The Town with Five Seasons

Originally posted on A Way with Words blog

I live in Oro Valley Arizona, the high Sonoran desert. When you hear the word desert you, of course, think sand, sun, and relentless heat. Maybe even camels. Let’s keep it that way. We of Oro Valley like to keep our secret. We live in a paradise.  Oh, we have our share of prickly things like cactus and stingy things like Gila monsters. But we are also surrounded by the beauty of cactus flowers in a variety of delicate colors, Mexican bird of paradise, purple Texas rangers, hummingbirds by the thousands, and on and on – a never-ending panoply of nature’s color and texture. Our valley is bounded by the Tortolita Mountains to the north, the Catalinas to the east, and the Tucson Mountains to the west. Tucson lies south of us and has additional mountain ranges framing it.

View from my desk
Winter in our backyard
Red waterfall – monsoon season

My favorite season is the fifth season. We have the regulation winter, spring, summer, and fall as most in the world but we also have monsoon season which interrupts the hot summer with thrilling drama. You can see monsoon clouds gather to the east over the Catalinas like towers of whipped cream, bright and white. Then, when the mood strikes, they climb above us, turn dark grey and let loose a torrent from the sky. I didn’t really understand the word torrent until I experienced my first monsoon. I was driving through town on a sunny August day when bam! Suddenly I could not see the front end of my car. An opaque sheet of water enveloped me making it impossible to move.  It was as if I had driven into a waterfall. Fortunately, the downpours only last seconds or a few minutes then rain continues to fall in a more civilized way – in drops. Monsoon rain is commonly ushered in by loud thunder and exciting lightning strikes but occasionally it creeps up and pounces like a bobcat without warning. In a recent downpour, we could not see the houses across the street. They disappeared behind a veil of water.

When we hear monsoon thunder begin, my husband and I open up the doors and sit either on the front patio or back covered-patio to watch the fireworks. The sound of angels bowling balls through the sky is accompanied by sheets of bright light illuminating the mountains with occasional zig-zag strikes. Monsoons are the greatest in the evening, at dusk or later when the light show can best be enjoyed. Then the rains begin. The fragrance of the desert unfolding to the rainfall is intoxicating.

As with any extreme of nature’s many facets, there is danger in monsoons. Flash floods occur regularly during these tremendous storms. Floods wash away cars and other property, even houses, and cause death. Too many times we read that people, unusually young men on a dare, go to the edge of the Santa Cruz river that runs through Tucson to challenge the waters. The Santa Cruz is dry most of the year and is a temptation when it flows. Flood waters descend from the mountains to claim property and lives in the foothills also. Nature is to be respected as well as admired.

To my amazement, summer is when the locals flee to cooler climes. They escape to summer homes in the north or to the nearby White Mountains. I would never choose this season to leave town. It is by far the most beautiful time of year and temperatures drop from the June 100s to the 90s during the day. At night, as soon as the sun retires over the western Tucson Mountains, temperatures fall twenty to thirty degrees. And during the spectacular storms, they fall into the low 70’s. The humidity climbs, however, and we no longer have dry heat. Our environment becomes tropical for ninety days or so. The desert blooms its finest colors. The mountains turn green. Glorious monsoons are nature’s gift to us.

I grew up in the northwest and skied in the Cascade Mountains east of Seattle. Now I live less than sixty miles from the southernmost ski resort in the continental U.S.  In Washington, at Snoqualmie Pass, the altitude is around 3,000 feet at the base and rises to 5,600 feet. Oro Valley, itself, is at an altitude of 2,600 feet.  In the Catalina Mountains, we have Mount Lemmon Ski Valley at 8,000 to nearly 9.000 feet. Granted you are only able to snow ski or snowboard during a short winter window, generally February and March. The rest of the year you can ride the ski lifts to see spectacular mountain and valley views.

Snow stays in the mountains where it belongs. No snow shovels required in Oro Valley. We can see it fall and enjoy a snowcapped mountain scene from our yard without having to drive on slippery icy roads or slush as it melts. We have actually had snow in our yard on a few occasions over the twenty-five years we lived here. Twice it fell on Easter morning (see photo above). Snow stays a few hours then becomes mere hydration for the plants. As soon as snow begins to fall, kids rush out to build snowmen in the yard or at the park. It is funny the next day to see a tall glob of snowman in the middle of a yard that is totally clear and dry. We look for hills with snow to slide down on makeshift sleds since no one owns a sled around here. It is brief fun – and no muss, no fuss, it’s gone. We don’t have earthquakes or tornados or hurricanes either. In short, we live in a five-season paradise. Shhh – but don’t tell anyone.

In our book Telling Tales and Sharing Secrets, we pay homage to nature in essay and poetry as our group explores various genres of writing.

Happy Martin Luther King Jr. Day

Today we celebrate the man Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., an inspiration to our nation and the world. He came up from the heart of the south, Atlanta, Georgia, to become an international symbol of civil rights done the non-violent way much like his contemporary Nelson Mandela in South Africa. Mandela was jailed for nearly thirty years during the 60s-80s but became President of South Africa when his efforts from jail realized a momentous shift in the political climate of his country. Unfortunately, the non-violent pleas from Dr. King were largely ignored. Violence reigned and Dr. King was assassinated in 1968 so his life was not played out to its fullest. But his legacy is lasting and potent. President Ronald Reagan officially made the third Monday in January, a day to honor the strength and commitment of Dr. King to the objectives of civil rights and harmony for all people.

Dr. King said: “I have a dream that my four little children will one day live in a country where they will NOT be judged by the color of their skin but by the content of their character”. Why are leaders being chosen now by their skin color or gender instead of their character and credentials? They may have both character and credentials but they are being promoted by attributes they were given at birth instead of attributes they developed over their lifetime and career.

I lived during the turbulent, violent decade of the 60s when assassination of our best and brightest happened too often. It was a time of “revolution” when the country was divided and hate held the country hostage. I’m seeing so much of the same attitudes prevailing today. Reasons for revolution may differ today, but they are only symptoms of the dis-ease of division. It saddens me that, as a country, we cannot see that we have more in common than we have to divide us. We allow leaders, political and otherwise, to foment division for their own political or economic benefit. Does humanity never learn from our tragic history? President Lincoln, a hero to most people now, was reviled by half of the citizenry in the 1860’s and assassinated by that hate. Are we doomed to repeat those awful decades?

Or IS the learning being done by those who find a way to harness dissension for their own aims? The rest of us are pawns in their machinations.

If words would heal then let Dr. King’s words prevail. “Love is the only force capable of transforming an enemy into a friend”.

I don’t pretend to have any answers, just more questions.

Blog reinitiated – October 2020

I found a great reason to initiate or reinitiate my blog. I, along with two friends, have written a book. The name of our book is Telling Lies and Sharing Secrets. It is the story of our writers’ group. Many times we were challenged by teachers and mentors to record the twenty-five year journey as a group. We finally took the challenge and began work a few years ago.

The book has not been published but finishing the manuscript has been a five-year endeavor similar to birthing a fifteen pound baby in a hurricane with a parachute and army boots on. You get the idea. The book tells how we started and maintain the group and includes short stories, poems, memoir, and essays as well as our narrative. Sounds pretty simple and it is an easy read. The collaboration during COVID has been interesting to say the least. Thank you ZOOM. We managed to corral a variety of notebooks, journals, and personal recollections, culling the herd to the most manageable and taming our egos in the process.

We now take on the publishing industry to find a suitable publisher to nurture our baby. In research we discovered this may take another year. More of our journey will be posted on this blog.

Nine Eleven O’One

Billowing palisades, pewter airfall

            Cascade in slow motion

                           Overflowing the fountain of commerce

                                              Graceful to the eye, hideous to the heart

Soft tarnished silver clouds

            Enfold those futures

                        Spewing them into the Manhattan morning

                                    Nine Eleven O One

Elegant grotesque plumes gently tumble one over another

            Carrying tattered remnants of lives

                        Spirits ripped from bodies

                                    Turning the shells to ash

Is there a torture more sublime

            Moment by moment terror

                        Smelling the hot acrid breath of death

                                    As it approaches their prison in the sky?

Does hope flee quickly

            Or does it leak slowing

                        From the corners of their eyes

                                    As the dusk of life turns to night?

written on a plane from Tucson to Seattle 9/21/01.

Published in our book Telling Tales and Sharing Secrets

Oro Valley, our home

I love my adopted “home town”.  I see these beautiful mountains up close from many rooms in my house and our patios. In perusing the internet I came upon our town website which inspired this blog.  I’m not sure who wrote it but I underlined and commented on a couple of things that I find amusing.

 “Close to everything. A world apart.

Oro Valley is a planned community cradled in the shadows of the magnificent Santa Catalina Mountains with hiking trails through Catalina State Park, hiking and bicycle trails throughout the Town, world class golf courses, horseback riding and a long valued cultural tradition, vibrant for over a thousand years*.  *(Comment: Who was documenting the vibrancy of our cultural traditions, golf courses, horseback riding, parks and hiking trails a thousand years ago?)

The Town has been given many accolades through the years, and is proud to be part of the lists below:

     Playful City USA

     Best Places to Live in Arizona

     Best Towns for Families

     Best Places in America to Live and Launch a Small Business

The town is located in the high Sonoran Desert with average high temperatures of 83.4 degrees and average lows of 53.8 degrees and breathtaking beauty. Located just miles north of the Tucson city limits, services like the University of Arizona and Tucson International Airport are just steps away *. *(Comment: It is a 30 to 40 minute drive to either of these services and those would be extremely LONG steps.)

Our schools are the finest in Southern Arizona. Our wild animals are some of the friendliest anywhere*.”  *(Comment:  Yes, indeed, I can attest to our friendly wildlife.  Bobcats regularly stroll through our fenced backyard, hopping over the fence at will.  On one recent morning, a bobcat stopped on the mat outside our sliding glass door and peered in to look at Babbity Bowster who was frozen to his spot inside the door. People are cautioned here to have only “inside” cats.  Cats who roam are tender fodder for the carnivorous critters in our Sonoran Desert.  Babbity Bowster is now seven and he is an “inside-outside” cat who survived a coyote attack on the golf course.  He weathered attacks by a Crips-like gang of Great-tailed Grackles when he had the temerity to intrude on their nesting area. He suffered pecks on the head that bloodied him.  Every time he went outside they swooped down en mass to attack and he soon became very wary of stepping out the door.  After a few weeks they retreated.  He recovered his confidence and continues to prowl the underbrush of the wash and golf course.  He looks quickly about when he hears the call of the grackle but maintains his ground. He brings us gifts of mice, lizards and sometimes baby bunnies or quail all spring and summer. He tries to keep them alive for us to enjoy. He releases them in the family room, kitchen, even bedroom. Occasionally they are not willing to play nice and he holds them too hard in his teeth and can only deliver limp bodies.  Continue reading

Oro Valley’s newest residents

 So what is wrong with PEOPLE? We have a Great Horned Owl living in the top of a saguaro with her two babies at the end of our cul-de-sac. Wow, hard to believe that she took up residency here in our little community. She probably should have chosen the gated community just a tick down the road. She is the object of massive attention from the neighborhood, media and passersby. She doesn’t seem to mind most of the time and nearly everyone has been respectful until yesterday. Some well-meaning (I’ll give them the benefit of the doubt) numbskull decided that the owl family who are exposed to the hot afternoon sunshine (averaging in the high 80’s lately) needed shelter. Somehow the daredevil numbskull ascended to the top of the prickly saguaro (20 +/- feet) with cardboard and duct tape and made a tacky screen sticking up above the west side of the cactus. What? Like Great Horned Owls haven’t been making nests in the desert cactus for, oh, let’s say a few hundred years? They need a not-quite-bright person to assist? Now the saguaro looks like a shanty town high-rise and the momma owl looks down very disdainfully on the gentry below. Fortunately, she has accepted the addition for the time being but she is out scouting and I can just hear her telling her progeny that they will soon move to a classier neighborhood.

http://animals.nationalgeographic.com/animals/birds/great-horned-owl/

Wonkagranny Thoughts

         or do I really think I have something worthwhile to say

As my husband, family and many of my friends will attest, I am not shy when it comes to stating my opinion and backing it up with facts, be they true or not. I’ve never been called an out and out liar but it has been noted that I play fast and loose with reality. But then, that is THEIR opinion.

Now a blogging challenge is set before me. Be clear, be accurate and be respectful – good virtues in every aspect of life. If I’m to open my big fat mouth or, in this case, launch into the blogosphere, it really should be backed by facts in the responsible, checkable sense. But then isn’t opinion just opinion…not, for better or worse, testimony with God or the law hanging over me? So maybe I can do this. I will endeavor to make sure my opinion is clearly represented and any factoid that happens to wander into it will be checked and notated. There, that is my disclaimer. Continue reading