Snow Day – 2/22/2019

Pusch Peak - snow and clouds! February 2019.
Pusch Peak – snow and clouds! February 2019.

A second day of snow in the desert! The almost-accumulating snow in our backyard was encouraging, and the snow on Pusch Ridge was alluring – but we pressed on northwards, past Catalina, all the way around to the American Avenue Trailhead in Oracle. Soft shin deep snow made our short Mariposa and Bellota Trail loop a unique experience! Even in Oracle the day had changed by noon – drips of melting snow were falling from the trees by the time we were back at the trailhead – but the snow on Pusch Ridge from Naranja Park in Oracle was amazing. Snow Day!!!

Bighorn Mountain. February 2019.
Bighorn Mountain. February 2019.
Domes above Alamo Canyon covered in snow. February 2019.
Domes above Alamo Canyon covered in snow. February 2019.
Snow covered Cholla on the Mariposa Trail in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow covered Cholla on the Mariposa Trail in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow covered Bellota Trail in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow covered Bellota Trail in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow covered Bellota Trail in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow covered Bellota Trail in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow in Oracle State Park. February 2019.
Snow in Oracle State Park. February 2019.

Fenced Corridor, Rosewood Point, Campbell Trailhead – 12/22/2018

The fenced access corridor from the Campbell Trailhead. December 2018.
The fenced access corridor from the Campbell Trailhead. December 2018.

Hiking north from the Campbell Trailhead is an interesting experience – for much of its length the tight corridor to the Pusch Ridge Wilderness is bounded by chain linked fence topped with barbed wire – today it reminds me of a passage from Paul R. Krausman’s And Then There Were None – The Demise of Desert Bighorn Sheep in the Pusch Ridge Wilderness, p. 103:

it was apparent that the growing human population of Tucson and surrounding towns had developed right up to the borders of protected areas, essentially creating an anthropogenic fence around the population of bighorn sheep that prevented them from moving to other mountain ranges that they historically occupied in the Tucson Basin, including the Silver Bell, Tucson, Rincon, and Santa Rita Mountains, which may have provided habitat for a metapopulation of bighorn sheep. This anthropogenic fence clearly added to the genetic isolation of the herd.

I don’t believe there is any intended double meaning in Krausman’s passage – but, in-between the tall chain link, it seems to beg for a re-imagining into the text of a future – strangely similar – volume on a different species:

it was apparent that the growing human population of Tucson and surrounding towns had developed right up to the borders of protected areas, essentially creating an anthropogenic fence that prevented them from moving thru the mountain ranges that they had historically used in the Tucson Basin, including the Silver Bell, Tucson, Rincon, and Santa Rita Mountains, which may have provided critical habitat for escape from their increasingly crowded technologically-dominated urban environment. This anthropogenic fence clearly added to the isolation of the human population from the natural world now so critical to their survival.
Looking across Pima Canyon to Pusch Peak, The Cleaver and Bighorn Mountain from just below Rosewood Point. December 2018.
Looking across Pima Canyon to Pusch Peak, The Cleaver and Bighorn Mountain from just below Rosewood Point. December 2018.

With an official trailhead you might expect an official trail at the end of the access corridor, but there isn’t one – and with the overlapping concerns of the Pusch Ridge Wilderness and Bighorn Management Area I don’t think there ever will be. Without an official trail entrance into the wilderness is closed at this location from January 1 to April 30 – but the rest of the year you can explore the wilderness – perhaps finding the rough, informal, steep, sometimes obscure and hard to find route that winds its way towards Rosewood Point and up towards more distant destinations.

Looking up Pima Canyon from the Rosewood Point area. December 2018.
Looking up Pima Canyon from the Rosewood Point area. December 2018.

Rosewood Point is on the east side of Pima Canyon with views down into the canyon and across to the well known destinations on Pusch Ridge: Pusch Peak, The Cleaver, Bighorn Mountain and Table Mountain – and Rosewood Point is high enough that, like all good destinations in this area of the mountain, there is a thriving population of Shin Daggers to …enjoy… A minor, but worthy, destination.

Sun and fence on the Campbell Trailhead access corridor. December 2018.
Sun and fence on the Campbell Trailhead access corridor. December 2018.
Pontatoc Ridge in the Sunset from the Campbell Trailhead. December 2018.
Pontatoc Ridge in the Sunset from the Campbell Trailhead. December 2018.

Double Rainbow, Light, Shadows, Linda Vista Trails – 2/19/2017

Double Rainbow from the Linda Vista Trails. February 2017.
Double Rainbow from the Linda Vista Trails. February 2017.

I am constantly amazed how much there is to see on the Linda Vista Trails – it is easy to focus on the noise and proximity to town, but if nothing else the views make the Linda Vista Trailhead a worthy destination…

Cliffs below Pusch Peak from the Linda Vista Trails. February 2017.
Cliffs below Pusch Peak from the Linda Vista Trails. February 2017.
Shadows-light, storm-clouds, Pusch Ridge. February 2017.
Shadows-light, storm-clouds, Pusch Ridge. February 2017.

Bighorn Capture and Mountain Deaths, Free AZ State Park Entry, Bond Failure – 11/22/2015

Pusch Ridge - end of the day - from Safford (Sombrero) Peak in the Tucson Mountains. November 2015.
Pusch Ridge – end of the day – from Safford (Sombrero) Peak in the Tucson Mountains. November 2015.

 

The latest Santa Catalina Bighorn Sheep Reintroduction Project update includes information on two deaths:

  • As previously reported during the recent November release one captured Bighorn was not released into the mountains – the Bighorn was unable to exit the transport trailer and was taken to the AZGF Adobe Mountain Wildlife Center where he was found to have a femoral fracture and was euthanized. Captured bighorn euthanized because of fractured leg – Arizona Daily Star.
  • The report also covers the death of Ram #34641 whose remains were found by a “hiker … near a mountain peak in the Catalinas”. The cause of death is currently unknown ” due to the age of the remains”.

With the death of Ram #34641 and the release of 29 new sheep (3 of which were not collared due to age/size) there are now 60 collared sheep believed to be alive in the Santa Catalina Mountains.

Arizona State Parks offer free admission on Black Friday – azcentral.cpm, #Optoutside at Arizona State Parks: AZ State Parks have partnered with REI to offer a free day pass for entry into one of Arizona’s State Parks if you visit an REI in Arizona from Saturday Nov. 21 through Wednesday Nov. 25. AZ State Parks is also giving away 10 Annual Passes to the 10 most liked pictures taken in an Arizona State Park and posted to the AZ State Parks #OptOutside Facebook page from 11/26 to 11/29.

Climbing Costs: Should hikers pay the bill for stupidity? – Tucson News Now: An article about the cost of rescues that asks if hikers/climbers/etc. should be charged for rescues. While the article does include some information about rescues in the area there was very little information from rescuers and no background information about how rescue costs are handled in other areas – for me the most thought provoking part of the article was the quote from Jim Holmes of the Southern Arizona Rescue Association: “We don’t want to do anything that would discourage the public from calling for help, if they delay because they’re afraid there’s going to be an expense associated with the rescue, it makes our job harder.”

County bond plan might have been too big to pass – Arizona Daily Star: In the beginning of November Proposition 430 Natural Area Conservation and Historic Preservation was not approved by voters in Pima County. Bonds and public expenditures are complex issues and it is worth reviewing the Audobon and Coalition for Sonoran Desert Protection pages on this failed Proposition.

Sunset on Pusch Ridge – 11/15/2015

Pusch Ridge in sunset light – taken from Golden Gate Mountain in the Tucson Mountains.

Pusch Ridge – Pusch Peak, Bighorn Mountain, Table Mountain with Rosewood Point on the other side of Pima Canyon and Samaniego Peak and Mule Ears visible on the ridge in the background. November 2015.