New Avenues

I have not been very successful so far selling my work and recognize the need for change if I ever want to quit my day job. Recently I have been looking into NFTs as a way to make millions. Yeah right huh? Well who knows? I know the Bored Ape series was probably like winning the lottery for it’s creator, but maybe it will be like winning many small scratchers for me.

NFTs

NFT is an acronym for Non-Fungible token. It’s pretty new thing some people have gotten rich like I mentioned. After looking into it further, it’s a little more money than I can afford to risk minting with crypto currency. But I can at least create the NFT as a certificate of authenticity, which is what a NFT can be. There’s some talk that since it involves crypto currency that enables bad actors in the black market. Personal opinion, anywhere there is money to be made you will find those people. Also I can see how this might disturb some artists as it breaks from their norms, which one person said I would lose respect as an artist. Like I said I’m having difficulty at finding success and this is a new avenue. If I am swimming in bit coins like Scrooge McDuck I’m not going to care about other people’s opinions. Especially since I don’t matter to them now.

Great-Tailed Grackle NFT
Click the Image to visit the OpenSea home for this NFT

Fine Art America

Fine Art America is another avenue I wanted to work on in the past, but wasn’t sure if it was worth the effort. I even went to the trouble of creating my own shop and uploading hundreds of images to stock photo sites to make a buck. I’ve yet to make a dime from my own shop. The stock photos just are not selling for a good price nor have I made enough to even collect a check. What I like about Fine Art America is they do all the printing and can place images on products like a coffee cup. Which allows me to focus more time on taking pictures and marketing. Click the image below to see my profile on Fine Art America.

Hummingbird on a sunray red and yellow background
Click the image to see it on a beach towel

Art Fairs

Last I am working on getting on the scene and working Art Fairs. One of the most popular is First Fridays in Phoenix, which I have a pending application. They are requesting handmade art and what not, so not sure if I will pass. Otherwise I have been working on local Art Fairs like Tempe Festival of the Arts and smaller operations.

Warm March 1st
Example of a print I plan on having on hand at an art fair.

Conclusion

There’s gotta be a way. When I first started this, it was out of haste with not much planning. I thought if I built something people would visit the website and eventually things would fall into place. Then Covid hit, it hit me hard with the approach I was taking driving people and things around for a living. Mentally not sure I was going to make it through. I kinda feel like I am on mule, but thinking it’s a horse. I give it a gitty-up and it won’t move. Now I’m getting off my horse and leading it on foot.

2022 Maricopa County Fair Entries

Finally pulled the trigger and got my own printer. I was looking into getting a booth and researching fairs when the Maricopa County Fair caught my attention. Funny thing, it happened when I was trying to avoid traffic and pulled into the 17th Ave entrance. But it inspired me to get the printer I was eyeballing and get the ball rolling on future plans. Below are the images I submitted. I am offering 8″ x 10″ prints glossy or luster for now and if really interested I can print up to 13″ x 19″ for little more $$$.

Click on the photos to purchase prints

Check out this years Maricopa County Fair 2022 to see in person and save $10 on the purchase.

4 Peaks Under the Weather
4 Peaks Under the Weather
Annas Hummingbird on Watch
Annas Hummingbird on Watch
B&W Salt River Horse
B&W Salt River Horse
Black Phoebe against Dark Background
Black Phoebe against Dark Background
Cactus Wren in Flowering Ironwood
Cactus Wren in Flowering Ironwood
Dust Storm PHX July 9th 2021
Dust Storm PHX July 9th 2021
Erysimum capitatum – Sanddune Wallflower
Erysimum capitatum – Sanddune Wallflower
Milky Way from Jack's Canyon
Milky Way from Jack’s Canyon
Grackle at Salt River
Grackle at Salt River
Harvest Moon 2021
Harvest Moon 2021
Midtown to Downtown PHX in Color
Midtown to Downtown PHX in Color
Midtown to Downtown Phoenix in B&W
Midtown to Downtown Phoenix in B&W
Monarch on San Felipe Dogwood
Monarch on San Felipe Dogwood
Picacho Desert Sunset
Picacho Desert Sunset
Poofy Hummingbird
Poofy Hummingbird
Purple Grand Canyon is a HDR image with a layer blend to bring out the purple mountain majesty during the blue hour.
Purple Grand Canyon
Rainbow Lightning is a composite image of a series of photos taken as a dust storm rolled through the Arizona Sonoran Desert at sunset creating a rainbow.
Rainbow Lightning
A Saguaro against the storm is an image taken in the Sonoran desert as the dark monsoon clouds approach the sturdy giant.
A Saguaro against the storm is an image taken in the Sonoran desert as the dark monsoon clouds approach the sturdy giant.
Blooming Sugar Bush Close-up
Blooming Sugar Bush Close-up
Tarantula Hawk in Apache Plume
Tarantula Hawk in Apache Plume
Warm March 1st 2020 Sunset
Warm March 1st 2020 Sunset
Wrong Hood Wild Horses
Wrong Hood Wild Horses

4 Peaks All the Way

SOOO the title says it all I finally was able to drive to 4 Peaks all the way. Well rode actually as a passenger in Karla’s, my girlfriend, FJ Cruiser in 4WD. Her having a vehicle that can explore Arizona was definitely a factor in us getting together when we met. We almost didn’t go to 4 Peaks with life and all. It’s easy to make excuses to just stay home, but we got up Sunday morning and I asked if she was ready to go and away we went.

4 Peaks before the Bush fire
4 Peaks before the Bush fire
Similar view of 4 Peaks after the fire almost 2 years later
Similar view of 4 Peaks after the fire almost 2 years later

The second attempt I posted on my Behance page titled 4 Peaks 2nd Attempt. It was thwarted by what looked like a riverbed or rocks that had washed over the road during monsoon season. My little Mitsubishi Outlander had the clearance, but not the transmission to deal with such rugged terrain. So I had to turn around. It has since been cleared by a grater.

This was before the Bush Fire burned the area up. The pictures above are the before and after. The Tonto National Forest can be very green when we get rain. Unfortunately in 2020 a car fire on State Highway 87 burned the area up from the 87 to parts of the chain of reservoirs south of Roosevelt Lake. It could have happened naturally from lightning during a monsoon anyway, so just something that was bound to happen. Below are a couple pictures of why. During the 1930’s people used Buffelgrass as cattle feed. Pretty ain’t it?

Landscape full of buffelgrass
Landscape full of buffelgrass
close-up of Buffelgrass
close-up of Buffelgrass

Well enough crying about the past. Karla, Squeakers, our dog, and I roared up Highway 87 on the crisp March morning to the 4 Peaks Wilderness area just past the Bush Highway. We passed a trailer full of ATV’s entering the area. Before we got there I mentioned there are two paths. One would take us east into the lowlands for some 4×4 fun and the other would take us to 4 Peaks. She chose to go up 4 Peaks. We got in about a mile to find an abandoned campfire still smoldering. We stopped so I could throw some water and dirt on it just in case.

Folks if you are reading this and thinking about going camping up there please be mindful. Leaving something like that behind could destroy an ecosystem that exists no where else in the world. Not to mention hurt people that go deep on the trail if another brush fire was caused from it. In this case it almost wiped out the communities of west of Apache Lake.

One of the first pictures I stopped to take was of a Sugar Bush and the landscape looking back. For anyone feeling bereft this should give you hope life is coming back.

A Sugar Bush blooming through old growth burned by the Bush Fire.
A Sugar Bush blooming through old growth burned by the Bush Fire.
Sugar Bush blooming close-up
Sugar Bush blooming close-up
Looking back on the area burned by the Bush Fire
Looking back on the area burned by the Bush Fire

We also saw plenty of wild flowers along the way with lupine, poppies, and Dakota Verbena lining the trail up the mountain and down.

Dakota Verbena growing wild on the mountain trail leading to 4 Peaks
Dakota Verbena growing wild on the mountain trail leading to 4 Peaks

We stopped a few times to take pictures and relieve ourselves along the way up the mountain. It was nice just pausing to soak up the landscape with the sun warming our bodies and breathing in the light crisp air blowing softly through the valleys and draws. Squeakers was loving it too. We thought we got a Tea Cup Chihuahua. He has since proven to be more of a Rat Terrier. Not a dog that rides around in a purse. Here’s a few pictures we coaxed out of him running through the dead wood.

I found a nice path he ran like an obstacle course on the first try.
I found a nice path he ran like an obstacle course on the first try.
There he is negotiating a branch. That split second decision to go over, under or around.
There he is negotiating a branch. That split second decision to go over, under or around.
And there Squeakers goes like a champion show dog over.
And there Squeakers goes like a champion show dog over.
Another attempt this time he took the long way around though.
Another attempt this time he took the long way around though.
And the last attempt...a signal he was done doing this for fun and attention
And the last attempt…a signal he was done doing this for fun and attention
"Thanks for letting me get out and runaround Dad, but think I'll just ride with Momma the rest of the way." ~ Squeakers
“Thanks for letting me get out and runaround Dad, but think I’ll just ride with Momma the rest of the way.” ~ Squeakers
Karla Kash
Karla Kash

The best part of the trip was riding with Karla to 4 Peaks all the way. The journey may have took a few hours but it’s during those moments together time ceases to exist. A couple people and their dog in bubble of reality far removed from the rigmarole of life experiencing a world less than a hundred miles away that might as well be on a different planet. These are the things we live for, bonding in a deeper more meaningful relationship.

Roosevelt Lake from on top of the mountain trail
Roosevelt Lake from on top of the mountain trail
Camping Area near the summit with snow on the south side of 4 Peaks
Camping Area near the summit with snow on the south side of 4 Peaks

We reached the end of the trail that had a couple spots for camping and a little further down an area to park for hiking. This view almost looks fake, but I assure you that you can pitch a tent and meditate on it for as long as National Park Service will let you. Which I think is about two weeks, might want to do your research before planning.

Sanddune Wallflower
Sanddune Wallflower

And finally my favorite picture. A Sanddune Wallflower growing along a grated small ridge of sandy gravel off the side of the road. This was the first time seeing these flowers and my mind was thinking what a wonderful shot it would be to get a close-up with the snow covered mountains in the background.

We finished up with lunch at Butcher Hook, a roadside diner along Route 188. In our quick planning we forgot to pack a lunch and snacks, so this was a welcomed meal after a few hours on the dusty trail. I also was not doing my best thinking and forgot to take a picture of the restaurant and my debit card. The food was awesome!

Case of the Fuck Its

Every so often I get this urge to say, “Fuck it”. Fuck the daily grind, fuck the city, fuck my cat, fuck this and fuck that. It hasn’t always worked out for the best. I don’t have fuck you money, so it’s a short lived experience. Also I have carried this attitude too far in life several times. The epitome of an alcoholic, depressive, worn down, beat up soul. Sometimes it’s a good thing. Art is made. Poetry is written. The soul is cleansed and I am ready to stare life in the eyes again. Ready to say, “Bring it on motherfuckers!”

More Powerful Zoom

I recently upgraded my equipment with a new zoom lens to get better photos of birds, lizards, and even some cityscape. It’s a great feeling to know if I do everything right on my end the wildlife might cooperate long enough to get some pretty cool photos.

Grackle at Salt River is a photo of a single Grackle among a flock standing on a river rock next to a glowing river from late afternoon sun.
Grackle at Salt River is a photo of a single Grackle among a flock standing on a river rock next to a glowing river from late afternoon sun.

Heck even when I am off on my settings some good things still happen. Like these images of a Ash Throated Fly Catcher. The first one is motion blur from when it took off from it’s perch and the following is when I believe the same one put on a little display of it’s prowess as an agile bug catcher. It was a cool experience at the end of a long hike along the Salt River. This little guy was hanging out in a field of plants frequented by butterflies. I tried to get a photo of it in a bush and as it flew away and I turned to walk back to my car, it perched along the fence rail. I got a few photos and again as I was about to walk away it swooped down for what looks like the biggest horsefly I have ever seen. The photos turned out pretty cool with the Canon RP’s internal stability adjusting for my camera shake and bokeh from the 150-600mm F5-6.3 DG OS HSM | C

Fly Catcher with a Big Bug
Blurred Bird on Take Off is an image of an Ash Throated Fly Catcher seen in this photo. I think it's a pretty cool looking photo. Hope you do too.

One of the main reasons I got a big zoom lens was to get better bird pictures. I found a nesting area of Northern Phainopepla, which look similar to Cardinals with their spikey crest. Cardinals are in the area too, but it seems a brush clearing project may have scared some of them off. The Phainopepla are fun to take pictures of as they respond to a whistle. I heard one and gave a short whistle to the best of my ability to mimic theirs and the whole tree line started sounding off.

Male Northern Phainopepla is perched on a tall branch with the sunlight glistening off it's dark feathers creating a blue iridescent color.

Of course one of the main attractions along the Salt River are the Wild Horses that roam the desert valley. Most of them don’t care for us humans, although they are quite tolerant. I do my best to respect their space, but sometimes it’s tough to avoid crossing paths. As I was walking the trail a small herd and I were surprised to meet rounding a corner. I wasn’t sure how they would react, but it was a mutual decision to make room for each other. As I tried moving behind a large tree, so they could get by they didn’t budge. They could still see my shadow I figured and moved out in the open. The lead horse took a path on the other side of the tree and the heard followed with the white horse taking the rear.

To end my hike was the Ash Throated Fly Catcher swinging by for one more picture. What a ham! I’m not sure, but this might be the same one that caught the bug and ate it on the fence railing.

Random Adventures

My random adventures don’t always have any kind of story to spin out. Also, it’s been a minute since posting a blog, so wanted to get some images together that I haven’t published yet. I tend to take an hour or so and get out for a drive to places I haven’t been or visit places I scouted to try and capture previous ideas that just weren’t right for the light at the time. Some of these just go straight to social media as all I have to share is a cool picture.

This is the desert on the way to Ajax Mine just west of a massive wildfire going on. I was trying to capture the Milky Way, but the quarter moon behind me had other ideas. Still pretty cool picture.
This is the desert on the way to Ajax Mine just west of a massive wildfire going on. I was trying to capture the Milky Way, but the quarter moon behind me had other ideas. Still pretty cool picture.
One of my favorite spots is the 4 Peaks wilderness. This is right before sunset in an area I like to take Milky Way shots.
One of my favorite spots is the 4 Peaks wilderness. This is right before sunset in an area I like to take Milky Way shots.
Good ole' Camelback mountain. 2021 Monsoon season is brewing, but no luck capturing one of those massive dust storms.
Good ole’ Camelback mountain. 2021 Monsoon season is brewing, but no luck capturing one of those massive dust storms.
A quick handheld Panoramic stitched together of 5th Ave and Thomas in Phoenix Arizona
A quick handheld Panoramic stitched together of 5th Ave and Thomas in Phoenix Arizona
The Flower Moon 2021 I was bit late to the show and ended up driving/walking through downtown Phoenix looking for a good composition.
The Flower Moon 2021 I was bit late to the show and ended up driving/walking through downtown Phoenix looking for a good composition.
This is the moon hiding behind some clouds in Tonto National Forest just North of Roosevelt
This is the moon hiding behind some clouds in Tonto National Forest just North of Roosevelt
Flowering Saguaro
Old western storefront
Roadrunner walking away from me

These are some verticals. The Saguaro on the left is from Memorial Day weekend. I went down to Organ Pipe National Monument and left pretty quickly. Unfortunately the immigration crisis made me a bit uneasy driving around solo. The middle picture is a boardwalk of store by Picacho Peak being remodeled. And that tricky road runner popped up behind me when I was spraying myself with bug spray before a hike on the Salt River. I was like, ‘wait! I’m not ready!’ It didn’t care to have it’s photo taken.

Old gas station looked like a good place for vampires to hangout during the day
Old gas station looked like a good place for vampires to hangout during the day
Boardwalk of a storefront that would be cool for some old west looking photos
Boardwalk of a storefront that would be cool for some old west looking photos
Piestewa Peak on a pre-Monsoon 2021 Day
Piestewa Peak on a pre-Monsoon 2021 Day
QT and The Candy Store added more purple lights using some copy and paste with blending
QT and The Candy Store added more purple lights using some copy and paste with blending
Afternoon sun from a peak on the Maricopa Trail by Salt River
Afternoon sun from a peak on the Maricopa Trail by Salt River
Panoramic Sunset/Golden Hour. It was more like Golden Minutes as the distant clouds obscured the sun
Panoramic Sunset/Golden Hour. It was more like Golden Minutes as the distant clouds obscured the sun
A view of Salt River and the Maricopa Trail. It was a beautiful day after a week of 115+ degrees it cooled to the 90's
A view of Salt River and the Maricopa Trail. It was a beautiful day after a week of 115+ degrees it cooled to the 90’s

Flowers Can’t Mend Your Relationship

The Customer

A man and his wife have settled into their new modern home in the south of Scottsdale, but just across the border in Tempe. An area bustling with entertainment and activity. A valuable starter home crammed within inches of other homes. They met in a college bar on penny beer night. The man and his wife enjoy a life of relative ease with good jobs, no children and infinite possibilities for the future. They attend many parties and discuss their achievements among friends and strangers, comparing their lives with envy and pride. Their main topic these days is their new house in Scottsdale.

The husband is a heavy drinker and still likes to go to clubs with neon lights filled with young women in tight short dresses looking for free drinks. His wife quietly accompanies him to meet up with his college friends, his bros. They order bottles of tequila, obnoxiously party into the night. All while his wife stands in the shadows listening to them rate the fawns. 

She is a gorgeous woman with beautiful doe eyes, a fresh salon cut, and a body that fills a dress as if it was tailored just for her. An effort to keep her husband straying eyes fixed on her amongst a sea of early 20 somethings that barely fill their thick high heel shoes.

As the night rages on she leaves in a taxi. Her husband notices an hour later. Now in a fury as his possession is lost. He imagines she absconded with another more successful, much wealthier man to his mansion in the mountains overlooking Paradise Valley. He leaves his bros frantically calling and texting with no response. He returns to his bros for another bottle.

2 AM, last call, the man finds himself pissing in an alley before heading over to catch up with his bros for late night tacos. He vomits in an Uber on the way home. Too wasted to remember the gate code he jumps the wall catching his cargo pocket on a spike falling flat on his side. He tries a few doors before finding his home. Then walks to the bathroom; his gut twists the last of the clear fluids out with a finish of a yellow acidic glob of bile.

He rinses his mouth walking to the bedroom where his wife lays with her back to him pretending to sleep. Then attempts to massage her. She shrugs him off, but he continues his attempts anyway. He thinks his drunken antics are foreplay and will woo her into sloppy animalistic sex. The smell of his slime disgusts her further. A mixture of evaporated alcohol and vomit permeating from his heavy breath.

She jumps out of bed and reams him out for his behavior. Banishing him from the bed. They meet again late Sunday morning after missing their brunch reservation at a posh breakfast restaurant. Her trade off for his night out was a morning jog along the red mountains of Papago Park. The man, still sick and dehydrated, tries to find a way to apologize with words, but they are futile as her demeanor grows colder.

He makes himself a Bloody Mary to drink while scrolling through his phone watching Fox News in their living room filled with furniture from the Memorial Day sale. His bros are posting pictures of themselves on social media partying throughout the night. He’s tagged in a picture licking salt off a waitress’ cleavage. Then an ad pops up for DoorDash flower delivery. He acts swiftly picking out the second most expensive arrangement.

The Delivery Driver

A delivery driver wakes up and puts on his shoes for another long day of fighting traffic delivering food. He’s a Type-A burn out working on 7 straight days. A dropout with a torrent of flames trailing behind him in failed relationships and opportunities. He used to drive a taxi until Uber came along. He used to drive an Uber until the Corona Virus came along. His car is sweating oil and antifreeze, shaking in idle waiting for a green light. The air conditioning trying to keep up with a 115° day blowing in his face. It smells like garlic flavored garbage with a hint of mildew.

The Phoenix traffic on a Sunday morning is just as relentless as a Friday night rush hour with alcoholics frenetic for that first drink. Demons behind wheels ride his tail, flash by, swerve around limping people in crosswalks pushing strollers full of their former lives.

An annoying bleep goes off. Bleep bleep bleep bleep…bleep bleep. The driver, already going mad from the heat, the traffic, the same songs on repeat, quickly presses the button to stop the relentless alert. It’s an order from a flower shop with a delivery going to a wealthier neighborhood. He accepts the delivery even though it’s only paying $9 for a nearly 20 mile trip. Doordash likes to hide the true value of the order to encourage drivers into taking lower paying deliveries. The driver in high hopes accepts the delivery on the off chance the customer is generous.

The driver arrives at a worn building lacking the conventional signage of a brick and mortar business. Vinyl lettering requests pick-ups and deliveries be made to the double doors in the back. He proceeds around the building passing a cluster of discarded boxes forming a small hill missing the doors. Then gets out of the vehicle and calls the shop as he walks back around to the area. 

A person’s arm can be seen retracting through a door scooting an orange cone to prevent it from locking, when a lady answers the call. She directs him to stop as he walks through the narrow path created by discarded cardboard and the building walls. The lady opens one of the doors handing a bright bouquet in a vase to him. She suggests taking a box and the driver first declines, worried about the stability of the vase full of water and fragile flowers. Then she picks out the perfect one with boxes within a larger box creating firm stable dividers fitting the vase snug.

The driver finds himself back in the race among the demons first on the surface streets then on the I-17, where merging is more often a juke than a graceful change of lanes. A critical maneuver at high speeds with amateurs driving in the right lane as if they are lost in the blurry dust storm created by the turbulence of passing vehicles. He maintains a certain lane to avoid the lost on the right and the demons passing on his left as the junction of the I-10 and I-17 creates havoc among those not familiar with the elevated curving arches. Many catastrophes are made as the two worlds meet, not quite understanding which lanes go east and what direction east is. This time like many others the driver breaks free unscathed. 

The driver merges on to the I-10 East heading to the Deck Park Tunnel. Again he positions himself to avoid the confusion of the freeway as it narrows. The downtown exits jam up the right lane in the void of the tunnel, which in itself causes slowing as the timid brake and the wannabe race car drivers roar through in a display of bravado. As he exits the tunnel merging to the right in preparation for another battle of wills between those entering the freeway and those trying to figure out which lane departs the I-10 to Highway 51 or the Loop 202. This goes smoothly as well.

The merge onto the 202 East is coming from the right as it begins from it’s parent I-10 West. Google maps interprets the 202 poorly with a slight left to stay on the freeway just before the exit to 52nd Street. The savvy driver has taken this route before and maintains his lane until the exit approaches. He continues east on McDowell which splits the red mountains of Papago Park overlooking Tempe Town Lake. A dry lake bed is now full of water lined with a growing glass metropolis.

A red light allows him to check Google maps for finer information and the Doordash app for better instructions on the destination. They both are lacking, but he knows this must be the car dealership that was razed for overpriced condominiums squished together on a small lot of land. The new metropolitan look of the desert is not quite a house nor a condominium nor an apartment. Chicken wire boxes made of 2×4’s covered in stucco painted grey with thin windows and a garage held behind a cinder block wall and security gate, which he has no code for. Luckily someone else pulls in behind him and he circles around to tailgate them inside.

The Delivery

The delivery driver stops in front of the man’s house. He exits to carefully pick up the vase from the passenger side of the vehicle only to forget that it was locked. Unlocking the doors from the driver’s side, then walking back around as the man opens his front door. 

Disheveled with a puffy droopy face covered in 3 days of beard growth he stands in the doorway without as much as a hello. The driver pulls the vase full of flowers from the sheath the lady at the flower shop gave him. The man says, “thanks” and turns back inside his air conditioned home shutting the door. 

The driver completes the delivery on his app to his chagrin; it was just a $9 trip across the belly of the beast of Phoenix. A $46 taxi fare, a $17 Uber trip. (Based on 2016 rates) Now a $9 DoorDash delivery. Charity for the boy.

I decided I couldn’t just leave this as is. Part of the first short story was releasing the angst and frustration I personally have in life. It was not a wise decision to take a low paying delivery 19 miles and I had my fun expressing the negative feelings. It did occur to me that this may not have been what I imagined and could be a much simpler and more kind hearted event in life. So below is a diametric story of what happened.

Flowers Enhance Relationships

The Customer

A man and his wife have settled into their new modern home in Avondale. An area bustling with entertainment and activity. A valuable starter home in a new neighborhood. They met through friends of friends at a church picnic. The man and his wife have good jobs and are planning to have children. They attend church activities, play in a local coed softball league, and enjoy spending time hiking when they have the chance.

The husband is a hometown sports fan and has made plans to watch a Suns playoff game with friends. His wife, not quite as interested in watching sports, but enjoys the company of friends, joins him at a local hot wings joint. 

They spend the night laughing, joking, and cheering as the Suns beat the Lakers. The night is getting late and they head home in good spirits. Her husband makes dessert, ice cream and a slice of apple pie he heated up in the microwave. They enjoy their late night treat watching Netflix and cuddling, which later turns into foreplay and passionate copulation.

In the morning the wife feels sick and she has missed her period. She takes a home pregnancy test with positive results. Her husband making breakfast is unaware until she enters the kitchen with a glowing smile holding the test strip. They embrace hugging and kissing the joy of the revelation.

The husband secretly opens up his DoorDash app in the dining room and orders a dozen roses. He writes on the card, “For the most beautiful and gracious woman. I am lucky that someone like you would have me as your baby’s father.” Then they go on a hike as they had planned earlier in the week enjoying the fresh cool morning air.

The Delivery Driver

A delivery driver is woken up by his cat kneading on his side. He’s a hard worker and only delivers on the weekends to help pay for his children’s college tuition. It’s a Saturday morning with relatively light traffic. The vehicles seem to almost be in sync as they catch green light after green light, when his phone bleeps a couple times alerting a potential delivery. He’s surprised to see it’s for a flower shop and accepts it in curiosity. It’s not everyday he gets to deliver flowers, so this sounds like an opportunity to brighten up someone’s day.

He arrives at the flower shop and is greeted by a bright smile by the florist. She hands the arrangement over in a neatly designed box, which he carefully places on the passenger seat. The drive to the customer is along surface streets and a sleepy neighborhood with green island parks. Local families on their morning walks wave as he passes by.

The Delivery

The GPS gives an early warning, “Your destination is on the left in 100 feet.” as he pulls over verifying the house number. He parks near the sidewalk leading to the door and pushes the lock button to make sure the doors are unlocked. As he exits and circles around the back of the vehicle the husband greets him. They exchange gratitude as the husband slips a $20 bill into the driver’s hand. 

The two couldn’t be happier as they part ways. The husband quietly returns inside, placing the bouquet on the kitchen island for his wife to discover. The driver continues on knowing how his effort was integral to making someone’s else’s lives better that day.

Hidden Salt River Trail

Today’s post is some pictures I took on a hidden Salt River trail. It runs between the Granite Reef and Phon D Sutton Recreation areas. I personally like to park a little past the Granite Reef area where there’s a horse gate to the trail. A word of caution this isn’t the greatest place for a casual hike or fishing. Make sure to get a Tonto Pass before heading out. Some are sold at kiosks in recreation areas and at the Saguaro Lake Marina.

Cleared dead trees in piles along the hidden trail on the Salt River
Cleared dead trees in piles along the hidden trail on the Salt River

One of the first things I noticed from last summer is the dead burnt trees and brush being cleared and piled up. This looks like excellent habitat for snakes and other animals. The trail has a silty sand base with areas of dry river beds and an iron metal fence to keep the wild horses from the area between the Salt River and the Bush Highway. (It’s actually to keep people from driving right up to the river’s edge.)

Dead tree with Waxing Gibbous Flower Moon
Dead tree with Waxing Gibbous Flower Moon

The hidden trail is lined with Arrowweed, sage, and native grasses. Along the way there was a very active beehive, so bee careful! Also, there seems to be an extraordinary amount of horse apples.

This Cottontail has seen some serious shit
A bee feasting on Arrowweed flowers
A bee feasting on Arrowweed flowers

Here is a peculiar plant the Tobacco Tree. It has some pretty long yellow flowers perfect for feeding humming birds. There are a few at the beginning of the trail to check out.

Tobacco Tree flowers up close
Tobacco Tree flowers up close
Two bees sharing a meal
Two bees sharing a meal

As I walked along Zebra Tailed Lizards will run out into the path stopping to try and blend in with their environment.

Zebra Tailed Lizard trying to blend in with roots
Zebra Tailed Lizard trying to blend in with roots

Birds

There are plenty of birds that might stop by to see what you’re up to. The area has many different species and can be a bit camera shy.

Male Cardinal paying a visit
Male Cardinal paying a visit
Cardinal eating a fat bug
Cardinal eating a fat bug
Female Phainopeplas in flight
Female Phainopeplas in flight
Female Phainopeplas
Female Phainopeplas

A female Phainopeplas was responding to my whistle. She followed me from a high perch in the tree line to a closer view. Where we played a game of whistling. It was fun to whistle and watch her jump from a perch with a beautiful flutter landing on another branch.

Lesser Goldfinch
Lesser Goldfinch
Green Heron flying away when I tried to take it’s picture
Blue Darter Dragonfly
Blue Darter Dragonfly
American Ruby Spot
American Ruby Spot

Infestation

There’s some kind of infestation happening leaving clumps of silky white debris. It looks like it is killing Mesquite trees starting at the branch and working it’s way around.

Ground covered in a cotton or silk like debris.
Ground covered in a cotton or silk like debris.
White floating orbs of silk appear to catch onto the dead branches
White floating orbs of silk appear to catch onto the dead branches
Close-up of a mesquite leaf and branch covered in a silky substance.
Close-up of a mesquite leaf and branch covered in a silky substance.

I found some insects that were crawling away from the ends of one branch. Below is a couple pictures of the largest one. I didn’t see any other kind of creepy critter culprits.

Heavily camouflaged critter
Heavily camouflaged critter
Side view to show the girth of the critter
A side view to show the girth of the critter

Wild Horses on the Salt River

Wild Horses drinking and feeding at dusk on the Salt River
Wild Horses drinking and feeding at dusk on the Salt River
Wild horse drinking from the river
Wild horse drinking from the river

People come from all over to see the wild horses. After walking over many piles of horse dung I knew at some point it was possible to find a group.

I was grateful to have a 300mm for shots of them hanging out across the river. One of the challenges I faced was the setting sun and the hordes of insects.

This Alien World

This alien world of ours

Orbiting and spinning around one star

One star in a galaxy of millions

Yet we know this and only this world

Our country

Our state

Our cities

Our neighbors

Our family

Ourselves

Almost Ajax Mine

Smooth dirt road on the way to Ajax Mine
Smooth dirt road on the way to Ajax Mine

I am here to tell you about the trip I almost took to Ajax Mine in central Arizona. Picking a location on Google Maps is where I first start my planning and the plan ends there. I did skim over a blog by Bold Canyon Outdoors on their adventure and it sounded easy enough. Easy enough for a 4 x 4 vehicle… I was thinking it looked more like the typical wavy smooth roads with occasional areas washed out.

Desert landscape with Jumping Cholla, Prickly Pear, Ocotillo, Palo Verde trees, Jojoba and Saguaros cacti

The First Half

The first half of the trip was a straight flat track with ripples. I fantasized about the photos I was going to take of the Milky Way rising above the abandoned Ajax mine. The landscape was typical untouched wilderness of the Sonoran desert. You can see the Jumping Cholla, Prickly Pear, Ocotillo, Palo Verde trees, Jojoba and Saguaros cacti in the landscape.

Once passing the fence line and cattle guard from Cottonwood Canyon Rd leading to Mineral Mountain road I encountered some areas a regular passenger car would start scraping their under carriage. Google maps will have you take a route to a gated ranch. Which if I had fully read the blog earlier, I would have just taken their custom route. It didn’t take long after passing a camper packing it out and a recreational shooter that I encountered the furthest point my Mitsubishi Outlander could handle. It was 4.1 miles from the mine and I literally said, “Four miles ain’t shit!”

Pride Falls Before the Man

Paraphrase of Proverbs 16:18

About a half mile up I was already thinking I should retry to climb the hill as the trail was looking good to go again. Then I came up on the first water hole for the open range cattle. They all had horns and they were too far away to tell if any were bulls.

As I approached a couple of them popped up out of a resting position to their feet. There was apart of me ready to turn around in fear. There was also a very steep hill past the herd I was not looking forward to hiking up. I pressed on despite those inner voices seeking safety and comfort.

About halfway up, I was thinking of the final week of basic training at Ft. Benning. They take us on a 15 mile road march with a combat load. Today I was only carrying a camera gear and a half gallon of water. So counted my blessings resting my legs every so often. I lost signal to Google maps converting the directions from car to walking until I reached the peak of the hill. It told me I was only about a half mile in.

The top of the first major hill on the South Ajax Mine road.
The top of the first major hill on the South Ajax Mine road.

Once again I was thinking about turning around. The inner voice said, “This is suicide to keep going with a half gallon of water and the sun setting and intermittent cell phone signal.” In reality it is pretty dangerous, but it was only a few miles. I couldn’t just quit though.

Grace of the House Finch Babies

Then a moment of grace between the first and second hill happened. I could hear birds frantically chirping away just off the carved mountain path. I saw a brown bird with a red breast fly off from a Jumping Cholla. A dark cluster between arms appeared to be a nest. I climbed up a few feet to see the chirping was coming from a couple baby House Finches.

Baby house finch in a nest made in Cholla cactus
Baby house finch in a nest made in Cholla cactus

I pressed on to a second challenging hill. It was obvious my vehicle would never make this journey. If it made it there, coming back might be another challenge.

Southwest side of the second hill
Southwest side of the second hill
Ajax Mine trail that would require four wheel drive
Ajax Mine trail that would require four wheel drive

Still with three miles to go I stood there trying to figure out the distance to the mine. Google maps said it would take an hour, which would put me at the mine during the blue hour giving enough light for some nice long exposures.

A view of the South Ajax Mine Trail route to the North Ajax Mine Trail leading from the ranch.
A view of the South Ajax Mine Trail route to the North Ajax Mine Trail leading from the ranch.

I came to a junction and a large dry wash. It lead to North Ajax Mine Trail and some unmarked OHV trails. Luckily Google maps saved me from taking the trail in the picture above. The Ajax Mine Trail is actually behind the mountain. The hike was pretty easy from that point crossing a couple washes.

The view past the wash junction looking south to the second hill
The view past the wash junction looking south to the second hill

Momma Cow

I came around a bend and found another herd. They looked like they might be penned, but as I got closer one of them was definitely outside the fence. It started rolling it’s head around. In my mind, I was trying to figure out if it was shaking off some cacti needles or if it was an aggressive gesture. Despite it’s cowbell and long eyelashes, it’s horns were all I was thinking about. I happened to stop next to a Catclaw Mesquite with some Tarantula Hawks having a feast. I figured I could work out my fears while taking pictures of these little monstrous looking insects.

Tarantula Hawk in Catclaw Mesquite
Tarantula Hawk in Catclaw Mesquite

Unfortunately momma cow was not budging. I could see her calves now and my creative mind went off. Not only would I be walking past on unstable ground the narrow path had no real cover. I imagined myself running through the desert in a thin pair of shorts catching all the cacti needles and eventually being brutal gored and trampled. Not to death though just a thorough ass kicking, because God would want me to walk bloody and broken back up those hills. Regretfully I started to walk back looking over my shoulder. Then momma came out of the brush in my direction. Great she’s stalking me now!

Momma cow protecting calves
Momma cow protecting calves

The Long Walk Back

I continued to walk briskly and took the wash to throw her off my trail. Coming to the first uphill on the 2nd Hill. The sun was setting behind it. Fully paranoid at this point I was sure a rattlesnake would be repositioning from their day lair for a meal.

A perspective of the vertical challenge of the northside of the second hill
A perspective of the vertical challenge of the northside of the second hill

I continued on and came across the first herd again with a few missing now. A little further up the road I spooked a calf and this time another cow was standing on the side of the road. Fuck me man! I powered through my fear and calmly walked by. This cow just looked goofy with one horn pointing up and the other down. It might have been crossed-eyed too. At this point I felt foolish for turning around in the first place. What’s even funnier is I was running scenarios of fighting off mountain lions and bears in my head before all this. Really I do look at these thoughts in a comical way though. Which allows me to enjoy some of the beauty I would miss otherwise.

View going home on the second hill
View going home on the second hill
Mountain outcrops by Martinez Cabin