Wednesday, February 21, 2018

February 21... Odds and Ends...

I am trying to keep up at least a weekly post about my activities, but since I have been stationary for several weeks now, it's a little more difficult to come up with content.  I am still at Scadden Wash in Quartzite, and will be here until the end of the month.  After that I don't know where I will go but will remain in the area for a while longer before I start my next journey...

A few interesting things...

One of the members of the wildlife, a cute chubby little bird which I think is a gray bellied warbler (edit-I haven’t identified him as yet, maybe if the wren or the thrasher family), has been very bold in the search for food.  Almost daily, when I have the side door(s) open, he hops up on the step of the van and then proceeds to graze my sandy brown colored rug for bits and pieces of food, and it doesn't matter if I am lying on the couch or in the back cooking with music playing.  The picture shows him at the door at getting ready to exit, but this was because he was a bit put off by me mgrabbing the phone to snap a pic...


Here’s a short video too...
I managed to capture my visitor in a short video, but as you will see, as soon as he spots the camera in my hand he exits...  lol




I thought I would also include a photo of a meal that I made lately.  I eat pretty well, and most of the time I enjoy putting together a nice meal, breakfast is my favorite time to create...


I think you can identify most of the ingredients, so I won't go into details, but it is mostly an open face omelet dressed with veggies and some shredded peppered and smoked turkey breast meat...


And lastly, just a shot of a campfire I had a week or so ago.  I didn't have any firewood and you can't use wood from the desert, but some campers who were nearby left and I noticed that they had left their remaining firewood stacked in their fire ring.  So I collected all of the wood and brought it back to camp and although it wasn't much, I have had two campfires already and still have a couple of sticks of wood left...

Thanks for coming along...



Thursday, February 15, 2018

A little jib jab...

 Just a little encouragement to all of you who are dutifully committed to the daily nine to five...



You’d be making this video too if roles were reversed, you know you would...  ðŸ˜‰

Wednesday, February 14, 2018

The Giant Redwoods...

I have wanted to see and experience the giant redwoods in person for almost as long as I can remember.  Seeing photos in magazines of cars driving through the hollowed out center of a standing redwood, the acres and acres of redwood trees I saw on TV nature shows as a kid, etc… so this was a bit of a quest for me to take the challenging trip up to northern CA to experience these natural giants…

I will say that when I first stepped into the forest, being in their presence, standing in the midst of a grove of giant redwoods, made me feel a bit sad and that kind of surprised me, but I really wasn’t sure why.  I had taken a road which was called the ‘Avenue of the Giants’ in the Humboldt Redwoods State Park, Humboldt county CA.  I took the self-tour which consisted of 7 or 8 groves of ancient redwood trees scattered over about a 30 mile stretch of winding road.  At the beginning of the trail was a station where you could pick up a pamphlet with information and the location of the groves.


The photos I included below were from one of the groves that was supposed to have one of the highest accumulation of biomass, meaning largely untouched earth, for hundreds of years.  You can’t take pictures of these trees with any success.  It’s just not possible to capture their sheer mass and presence on film…

However, the flora and fauna surrounding these beautiful giants was just as breathtaking.  So many of the shots you will see are of the areas under the trees.  When I first walked into this grove it was quite dark and the ground was very cold and wet, not much light or sunshine seeps in.  When I snapped the first few shots, I noticed that the camera was compensating for the darkness, so what the picture portrayed was not what I was seeing before me and I wanted to capture the area just as it was.  I went back to the van to grab my tripod, i knew that I would have to use longer shutter times to capture the scenes and I couldn’t hold the camera steady enough without some help.  I was captivated by the area, everywhere you looked there were pops of bright green foliage which gave it a very surreal feel in this dark environment. Just nature’s orchestra of contrasts, colors, and extremes, it was magnificent…

What struck me about the redwood groves was their relatively small size.   These were areas that had obviously been preserved for public consumption, but where were the acres and acres of giant redwoods that I remember hearing about as a child?  That night after leaving the area and heading back south I got online to see if I could find out where these forests of giants existed.  I was shocked when I found out that there aren’t many of the ancients left…

Of the over 2 million acres of ancient redwoods that used to be in CA, now there are less than 3% remaining due to logging and agricultural operations…  

OMG…  What have we done…  only 3% remaining of the  2,000,000 acres of these majestic giants…  Now I understood why this was such a sad experience…














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Also, here's a short video of the Richardson Grove, the first place I stopped just before I reached the Avenue of Giants.  As I am driving through, watch for the two large redwoods next to the building at the T in the road.  It really gives you a perspective of just how large these giants are...




Hummingbirds...

The southern AZ area is both the home of some hummingbirds like the Anna’s, and an area for visitors during the migration process.  I always like to include a few interesting facts, some things you might not know about hummingbirds, what I learned as I studied them…

Hummingbirds are beautiful both in appearance and in their ‘dance’.  I never get tired of seeing them, when watching them partake of the flower’s nectar or when they fiercely attempt to protect their territory from other hummingbirds.  These dear creatures usually only live from 3-5 years and their heartbeat can race at as much as 1200 beats a minute, it’s no wonder they like sugar water so much… lol

Here’s a link to a page that has a lot of facts about hummingbirds that you probably didn’t know...

http://www.worldofhummingbirds.com/facts.php

I used a baby food jar and some hemp twine to make a hummingbird feeder months ago when I was originally in the Quartzite area.  I just recently revamped the feeder and put it back out to see if I could draw them in close enough to snap some close up photos.  I mounted the feeder on the van’s awning pole right outside of my side doors and it was less than thirty minutes before I had my first and only visitor, what I believe is a female Anna’s hummingbird.  The Anna’s species live year-round in the CA area and often are found in southern AZ.  Most hummingbirds migrate from places as far north as Alaska and Canada, down to Mexico for the winter and then make the trip back north in the Spring…

Just a side note, when I originally had the feeder out I ‘experienced’ a species known as the Rivoli or commonly known as the ’Magnificent’ hummingbird.  How I know, and why I say I experienced it, is because this is one of the largest varieties of hummingbirds.  If you are quiet you can hear the ‘humming’ sound of the bird’s wings of the smaller varieties, but I kid you not, this guy (or gal) came in vibrating like a helicopter, in fact when I first heard it I thought it was a helicopter passing overhead…

Here are some of the first good pics I managed to capture of my new friend.  You can sometimes see it’s tongue sticking out of its beak, and I have even see this one spit out a mouthful (why I don’t know) and then go back in for more…









I had to move the feeder, I was expecting a high wind day and didn’t want the awning to take the abuse, so I created a small rock platform on the ground and wedged the feeder in place so the bird would still have access to the feeder.  The details of the bird are more difficult to make out with the darker background, but I wanted to include these shots too…








This small wonder has become very comfortable with my company.  I was within two feet of the feeder checking on my two solar lamps I had put out in the sun to charge when the hummingbird approached the feeder, albeit with some caution, but quickly began to slurp away without any noticeable hesitation of me standing right there beside of it…


Thursday, February 8, 2018

Anastasia Repairs, The Hitchhiker, and Slab City…

Anastasia has problems…

As I made my way south on highway 101, a crazy experience in itself, I was just north of Los Angeles in Bakersfield when I heard my brakes start to grind.  I pulled off immediately and searched for a repair shop.  Luckily I was less than two miles from a brake shop chain store called Brake Masters, so I limped my way over to the shop and had them take a look at her.  The rear disc brake pad on the right rear were down to metal and appeared to have been sticking for a while.  I needed at least one rotor, but I knew they were both getting pretty thin so after they priced the job with both rotors I gave them the okay…

The manager was super nice and because he didn’t have the rotors in stock he had to call the warehouse and have them sent out which took a couple of additional hours.  He was so apologetic for the delay and kept calling the warehouse to make sure they were going to stick to their scheduled delivery time.  He must have called them 4 or 5 times, so much that they stopped answering the phone.  But his last call got through and he laughed because he said they picked up the phone and the first words out of their mouth, even before he could speak were, ‘they’re on their way!’

I only had to spend a few hours there, they did a good job and I was safely back on the road by late afternoon.  I drove about another hour or so to a truck stop and parked for the night…


The hitchhiker…

I spent the night in a Flying J truck stop.  I like both the Flying J and the Love’s truck stops.  I feel very comfortable and welcome most of the time.  This one was a bit different for some reason.  Again I felt unwelcome by even the trucking community.  I try to park off the beaten path and not take up a valuable space reserved for truckers but this was a newly opened truck stop and there really weren’t too many spots out of the way of the truckers.  I found a spot that I thought would be difficult for a tractor trailer to maneuver into and parked.  A little later on a truck pulled up in front of me with his lights on and stayed there for quite a while.  I peeked out and he seemed upset even though there were plenty of other spaces available, he seemed miffed that this van was parked here.  I waited for a knock on the door, but he eventually backed up and left…

I woke up early the next morning, grabbed my personal hygiene items from the van and went in to get a shower.  They have very nice facilities and it always makes me feel better to have a good hot shower.  I got a cup of coffee after my shower and hit the road again…

Down the road when I stopped to use the bathroom at a gas station just off the interstate, I parked to the side and I was walking in when this young woman, 30-ish, with a large backpack and a carry bag asked me if I was heading east.  I told her I was heading to Quartzite AZ.  She asked if she could ride along and I said okay.  After relieving myself I came back out of the station to the van and helped her to load her bags and we took off.  I introduced myself and she told me her name was Bethany.  I asked her quite a few questions as we traveled like where was she headed, why was she on the road, you know, just curiosity, but for the most part she responded with short answers and no real content…

When I would speak to her, asking her questions, making conversation, she would always respond with yes sir or no sir, which I understand why, a kind of respect for elders thing, but I told her just call me by my name.  She did say that she had been across the country, ocean to ocean, five times and that she felt she had some gypsy in her blood… 

For the most part, conversations were almost non-existent, and that actually worked well for me.  She seemed to be okay with her circumstances and didn’t consider me a threat, nor did I consider her a threat, but we just didn’t have much common ground to share except the music on the radio.  At one point early on she asked me if I knew where ‘the slabs’ (aka Slab City) were.  To which I replied yes, I think they are near Palm Springs, and actually we would be traveling pretty close by.  She said she wanted to stay there, with all the hippies (lol).  I asked her if she had any notion of what Slab City was like and she responded that it’s a big hippy commune.  I held my tongue.  I asked if she had a tent, she said no, not even a blanket.  Which made me wonder how she made it this far…

I looked at the map and it was a bit out of my way to go to Slab City, but I was curious about it anyway, so I told her I would take her there and drop her off.  I knew I could use this for a good photo shoot opportunity while I was there so it I figured it would all work out.  However, when we got to Slab City she had a sudden change of heart… 

If you don’t know about Slab City, it’s an old abandoned military facility.  It gets its name from all of the concrete slabs that were left behind after the buildings were disassembled and removed.  It’s considered to be the only truly free living space in America.  It’s a place where anyone can stay for free, forever if they want.  There are no laws, there are no rules or regulations, but somehow the people have created an active community of arts, crafts, and music among other creative works.  It’s a desert community with old trailers and dilapidated RVs, where any surplus item can become a new building structure or a work of artistic creativity.  Salvation Mountain has become a Slab City icon and it’s quite a tourist attraction as you can see from the pictures.  People were streaming in to this forsaken piece of desert land to get pictures of Salvation Mountain and to walk the famed yellow brick road up the mountain to the top…

I did manage to snap a few pictures while I was there, but I’ll definitely have to revisit this place.  I think I could spend a day or two just photographing the uniqueness of this self-perpetuating community…











 
Evidently Slab City wasn’t exactly what my hitchhiking friend thought it was, she seemed to have a bit of an ‘oh shit’ moment and then she asked me if I could just drop her off near the interstate.  Well, the nearest interstate was about an hour away south and my original plans were to head back north, but since I didn’t want to backtrack, I just changed my final destination from Quartzite south to Yuma in order to get her to an interstate and still have a familiar place to rest for the night.  I knew the camping areas there and I could settle in for a day or two to rest up and then head up to Quartzite…

Not long before we got to the interstate said she really wanted to go to Yuma.  Now at this point I’m just a little concerned as to whether or not she has any idea of where she wants to go, but I asked where in Yuma she wanted to be dropped off, it’s a big city I said.  She didn’t know, maybe a shelter she said.  So I looked up the shelters in the area and found only one that was open on Saturday.  I told her that there was a mission open and I could take her there, and she happily agreed.  I made my way to Yuma while she fixed her hair, makeup and freshened up a bit.  I found the mission not far off the interstate, helped her get her bags out of the van and told her to take care.  She let me know she was very thankful for the help, and she wished me good luck as she made her way through the mission doors…

I turned around and drove back to the interstate headed for Ogilby CA, to American Girl Mine Road where I had been camping on BLM land and setup camp…

It’s now Monday February 5th.  In the morning I will head up to the library to post these new pages.  After that I will spend some of the day running my weekly errands but then I think I’m headed up to the Quartzite area to camp for a while.  A lot depends on the weather.  I may be traveling to other places I haven’t been if the weather holds, I’ll let you know where I land…

Tuesday, February 6, 2018

On the road again, Salton Sea...

On the road again... (January 29)

After going to Yuma AZ to do my weekly tasks I decided to head west and begin the journey to upper CA to see my friends, the giant redwoods. The weather should be good for most of my travels. I just didn’t want to pass on this opportunity since I was already in CA. It was about 2:00 in the afternoon before I left Yuma so I knew I would only get in a couple of hours travel time before finding a place for the night. A little after 4:00 I decided to start looking around for a camping spot...

I was coming into Salton City and I could see the Salton Sea off in the distance, this seemed like a good time to check it out. Freecampsites.net listed a site about 20 minutes away called Palm Beach Dry Camp right along the beach. Reviews were mixed, some loved it, some hated it, the main complaint was the smell of the water which permeated the area and their were reports of a lot of trash...

When I got to the site I found it quite interesting and oddly attractive. I roamed around until I found my spot and parked. I jumped out of the van and grabbed my camera to snap shots of the half a dozen paragliders buzzing over the beach. They were very accommodating as they flew near by, often waving at me as they passed, grouping up, performing for the camera...

I immediately smelled the sea as I strolled towards the water. I didn’t find it unpleasant, it was similar to being on the beach by the ocean, but different, I can understand why some might not like it, but for me it was similar to the salty air waifing off the ocean...

If you go to a site to camp and you take it for what it is, without comparing it to your own idea of a dream spot, you can just enjoy it for what it is, not what you think it should be...

Here’s a bit of history on this place, which I think makes it even more interesting. This used to be an RV Park and golf course. The Salton Sea is a rift lake and the elevation is actually 220 ft below sea level. The water has become polluted from agricultural runoff and it’s also drying up. I had to walk several hundred yards across the dry sea bed to reach the water line. The water is saline, like the ocean, and this inland sea stands directly on the San Andreas fault line. It was created by tectonic plate movements and this must have been a thriving attraction in its time...

I happened to park right on the 14th green, a lot of the flags, cups, ball washers, and signage are still here. There are also covered picnic tables and other structures left standing from the old park which I find fascinating. The area is mostly sand, the RV Park area has good flat areas for parking and the ground is packed and solid in most places. The beach is soft sand and the sea bed is... well... like a sea bed... sandy and crusty...

Most of the other campers around me are here to paraglide, but there are a few others who seem to be traveling like me and enjoying their stay. I’m really enjoying the air shows...

The weather so far has been great. Mostly sunny, low winds, and the forecast is for highs in the 80s for the foreseeable future, nights in the 50s, and no rain, which make it even more attractive to me so I might stay here for a few days, we’ll see...

Sunrise...
Sunrise...
parked on the beach...
Setting up...
















close up of the sea bed...

just had to add my view from inside the van early in the morning...
parked right on the 14th green...









More about Salton Sea...



After doing a little research that night, I found that the Salton Sea used to be fed by the Colorado river but because of the water shortages in southern CA, water has been diverted and it has been drying up for many years now. The remaining water has become more and more saline over time which is making it difficult for the local fish and wildlife to survive. This lake has also been heavily polluted with agricultural runoff and with the lack of any_ incoming fresh water supply, the exposed sea bed is a major health hazard for the mostly indian residents in the Salton City area. In fact, when the wind blows hard enough for the dust particles to become airborne, children in the community_ are having severe asthma attacks. The children in that community_ have one of the highest rates of asthma in the country…


And… If something isn’t done about the exposed sea bed, the article I read said it could become the greatest source of airborne particulate pollution in the U.S. and Mexico…

Clear Lake…

The lake I ran up on in the video was called Clear Lake, and the shore-side community is called ClearLake Oaks. It was a beautiful little town but difficult to find a place to pull off the narrow road, but I managed to find a roadside park a few miles on further down the road and was able to snap some shots…









The Invitation

  A close friend of mine sent this to me and it just blessed me when I read it.     I thought it was so beautiful and I wanted to share. To ...