Saturday, January 21, 2012

Sonoyta

Busy getting ready for tonights 45 minute evening program. We haven't hiked or done too much for the past couple of weeks. I think I'm ready for tonight, I'm sure we will have photos to post soon. Sherri did get a couple of photos of me conducting the Ajo Mountain Van Tour, ten visitors on a three hour tour.

On our day off last week we did go down to Sonoyta, Mexico for dinner. Sherri and I went down early with Brian and Hilda. We walked around for awhile to check out the sights. Here we are on the Plaza.
The church is undergoing a facelift and had a service going on inside, so we didn't get to see all of it in its full glory. Here are Sherri and I on a cholla skeleton love seat.
 The bell tower under renovation.
 The Priest's house and offices.
We met 12 other volunteers for dinner at Zarape's, an open air restaurant. Janet, in the white vest, works at the Monument's Visitor Center and is a citizen of both Mexico and US. Janet was our host.
 It was Jimmy's birthday so Janet ordered cake and balloons. Sherri with "Mini Maus", close enough for a Mexican street vendor.


We had a great time and ate some wonderful Mexican Food. We are planning trips to Sonoyta every couple of weeks.

Saturday, January 7, 2012

Pronghorn and More

Monday Sherri and I set off to finish a hike we attempted after we first arrived at Organ Pipe. The weather was much better this past Monday than the first time we tried to hike to the arches. Our goal is to reach the top of the arches.
Coming up the back side of this ridge is very steep and a lot of loose rock. We did make it up to the top, just to the right of the moon. Sherri is coming straight up.
Great views at the top; the road and parking lot are below.
Just down the road from the arches an employee had told me where to find petroglyphs, so Sherri and I took another hike and found the rock art. Pretty Cool!!
Tuesday morning I was a late addition going out to Bates Well to put the pronghorn fence back up. It was taken down last week to release five males. Two Natural Resources employees, Amy and Ed, are trying to find the released males on radar. 
To get to Bates Well we went through an area closed to the public, there is an old ranch house along the road. Armenta Ranch is on the northern edge of the monument.
The pronghorn enclosure is in an open area and not much to look at. We put the 300' of fence back up in a couple of hours and took a tour of the ranch at Bates Well. This house is the last occupied "private residence" on the monument. Bobby Gray lived here until 1976.

Wednesday brought another hike up the old road between Ajo and Sonoyta, Mexico with a couple of other interps, Brian and Hilda.
The hike is a mainly flat nine miles. There is a very interesting Christate on a saguaro cactus, we all thought it looked like a camel.
Thursday was a big day. We were up at 3:30am to drive with three other volunteers to the 640ac breeding pen for pronghorn. A few years ago there were only 22 Sonoran Pronghorn in existance, today the numbers are up to 250, but still very much an endangered species. Five males had been transfered to Bates Well pens and released. Today the hope was to transfer up to eight pregnant females to Bates Well. This is accomplished by first herding the pronghorn into holding pens, called bomas. Then the pronghorn to be transferred are sectioned off in the boma. To capture the pronghorn eight people holding a net go into the boma and the pronghorn is wrestled to the ground and the veterinarian gives the pronghorn a shot of anesthesia. The pronghorn then is brought out on a stretcher and is processed.

The big concern is the pronghorn overheat from stress. The vet closely monitors the animal while water is poured on the pronghorn, that is why we started at dawn. From the processing station the pronghorn are loaded on the back of a pickup and driven to the helicopter a half mile down the road. Here is Sherri holding the IV bag getting ready to go to the helicopter, the man in the hoodie holding the pronghorn's head is Lee Baiza, superintendent of Organ Pipe.
It is an incredible operation which we felt very honored to be a part of, unfortunately two of the four died before being transported....very sad. The thought was a change in the anesthesia cocktail was causing the problem. Friday they were able to transport four more successfully, so the hope is six pregnant pronghorns can be released into the wild. We will be involved some more in this program when we go out to Bates Well again to monitor the released animals.
The interpretive programs started today and Thursday is the start of our presentations; it is almost show time so we better be ready.

Wednesday, December 28, 2011

Training & Christmas

We spent all of last week in training. The training will make us "competent" Interpreters. The class is a lot more intensive than we anticipated and a couple of folks have dropped out. We are preparing for 15 minute patio talks, 45 minute evening programs, 3 hour van tours and guided hikes. The weather wasn't too bad last week but come our day out to go out for van tour training, the temps were in the 40's with wind. Here we are listening to our instructor Ranger Ken.
Saturday, Christmas Eve, we drove up to Phoenix to spend Christmas with my sister Susan. We all went out for dinner and to church on Christmas Eve. Christmas Day we went out for a very nice brunch at The Buttes in Tempe. The buffet line and brunch table.

Sherri and I out front on a beautiful Christmas Day.
Tuesday we had a day off from class, so we went out to pull Buffelgrass with our campground neighbors, Kenn and Mary. Buffelgrass is a non-native invasive grass which the Department of Agriculture planted in the 40's to control erosion and for cattle feed. Kenn and Mary are volunteers with the Natural Resources Department and it was interesting going out with them to find and pull the grass. It is very scientific and all pulled plants are recorded and tracked by GPS. Both of us with our picks and the great Buffelgrass hunter.

Today it was back to class with a nice afternoon field trip. Charles is a herpetologist and the parks weather expert. We are at a weather monitor station on which Charles has placed an Our Lady of Guadalupe sticker to keep the illegal traffic from stealing or vandalizing the station. Some of the migrants think this type of equipment is a sensor and camera.
Sherri and I finish up our classroom training this week and next week starts the busy season with programs and tours five days a week. Happy New Year to ALL!!!!!

Sunday, December 18, 2011

Fire, Bike Ride and Bird Counting

This week we said goodbye to a volunteer. Jim had been here at ORPI for two months and it was time to get home for Christmas. Tuesday night we had a fire, Jim is seated at the picnic table.
Wednesday Sherri and I went on a 10 mile bike ride, a lot of up and down through arroyos. We are in front of the visitor center, nice and fresh before our ride.
We also went out for dinner to say goodbye to Jim, Mike and Tina. Fourteen of us had dinner in Lukeville, on the border, at a Mexican Cafe. The border crossing is right out the windows.
Sherri and two other volunteers signed up to count birds on Saturday morning just outside of Ajo. The count is a project of Audubon Society in conjunction with Cabeza Prieta National Wildlife Refuge, which borders Organ Pipe. Since birds get up early Sherri and friends had to be in Ajo, 35 miles north, at 7:00am. The area Sherri counted in is on Childs' Mountain, which is a restricted area because there is an Air Force radar station on top.
Sherri and fellow birders, plus a sunrise photo.

This week we start our training program. On Saturday we are heading up to Phoenix to celebrate Christmas with my sister, Susan. Happy Holidays to All!!!

Saturday, December 10, 2011

Arch Canyon and Beyond

Another week, another couple of hikes. On Tuesday Sherri and I set out on the Ajo Mountain Drive to hike up Arch Canyon. The prediction was for wind, but when we left the 5er it was calm. Unfortunately by the time we reached the trail head the wind was howling down the canyon. The top of the arch was our goal for today.
After hiking for 1/2 hour into a 40 mph wind in 45deg. temps we decided that we had enough and turned around, drove down the road to another canyon and the winds were much calmer, The Estes Canyon/Bull Pasture trail has a section that goes up to Ajo Mountain which we had hiked a week earlier. We had not hiked in Estes Canyon and with the recent rains it is very green. This is a shot up Estes Canyon:
A barrel cactus soon to bloom.
It was not the hike we had planned, but it turned out to be a great day and Arch Canyon will still be there when the winds aren't blowing.
The Jims and a new volunteer were interested in hiking to the top of Mount Ajo. The Jims are leaving soon and with a little persuasion we set Thursday as our day. The winds were strong on Wednesday, but Thursday morning was calm and cool at the trail head. Jim the campground host who has volunteered here for many years is on the left. Jim is a fee colector from Portland Oregon is in the center, and Brian a ten year full-time RVer is on the right. Brian is a fellow interpreter.
It was a gorgeous day and after an hour we had shed most of our layers. We came across some ice which had formed at the base of some plants over night. The ice looked like cotton and we had to feel it to believe that it was really ice.
Campground Jim is very knowledgeable about Organ Pipe so we took our time talking about park history, the flora and fauna. We made it to the top, remember from last week's post that only 100 or so hikers make it to the top each year and here I was twice in 11 days, we relaxed, ate and enjoyed the views.
The hike down is the tough part and we did have a couple of slips and falls, but no injuries. Fee Jim negotiates the rock on the way down.
The few that hike to the top each year are proud of the accomplishment and are rewarded with fabulous views and memories of a great hike. Sherri covered the Visitor Center while I was off hiking, I owe her one.
Today is an openhouse at the visitor center so we are planning on a busy day. Tomorrow we are heading to Sonoyta, Mexico after work for Our Lady of Guadalupe festivities. There is a pilgimige to the church in the evening with food and music, then a Mass at 11:00pm. We will need to leave before Mass since the border crossing closes from 12:00am - 6:00am. Janet, who runs the visitor center gift shop will be our host, she lives in both Lukeville AZ and Sonoyta. It should be an interesting evening and I will blog about it next week.
I will finish this week with another sunrise photo taken while out walking Ryder.

Saturday, December 3, 2011

Mount Ajo

A couple of visitors came into the visitor center last Sunday. Clint and Julie were talking about hiking up to Bull Pasture, but they did want to take their motor-home up the Ajo Mountain Drive. I told them that Sherri and I were going hiking in that area on Monday and they were welcome to go with us. We talked and decided to make the top of Mount Ajo our destination and to meet at 7a the next morning. We met at 7a and drove up to the parking area for the Bull Pasture/Estes Canyon loop hike, the trail to Mount Ajo starts at Bull Pasture. Pictured are Clint, Julie and Sherri at the start of the hike with Mount Ajo in the background.
The temps were cool in the valley, but as we started out it warmed up quickly. We came across some interesting rock formations and had great views from Bull Pasture toward the mountains in Mexico.

The trail to Mount Ajo winds around the southern end of Bull Pasture and in an area known as the Cones it heads straight up.
Notice the window in the rock on the right, this is the biggest one of the four that we saw. It was at this point that Julie decided the downhill was going to be too hard on her knees, so she left us.This area was the toughest part of the hike, not only is it straight up but the rock is loose and there are cactus waiting to bite.
We made it to the top of what appeared to be the crest.
This area is described in the hiking guide as a false crest and the summit with the solar panel and radio tower are still a ways off.
We made it to the top of Mount Ajo and were rewarded with spectacular views. The solar panel and antenna were installed by helicopter a few years ago.
There is an ammo can with a registry for names of hikers who made it to the top, by some counts only 100 hikers make it to the peak each year. Sherri is signing us in and we are posing on Mount Ajo.

It was a beautiful 70deg day, not bad for Nov. 27 and we felt great for our accomplishment. Clint was an excellent hiking partner and it was nice to have pictures of Sherri and I together. The hike down was harder than up in places, what with the steepness and loose rock. I did wind up on my butt a couple of times. Julie was waiting for us when we got down and as a thanks for driving Clint and Julie took us to dinner on Tuesday night in Lukeville, right on the border. It was great meeting Julie and Clint and safe travels back to Washington.
Later on Tuesday night we had a campfire in the VIP campground to say goodbye to three volunteers, we will miss Sherry, Joyce and Judy. As a few leave many more are coming in for the busy season which starts after Jan. 1.
On Thursday morning I went out in search of a large Cristate, which is an abnormal growth that occurs on Saguaros and Organ Pipes. I was led by the two Jims, who are both volunteers.
The lead Jim found this Cristate one year ago from a photo that a visitor brought in to the visitors center. Jim thought he knew exactly where to find the cactus but we went up and down washes with no luck. I finally came across a large dying Cristate and called Jim over. Sure enough the Cristate had dyed within the past year although the rest of the organ pipe cactus was fine. Jim wants to see if the Natural Resource office will allow us to remove the Cristate and use it as a learning tool on the patio at the visitors center.
It was a nice morning hike but by the time I started my shift at 1p it stated raining. We received just over a tenth which is always welcome in the desert. The massive storm which has blown away LA and much of the southwest has cooled things off in Organ Pipe.We are having highs in the 50's and lows in the 30's. Cool for here, but in comparison to the rest of the country not too bad. It is expected to warm back up soon and we will be out hiking on our days off next week.