Note: I have learned that the plural of cactus can be cacti, cactuses or…cactus!
I will no doubt apply all uses inconsistently in this post. ;)
On Monday we left sleepy Deming for Tucson, Arizona. But first we had to
check out the nearby City of Rocks State Park. It looks exactly as it sounds. I
was slightly skittish about scorpions, rattle snakes (oh and hantavirus!), but
before long I was clambering happily between, up and over rocks for better views.
There were only a couple of other people in the whole park.
The park was beautiful
and I lost all sense of time (and I lost Lashi). I came away happy and delirious
from the heat.

Back in the car for the day, passing breathtaking desert scenery, a few
ghost towns, dust storm warnings, billboards for ‘Fresh Jerky’ (huh?) and flying
through a time zone or two. I bid New Mexico goodbye (I love this joyful yellow sign) and welcomed Arizona!
I was happy to finally reach the appropriately named ‘Copper Cactus Inn’ - our
Tucson home for the next two nights. A city nestled between rocky mountains
literally covered in cacti. There is nothing more beautiful than a cactus forest,
it is sublime. Cacti grow into all kinds of odd forms,
some look sort of human-like to me, with ‘bodies’, ‘heads’ and ‘arms’.
I just couldn’t get over the fact that people had cactus and rocks in their
front yards instead of trees and rose bushes!
The next day was Venus Transit day! After a frantic site reconnaissance, we
found the perfect spot. I braved poisonous cactus, mountain lions, rattle
snakes and the afternoon heat to support Lashi in his obsession to photograph
Venus for six hours as it transited the sun. Not such a unique obsession as it
turns out, as we were joined by another Venus hunter with a similar impressive set
up, not to mention the throngs of people who stopped by to check out the telescopes
and witness the transit over the course of the day.
It was pretty amazing to witness that historic little black dot moving, oh a
millimetre or two every five minutes (hehe), but I was soon distracted by all the
beautiful things around me to photograph like the mountains, cactus, and a
dozen discarded long stem roses (I wonder what the story was with these?).
Check out Lashi’s amazing transit pics here.
As the sun disappeared below the horizon a group of capoeira dancers turned
up to take over our site. Dancing and singing, sharing a joyful ritual
together. I knew exactly why they would want to perform it here. It was a
beautiful, grateful moment.
A hot, momentous day was completed with a heavenly Vietnamese pho noodle
soup. As we returned home, I witnessed a ‘Hollywood’ moment. Relatively empty
streets with cop cars on every corner and crawling down side streets. Literally
dozens! A ‘Ghetto Bird’
above us sweeping its spotlight looking for crims, right above our hotel! We
darted from the car to the hotel and locked the door before we were taken hostage
or something. ;)
Wednesday we travelled north to Flagstaff, Arizona. At this point I could
change the title to ‘Caffeine Crazy’, you can imagine what hours trapped in a car
does to people. It includes strange animal noises, rants, wild theories and
delirious singing...you get the picture.
This epic driving day was to get us close to
the Grand Canyon and early on Thursday we headed up. I’ll let the pictures
speak for themselves, what an incredible place! On the way back we passed
Native American stalls by the side of the road selling dream catchers, and I day
dreamed as I passed through magical sounding places like ‘The Painted Desert’ and ‘Sacred Mountain’.
The next day we got up at 5.00am and drove 12 hours to San Francisco to be
the ‘Aussie specimens’ at a 65th birthday party in Mill Valley. We drove over
the Colorado River, through the Mojave Desert and passed a town called ‘Needles’.
Christian radio made a comeback (I thought we were in California now?) with ads for ‘affordable, biblical healthcare’
(?) and statements like ‘we are not even capable of framing questions that the
bible cannot answer’ which shows a remarkable lack of imagination I think!
I also
found my favourite plant so far, a strange sort of cactus-tree. I have other, clearer pics, but I like this blurry drive-by shot!
So there you have it, we crossed three time zones and drove almost 5,000
kilometres (think of driving from Cairns to Perth!). It was magic, and I miss
cactuses!




















Oh, how wonderful Miss Karen, thank you for sharing! Having driven round IOz for six months in the delirious heat, I had flashbacks reading this! I too experienced the wonder of the desert, sublime and stupid moments trapped in a car for ten hours or more in the heat and underpinning it all, absolute wonder in the world. Different continent, but somehow the same...
ReplyDeleteI too would love to see a cactus forest and those little houses with cactus gardens?! awesomeness!! :) Gold star! :)
Yes awesome. I was amazed that it was that distance. Fantastic photography and writing. Well done for documenting it all and getting it all up so quick too! Cass x
ReplyDeleteSome great photos, insights and observations Karen, you are really doing the US in true form. Wish I could have shared the Route 66 road trip with you (that has always been a dream of mine) sharing your caffeine crazy antics :) keep it up luv, miss you xoxox
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