The Desert…Everything
is Prickly!
It’s been a few weeks since I’ve posted a blog and thought
it was time to get back to it! We had a
nice Christmas here at the RV park…it certainly isn’t like being home with
family and friends, but still it was nice.
They had a few pot luck dinners, a gift exchange and a fun New Year’s
Eve bash (of course us old folks celebrate midnight New York time so we didn’t
have to stay up so late!!) They New Year
came in a bit chilly down here…our water hose froze one morning and we had to
wait till we had water for showers.
That’s about the extent of the cold weather though…it’s warmed up now
and is very nice.
I’ve been doing a bit of painting lately. They have a really nice room that they are
going to turn into an art room here.
It’s large with wall to wall windows on two sides. It has good light and though it’s not
renovated for an art room yet, they let me go in there and paint. They’ve also got a clay studio in the works
with pot-throwing rooms built and a kiln being put in place. It will be really nice when it’s done…they
might even attract some art retreats or something. Anyway, I started painting rocks. We went for a drive through the mountains a
while back and I was so taken by some of the rock formations that I decided to
try it. What I ended up with look more
like river rocks or beach rocks but I’m fairly happy with them. The process I used is was quite exciting to
me (maybe not to anyone else but I was excited to see the results.) The sand was time
consuming but worth it in the end. I
covered the rocks with contact paper and then splattered a liquid rubber
substance called frisket on the paper.
After that was dry I painted a wash of gold over the sand area and let
the painting dry. Then I spattered
darker gold and brown/black paint over the sand using a toothbrush. When I was happy with the way it looked I
uncovered the rocks and painted them.
Once I got the colours in place and while the paper was still wet, I put
wax paper over the rocks. When uncovered
the wax paper left those markings on the rocks. Pretty exciting! I put in the shadows and the painting was
done. Photos never do artwork
justice…these are not bad but the originals do look a bit nicer.
Yesterday
Tom, Oso and I went for a drive out into the desert to retrace our steps of an
adventure one night after dinner. It was
about six o’clock and we’d just finished dinner and I said to Tom “let’s take a
drive because the sunset is so pretty”…well, two hours later we found ourselves
in pitch darkness driving through the desert on a road that was pretty much a
cow path. I was worried we might not
find pavement and our way home but we did, thank goodness. Anyway, we wanted to see the desert in the
daytime so packed up Oso and a picnic lunch and off we went. It was actually a lot of fun. We saw about six mule deer and found some
“ruins” that were kind of neat. There
are two old homesites out there and both have been abandoned years ago. Both were made with adobe bricks and the
newer of the two had plaster walls and a wooden roof. The newer one was at what I think was probably
a cattle station years ago. The corrals
are still in use but the fences are definitely old style. The main corral had walls about two feet
thick made by stacking meskite wood in between the fence posts.
As
we walked around we found bottles of water hidden here and there. I expect they are for mexicans traveling
north through the desert to what they hope will be a better life. I still can’t believe there are about 1000
people illegally crossing the border each
day from Mexico to the US in the area just south of us. It seems unreal but those are the numbers
quoted by officials and there sure are lots of border patrols around. I find it difficult to know just how to feel
about them coming into the country illegally.
I know the US can’t continue to support all of these people but I wonder
if I might not do the same thing if I was unlucky enough to be born on the
wrong side of the border. These people
come from such intense poverty that you can’t help but feel for them. The drug smugglers however, should be caught
and dealt with severely!
The
desert here is brimming with cactus…everything from saguaro to occatilla. There are barrel cactus, chollas and one
roundish cactus called a compass cactus…it always points south. Kind of interesting. Everything in the desert, including the
meskite trees, are prickly. The bushes
that look as if you could just brush them aside and walk through are covered
with long thorns that sting when you get poked…I know from experience! The chollas are quite interesting. They have a wooden skeleton that is really
cool looking once the flesh has died off of it.
There are lots of dead ones out there so we cut a few and cleaned them
up…hopefully we can turn them into some sort of yard art. Chollas are the ones on the previous page
that look like trees with cactus growing where branches should be. The one below that looks like a bouquet of flower
stems is an occatilla.
I’ll leave you
today with this picture of a huge grasshopper we saw one day when we drove out
to a town called Patagonia. He posed
very nicely for me…I love the shadow he cast.
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