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July 2000

Arizona - Phoenix and Tucson

Cruises, Tours, Sightseeing ...
Experienced voyagerExperienced voyagerExperienced voyagerExperienced voyager David Aaronson
2005-09-24 19:35:37
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Mexico. However, where they do grow, they do it well.



Here's your classic saguaro with upturned arms and woodpecker nest in the top (5). The large approaching thunderstorm may not be normal. This is at the Sonora Desert Museum just outside the gates of Saguaro National Park. It's a sort of zoo-museum-garden hybrid. Amazingly we did not take any pictures of the river otters here because, well, they don't really belong in the desert. We also didn't photograph the sleeping beaver, mostly because it wasn't making lace in the bow. (If you're not getting any of these references you'd better go read the poem.)



These are not jubjubs, but they make a noise sort of like that. They don't really have a symmetrical shape either. They are javalinas (6), the most ridiculous animals yet to appear in the desert. They're related to peccaries (not pigs!) and they spend most of their time grunting. In between grunts they occassionally have the thought to lie down in some nearby mud, or maybe to eat another cactus as loudly and messily as possible. We also saw a herd (or whatever the appropriate collective is) in Sedona, where uniformed hotel staff members whizzing past in golf carts kept insisting to us that they were potentially dangerous and we shouldn't get too close. Perhaps we underestimated their natural leaping abilities, but probably not.



If you have to have a favorite saguaro (and you never know, you might) this would be mine (7). Not only does it have the best view, it has a sort of Hindu deity look about it. Of course it probably won't reign over the lesser saguaros for long, most of the hilltop variety we saw had been fatally struck by lightning. This was off the desert loop road, a hilly dirt road where our poor refined rental car got its first taste of what was in store for it.



The storm passed on, the lizards came back out, and the bandersnatch (if there was one) returned home. Leaving us with a lovely double rainbow seen here (8). The saguaros were unfazed by the entire specatcle.



We hunted until darkness came on. Actually, no, we returned to Tucson proper and had a bit of buffalo for dinner. We had intended to sample some of Tucson's notoriously high quality southwestern food but with the time change and all we were unusually tired and thus we just went to bed.

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