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Tag: saguaro

26 March 2023

Cactus & cristates at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument

blooming Brittlebush desert Ajo Mts clouds Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZSpent a few days exploring with a friend at Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument searching for wildflowers and cactus cristates, an unusual growth that I’ll tell you more about.

bushes full moon set Mohawk Mts BLM Owl AZHowever, before leaving the Mohawk Mountains boondock in Owl, Arizona I caught the moon set with better luck than the dark of the night before.  Back on Interstate 8 east to Gila Bend, taking video along the way.  Absolutely scored finding diesel at $3.99/gal.  Though that’s still too much it was the first time all winter I found under $4/gal.  Sure does limit the miles I drive.

purple Lupin & yellow Bladderpod flowers SR85 ORPI NM AZLupine surrounded by Bladderpod

From there I got off the interstate and headed south on SR85 through lush Sonoran desert to Ajo.  The shoulders on both sides teased with strips of wildflower colors in yellow, blue, orange, purple, white, and shades of green.

plaza Ajo AZ

lunch Tacos El Tarasco Ajo AZMade a stop in Ajo for a few last minute groceries and lunch at Tacos El Tarasco at the Plaza.  Travel days I don’t make time to prepare meals so usually treat myself.  Why not?  Flowers continued to line the road for the 30 minute drive to the Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument visitor center, passing through Why, Arizona along the way.

truckcamper cg ORPI NM AZA Facebook photographer friend as yet unmet, Richard Strange, had a campground reservation for two nights.  I assumed I’d be able to get a first-come campsite at Twin Peaks Campground when I got there.  But of course now everything is reservations that MUST be made online through rec. gov.  (More about them through links at the bottom of this post.)  I should know better, but don’t frequent campgrounds on public lands preferring to boondock nearby instead.  With barely a signal at the visitor center I managed to signup with the reservation site and get two nights camping, with my pass $10/night.  It’s a beautiful campground (here’s my site view) with over 200 sites nestled privately amongst the desert vegetation.  Richard hadn’t arrived yet, being distracted for over an hour by a couple large Caracara birds along his drive from the Phoenix area.

cg trl desert Ajo Mts ORPI NM AZ

Sonoran Desert cg trl ORPI NM AZI took a short walk on one of the many trails that leave from the campground and felt immediately immersed in this dense and diverse Sonoran desert.

window sunset cg ORPI NM AZ

Richard & RockyRichard & Rocky obviously not outside my door

After dinner Richard texted me.  What I didn’t realize at first was he was right outside my door with his walker and dog.  I went outside, we met, chatted away like old friends, and made a plan to meet in the morning to explore Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

RockyRichard, and his dog Rocky, rearranged the minivan so I could sit in the passenger seat.  Rocky is the most loveable Pitbull I’ve ever met.  He’s a rescue from dog fighting, and now a service dog.  Of course he thinks he’s human so really didn’t understand why I didn’t sit in the back.  But he shared the seat and immediately moved when I wanted to sit there.

Redtailed hawk preparing for flight off pole N Puerto Blanco Dr ORPI NM AZWe started with the North Puerto Blanco Drive for the miles allowed non 4x4s.  I almost immediately saw a Red-tailed hawk perched and Richard understood the command to “STOP”.

yellow brittlebush flowers desert mts N Puerto Blanco Dr ORPI NM AZ

desert N Puerto Blanco Dr ORPI NM AZWe saw some flowers but not endless views of colors.  The yellows of Brittlebush and Bladderpod were most prevalent with a few orange patches of Poppy.  In fact as we drove by an area of orange along the banks of a dry wash I saw a vehicle I thought looked familiar.  And sure enough more known photographers were set up to shoot complete with reflectors.  We chatted briefly before moving on.

Cholla Saguaro cristate SR85 ORPI NM AZ

Saguaro cristate SR85 ORPI NM AZNext Richard shared some awesome crested Saguaro cactus not too far off the main road.  Referred to as a mutation, or abnormal growth, the crest or cristate, is certainly unusual and not all that frequently seen.  I suppose first, you have to be actively looking for them.  There is debate about what causes these typically fan-like shapes.  We spent a lot of time speculating on various growth patterns seen over the day.

Saguaro cristate SR85 ORPI NM AZFrom Wikipedia: “Fasciation (or cresting) is a relatively rare condition of abnormal growth in vascular plants in which the apical meristem (growing tip), which normally is concentrated around a single point and produces approximately cylindrical tissue, instead becomes elongated perpendicularly to the direction of growth, thus, producing flattened, ribbon-like, crested, or elaborately contorted tissue. Fasciation may also cause plant parts to increase in weight and volume in some instances. The phenomenon may occur in the stem, root, fruit, or flower head. Some plants are grown and prized aesthetically for their development of fasciation. Any occurrence of fasciation has several possible causes, including hormonal, genetic, bacterial, fungal, viral and environmental causes.”

the Wall Gachado Line Camp Rd ORPI NM AZA very short jaunt took us to the border where neither of us wanted to be distracted by the wall.

yellow flowering desert Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZWe spent the rest of the afternoon lollygagging along the 21-mile mostly one-way Ajo Mountain Loop drive.  We searched for flowers and cristates, and ended up with a whole lot more.

Saguaro glomerate Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZAt one point Richard stopped because of seeing some weird growth on a cactus barely visible from the road.  I walked out to get a closer look and took photos with my camera and his 300mm lens Nikon.  It was at least two feet long.  Found out later from the Crested Cactus Society this anomaly is called a glomerate.  You may have seen nursery grown plants and cactus hybridized to create this look.

Redtailed hawk bird Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZRed-tailed Hawk

Cactus wasn’t the only sighting.

Saguaro crest Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZStopped for lunch at an actual picnic area with table—few and far between—offering an awesome view into a valley and another crested Saguaro not too far up a hill from the road.  If you get the guide for the Ajo Mountain Loop drive it’s #7.

desert cactus ORPI NM AZWe took advantage of almost every spot wide enough to park, and a few that weren’t.  Though I’ve taken this drive several times, I see it differently every time.

Saguaro anomaly desert Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZYet another unusual growth with wavy patterns are known as “spiral” or “checkerboard”.  Made us wonder if that was a sign for more crests to come.

bifurcated Saguaro Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZ

Saguaro bifurcation Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZSaguaro bifurcation Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZ g-2

And then there’s bifurcation, when the cactus, or an arm, divides into a split instead of the usual arm growth with a ring-shaped joint.

Crested Organ Pipe Cactus Ajo Mt Dr ORPI NM AZ

Sonoran desert crested organ pipe cactus Ajo Mt Rd ORPI NM AZFinally we got to #9.  Exactly six years previous to the day I saw this most amazing growth which I named the “octopuses’ garden”, my first ever crested Organ Pipe Cactus.

dead Organ Pipe Cactus with cristate Poppies at Organ Pipe Cactus NM AZI’d been told by a Ranger friend it had died since then.  I was sad.  Yet I’ve seen a lot of these Organ Pipe Cactus dying or dead during this visit.

dead Organ Pipe cactus sketleton cristate ORPI NM AZI was still anxious to see it, and got a closer look at the skeleton which clearly shows a very different growth pattern for the flatter cristate versus regular columnar cactus arms.

desert cloud virga ORPI NM AZWe continued with our drive-stop pattern, joking about the “plethora” of poppy patches, NOT.

crest Organ Pipe cactus Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZcrest Organ Pipe cactus Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZ

Richard shared a known-to-him/new-to-me crested Organ Pipe cactus that grows almost on the road.  It has several bifurcated and cristate growths.  How did I miss this one before?

desert Poppy flowers mt Ajo Mt Lp ORPI NM AZ

Poppies ORPI NM AZAs we came around the last third of the loop drive more flowers appeared.  Finally, some poppies.

Cactus Wren bird ORPI NM AZAnd a Cactus Wren too.

Sonoran desert Ajo Mts cg trl ORPI NM AZWe returned to our respective campsites exhausted from a long and wonderful day exploring Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument.

Granny's Kitchen Why AZRichard and I pulled out of camp at 9am then slowly made our way north to Why for breakfast at Granny’s. Had to stop a few times for pics and Richard was scolded by Border Patrol for parking on the road.

desert Black Mt clouds Darby Well Rd BLM Ajo AZWe parted ways after a delicious breakfast at Granny’s Kitchen and I continued north towards Ajo and my next camp.

desert Ajo Mts reverse sunset clouds Darby Well Rd BLM Ajo AZAll this happened weeks ago and I’ve been busy so am way behind real time.

Rec. gov & film permits

Did you know that rec. gov is a private company with a government contract that makes a bundle of money but not much reaches the feds?   I highly recommend Todd/Park Junkie’s explanation about who is rec. gov https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=C9ab9frl8zE & about a Lawsuit Against Rec. Gov https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=R7vYpSeAn6U .  This could be changed during the renewal of the Federal Lands Recreation & Enhancement Act.  Which also includes the issue of needing permits to share videos and photographs on social media for commercial purposes including YouTube, Istagram, and others.  So even though I don’t personally make any money on my social media platforms, somebody does, so legally I should have a permit.  Every park’s permitting system is different and the process takes time.  There goes spontaneity.  I’m going to do it anyway as my constitutional right to free speech and freedom of the press.  If I go to jail, I hope you’ll consider bailing me out.

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Arizona, Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument, Places I've been, United States cactus, crested cactus, cristate, Organ Pipe Cactus, saguaro, wildflowers 23 Comments
20 February 2018

Sky watching from the Arizona desert

Saguaro Ocotillo Sonoran Desert Chocolate Mountains West view clouds reverse sunrise King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaBeen enjoying a lot of sky watching lately what with the recent lunar eclipse and glorious sunrises and sets over the Sonoran Desert of southern Arizona.  Yet fluffy clouds turned to skies of gray and there is also the chores of life.

last light Shea Road camp Parker ArizonaAfter 13 of the allowed 14 days camping on the BLM (Bureau of Land Management) just outside the Kofa NWR (National Wildlife Refuge) I needed to move on.  Where did the time go?  Besides, it was time to dump and fill tanks and get groceries.  I drove north through an almost quiet Quartzsite then continued 35 miles to Parker for a Safeway and Wally fix.  I looked at and passed on both the LaPaz County Park and Blue Water Casino dry camp with too many others for my personal taste.  Instead I drove a roughly paved six miles east of SR95 on Shea Road to a BLM boondock which was unimpressive and obviously a well used OHV area.  So glad I was prepared to leave in the morning as the crowds of noisy rigs pulled in to go tearing around in the desert.  Sure hope that’s not why there is less vegetation here.

truck campter The Scenic Rd RV Park Quartzsite ArizonaIn the morning I checked the weather and big wind was predicted for Saturday night.  So being I still had to dump tanks and fill water ($12-15) plus take a shower ($8) I figured it was time to ‘treat’ myself to a RV Park.  I checked online and found The Scenic Road with rates from 2015/16 at $30.  Called ahead and they had space.  Level and close sites located along Hwy95 as are many other parks if not on Central in downtown Quartzsite.  With tax I figure that’s a $13/night site.  I refused the first parking option with my kitchen window three feet from the Women’s bathroom door.  Got a little better but definitely sandwiched in.  Figured that might turn out to be a good thing with overnight wind gusts predicted up to 25 mph.  Certainly not my cup of tea but I can sleep almost anywhere for one night.  And I had electricity too.

I heard the wind pick up just before going to bed at 11pm.  Guess it blew more but I never felt a thing so was good to be tucked in.  Sunday morning, after filling a propane tank and topping off the truck’s diesel I headed back out to the desert south of Quartzsite, this time the King Valley Road into the Kofa NWR.

saguaros ocotillos Chocolate Mountains King Valley Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge Arizona

Pencil Cholla King Valley Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaFound a side road from Kings Valley Road and although I could see a few RVs in the distance still felt like I had the place to myself.  Camp was surrounded by a goodly amount of saguaros and ocotillos, some palo verdes, lots of creosote bush, a few varieties of cholla, and some other scrubby stuff I don’t know.

 

Pencil Cholla

 

saguaros ocotillos Chocolate Mountains sunset sunrays King Valley Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaNice view of sunset over the Chocolate Mountains.

saguaros ocotillos Chocolate Mountains suset King Valley Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaWhile baking pizza for dinner I noticed a chirping noise when propane was used.  I Googled this new to me phenomenon and discovered the noise could mean time to replace hoses or regulator which I did about four years ago when I first got the camper.  Hmmmmm……

Sonoran Desert Kofa Mountains East view cloudy sunrise King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge Arizona

Sonoran Desert Kofa Mountains East view cloudy sunrise sunrays King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaMonday morning a layer of dark clouds hung over the eastern horizon.  Only a 20% chance of rain predicted.  I was parked on good hard rocky ground but the road I drove in on was soft dust and gravel.  Did make me wonder if I could drive it if it got very wet.  But I didn’t really plan to go anywhere for a few days anyway other than  maybe a walk towards the mountains.

Saguaro Ocotillo first light Choclate Mountains West view clouds King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaWind picked up during the day keeping it cooler than it had been.  These spring like temperatures are way too early making me wonder what this low desert will be like during summer.  Even the desert will change with extended 100°+ and drought.

Sonoran Desert Kofa Mountains East view cloudy sunrise sunrays King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge Arizona

Ocotillo leaves King Valley Road Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaThe day remained gray as rows of clouds hung over the valley.  A we bit of soft female rain fell bringing a smile to my face.  Rain is a gift to the desert dwellers especially when soft and not an extended downpour.  Considering the lack of recent rain I was surprised how green leafed the ocotillo were dressed.

 

Ocotillo

 

Ocotillo Saguaro Sonoran Desert Tank Mountains South view cloudy sunrise King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaAlthough chilly outside, I wore a jacket and scarf and opened the door to breath deep the petrichor of the desert.  I could feel it crying for more moisture.  What doesn’t kill us, makes us strong.

Border Patrol truck drove by and didn’t stop so guess I’m legal.

Sonoran Desert Kofa Mountains storm clouds Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaSun poking through holes in the clouds sent patches of light dancing across the land.  I grabbed the camera, stepped outside, and it was gone.  Just a tease.  In and out, taking ever more photos of the light on the desert while still processing the morning shots.

Sonoran Desert Chocolate Mountains storm clouds sunset sunrays King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge Arizona

Sonoran Desert Chocolate Mountains storm clouds sunset sunrays King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaGorgeous sunrays before sunset and after dark it seriously rained.

Sonoran Desert Kofa Mountains storm clouds sunrays King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaI awoke to a fresh desert Tuesday morning.  The ground not really wet but with a scent of moisture and more low clouds indicating another day of perhaps life giving rain.  Was enough to settle the dust on the road without making a mess.

Cholla Saguaro Tank Mountains clouds King Valley Kofa National Wildlife Refuge ArizonaJumping Cholla Tank Mountains

Yet it did not rain so I went for a walk and heard only the wind and nothing else.  Where are the birds.

mountains approaching Agila Arizona

Enough gray.  Third day and I’m done with it.  I wanted my sunshine back.  And so, seemingly, did my solar system.  The control panel gave a fault message saying “the batteries are discharged below the minimum acceptable level”.  With another two days of cloud cover coming I would be in trouble.  No lights and eventually the fridge won’t ignite.  Called Solar Bill in Quartzsite and was told “gray skies don’t make much power” to keep my one battery charged.  I could live without lights but don’t want the ice cream to melt.  For some reason running the truck doesn’t charge the house battery.  Something that needs to be fixed.  At least the propane tank quit singing.

rain low clouds Weaver Mountains SR89 North to Yarnell ArizonaSo, I could pay $20-30 to camp in Quartzsite to charge the battery, or, drive two hours to home, plug in, and take care of some business plus pick up mail including new slippers and a book.  And here I am in Yarnell, at the top of the foggy mountain.

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Hi, I’m Gaelyn, the Geogypsy

I retired after 29 summer seasons as a Park Ranger, traveling solo for 40+ years. My passions include travel, connecting to nature, photography, and sharing stories.

I started exploring US National Parks in 1977 and 20 years later became a seasonal Park Ranger.  I’ve lived full-time in a RV for 30 years working summers and playing winters.  I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow old, other than grow up.

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