoming. We stopped along the way many times and walked out to the Lamar River and at one particular bend in the river where Soda Butte Creek and the Lamar meet, we stopped for a good long time and just watched the area as we had been told that the day before there was a wolf pack seen here with an elk that had met its end. I’m pretty sure they were not paying their respects but were instead having a snack. No luck seeing or hearing wolves on this visit to Yellowstone, but no big deal as things have been just perfect.

Abendrot is the German word for describing the red color of the sky as the sun sets. Abendrot elicits oohs and aahs from Jutta every time she spots a bit of it; that and sagenhaft which translates to fabulous or marvelous. Das Abendrot war sagenhaft, and now you’ve learned a little German, too.