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Where have I been? Yeah, one-a-day and all that, but there have been many days and nada, zip, zero. WTF?



I went to Arizona to see the Scottsdale Arabian Show (which is just outside of Phoenix) and to visit La's friend in Tuscon (which is about two hours away from Phoenix (at least it is the way La drives) and to see the sights.

I did actually go to the horse show. Really. Two days of it. I saw show horses in the ring and doing stuff, but since it was a covered ring and since I don't have a three-hundred dollar flash on my cheap-ass digital camera, you're going to have to imagine that part. However fancy things might look in the show ring, though, things at the wash rack are the same at every show. Here's a picture.

washrack

An unexpected delight of our trip was that the underpasses and assorted freeway abutments and shit were decorated. Some had petroglyphs and some had geckos or cactus rendered in the concrete. Mostly, since we were blowing by them at ninety miles an hour (not kidding -- it's a big place and a lot of the roads are dead flat and dead straight and you can drive dead fast on 'em. At least, dead is what happens if you hit anything while going ninety. But it was a rental.), I did not have the opportunity to get pictures of 'em. This one, I snapped at a stoplight.

underpass

I think that perhaps the Arizona board of state tourism or whatever should make a point of mentioning how nifty their roads are. Not only are they decorated, they're mostly tastefully xeriscaped and colored to match the local rocks and stuff. The roads try to blend in. It's kind of neat and I'm sorry that I don't have more pictures of the decorations because they were pretty cool.

En route to La's friend's house in Tuscon, we stopped at a roadside attraction where this horse feed

feed2

cost five dollars for this big of a cup

feed

to feed to these...

ostrich

That was worth every penny of the five dollars. (And that's MY PICTURE that I TOOK BY MYSELF. I didn't steal it from anywhere. Yay me! Full disclosure: I have about sixty shitty pictures of ostriches that you aren't going to get to see. But this one? Teh hawtness.) Persons who have never met an ostrich (for that is the these pictured above) should know that they're right sudden birds. They're big, yes. They're also fast like chickens when they're pecking. It's kind of disconcerting. They can also snake their necks around like... like... well, the thing that they reminded me of most was those three green pointy bits that live in the holes in Half Life and peck you to pieces if you make any noise. They move JUST LIKE that, as fast and in the same kind of way. I could not actually capture this on film, but I tried.

ostrich2

The little white cup of stuff (refer to the feed cup picture above) was some kind of food for small, brightly colored birds called Lorikeets. (It was included in the five dollars at the ostrich place.) You go into the very-large (huge barn-sized walk-in) bird cage, double-doored and screened, and open the little white cup of stuff and then you are attacked by small brightly-colored birds who duel each other for the right to slurp up the liquid.

lorikeet2

They will also sit on your head.

lorikeet

It being the southwest, they offered hot peppers for sale in jars at all sorts of tourist venues. I took a picture because the colors were lovely I didn't figure they were for eating, just for looking at. I ain't be paying seventy dollars for looking-at food.

peppers

The scenery was kinda hostile.

ppear

cholla

Well, really, it was very hostile.

cholla2

But some of it was photogenic.

saguaro

There was really rather a lot of scenery going on, which was good because they didn't have very many trees to liven up the place. There was a distinct shortage of trees. Along the roads, they had some scruffy things with green trunks and some mesquite (but both of these were not what I'd call trees. They were only slightly larger than shrubberies) and stuff, but that was about it. Also, some damn fool thought it would be cute to plant freaking palm trees all over, so there were a lot of those, too. But anyway, there was scenery.

rocks

The trees are blurry because we were blowing by the scenery at ninety miles an hour. We went by some scenery more slowly but the light was fading and all my damn pictures came out grainy because of the low light levels...

Except this one.

sunset

They do really have pretty surgical-appliance-pink sunsets out there. That's the colors the camera saw -- I didn't tart things up in an editing program. Anyway, I'm home again and the usual round of postings will resume in short order.

Also, I ripped out the totally unsatisfactory 1x1 ribbing on the HoHI and cast on again and put on 2x2 corrugated ribbing and it is both totally right and acceptable AND better than halfway done. Go me! (Nothing like a plane flight to attack those not-particularly-thrilling knitting jobs. Now I need to rechart the pattern for the socks so that it meets the (new) 168 stitch requirement. *sigh* That's going to suck.)

Date: 2007-02-23 04:18 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] staceman.livejournal.com
Beautiful pictures. That last one is like, totally my desktop background now. The one before it is good background material as well, blurry trees and all.

Did you happen to notice in the first cactus pic, how two of the jaggy things together near the center kinda look like a heart?

Date: 2007-02-23 04:27 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] which-chick.livejournal.com
Not until you mentioned it. (It was the only not-blurry picture of a prickley pear thing that I had. La was getting pretty tired of "Dude, stop the car! I need a picture of that cactus!" so I tried to restrain myself.)

Date: 2007-02-23 11:34 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cassandramorgan.livejournal.com
Arizona is very pretty country. My family went out there when I was in junior high to visit my uncle, who lived in Tucson. The bugs, however, are huge bite-your-head-off sized. And rattlesnakes are scary.

That's pretty much all I came away with....

The ostrich

Date: 2007-02-23 02:29 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] ardvaark99999.livejournal.com
w00t on the ostrich photo. That's great.

Date: 2007-02-23 04:12 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] cousin-sue.livejournal.com
Was this your first trip out west?

Spouse and I *love* it out there, and we need to go back. You just reminded me that we need to go back, *and* that we need to take the spawn with us.

Sometime you should see our pics from Utah and Nevada desert. And Arizona.

I grew up around an emu, which isn't as big as an Ostrich, but I can imagine from what you told us what one is like (Ostrich, not emu). Theoretically you can ride them. Supposedly. (Again, ostrich, not emu).

Date: 2007-02-23 05:23 pm (UTC)
ext_9278: Lake McDonald -- Glacier National Park (Gen Tetons)
From: [identity profile] sara-merry99.livejournal.com
God, I love the West.

I'm actually afraid to vacation there because I'm afraid that it'll make me unhappy with where I have to live and work.

But I *love* it!!

Date: 2007-02-23 09:19 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] jaltemba-bay.livejournal.com
Sounds like you had a great trip. I thought that you could not get away in the winter to come and visit us for a brief warm up from the cold. They also sell the veggies in bottles here.

Date: 2007-02-24 01:17 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] which-chick.livejournal.com
You don't have a world-class arabian horse show where you are. Also, it costs more than a hundred and seventy dollars to fly (round trip) there, I betcha. It's only with dirt-cheap flights that I am willing to spend only two nights (Tuesday and Wednesday) at the flown-to location.

I'm seriously considering five days (two for travel, two for being-there) to visit the Joshua Tree National Park near Palm Springs, CA in May. I figure I can swing the entire trip (including airfare, hotel, park fees, and car rental) for about six hundred dollars. Anyone want to come with and split the car rental fee and hotel room? (That'd halve my price for the rental car and the hotel room, see. Dates under consideration are May 5 - May 8, flying out of BWI. May 5 is a Saturday, May 8 is a Tuesday.)

NOTE: Primary (only) trip activity will be trekking through Joshua Tree National Park and taking pictures of the shrubbery in assorted lighting levels and ninety-degree heat. You'd need a good hat, sunscreen, layers of clothing, good hiking boots, acceptable personal fitness, and the ability to walk at a reasonable speed while carrying at least a gallon of water in your pack... in ninety-degree heat, all day long. Any takers?

Date: 2007-02-25 01:09 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] zhasper.livejournal.com
Lorikeets is annoying birds. Loud, screechy, and they shit everywhere.

They are, admittedly, somewhat pretty, in small numbers at designated viewing events. When you're trying to eat breakfast, and the tree right outside your window[1], mere feet away, is infested with a swarm of them... not so pretty.

[1] Yes, right outside. We're talking a second-story window beside a second-story-height tree.

Date: 2007-02-25 10:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gwangi.livejournal.com
As somebody who graduated from The University Of Arizona, I have to confess that these pictures made me a little homesick. I miss the desert a lot more than I thought I ever would.

Date: 2007-02-25 01:09 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] which-chick.livejournal.com
Wanna go see the Joshua trees? It'll be hot fun! We'll get to see snakes cacti! There will be endless hiking scenery! The park has lots of informational signs, every one of which I will stop and read trails. It's only for two days (which will seem an eternity of sun, rocks, and hostile landscape).

Date: 2007-02-25 06:49 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] gwangi.livejournal.com
I still have scars on my legs from hiking in the desert with shorts on. There's a tree-ish plant called a "cat's claw acacia", which has these blades of doom all over it, and it grows everywhere. You don't realize you've been sliced up until you notice the blood running down your legs. Good times.

And I'll be happy to come along on the next trip, but I have nearly zero interest in seeing Joshua trees. Add in the fact that I'm still broke as hell, and it's a no-go. But if you like the desert enough to want to go back after this upcoming trip, I'll gladly suggest some out-of-the-way type spots. Good scenery, no tourists.

That also means, of course, that there's no trails or helpful signs. How do you feel about getting most of your daily water intake from cacti?

Date: 2007-02-25 09:10 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] which-chick.livejournal.com
I'm not in love with any sort of outing that requires me to drink from plants (barring outings wherein drinks are served in hollowed-out pineapples and/or coconuts) because that moves from fun to hardship right quickly. As well, I kind of think that trails and helpful signs are kind of important for dumb-ass east coasters (like yours truly) so that we do not wind up dead in the desert.

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