if I fiddle with them just right...extreme close-ups can be fun...
...one section along Picture Rocks Road still has a carpet of Mexican gold poppies and lupine under the cholla...
...and some desert hibiscus...
...and another color variety of desert globemallow...
(incidentally, globemallow was used by native SW tribes as a poultice for wounds and also as a diarrhea remedy... )
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Last week I drove down to Sierra Vista, where I lived as a kid...
Just four miles from my old house is the San Pedro River riparian reserve--it wasn't accessible to the public back when I lived there, but now it is a nature reserve--a corridor of cottonwood forest along one of the few remaining flowing desert rivers; it is one of the most important migratory-bird-routes in North America.
The high grasslands (four to five-thousand feet above sea-level) are still brown; spring is just barely arriving in this area, compared with Tucson, which is two to three thousand feet lower in elevation. The Huachuca mountains still have a lot of snow on their northern slopes...
The cottonwoods are just beginning to get a tinge of green above the river. (It's more of a 'stream' really, but in the desert, this qualifies as a river, since it flows year-round.) Until a couple of decades ago, jaguars would occasionally be spotted in this area, visiting from their more traditional habitat in Mexico! In the nearby Chiricahua mountains, there used to be a native species of thick-billed parrot...SE Arizona is truly an environmental crossroads...
...a great blue heron:
...and a red-tailed hawk...
...I've not yet looked up what this yellow-bird is:
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...and that's it for this posting; a few of my points-of-view.
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