From Oro Valley – 1/6/2019

Table Mountain from N. Oracle Road (77) near N 1st Avenue in Oro Valley. January 2019.
Table Mountain from N. Oracle Road (77) near N 1st Avenue in Oro Valley. January 2019.

Pictures from Oro Valley – from Oracle Road near First Ave, the Oro Valley Public Library and Naranja Park – I would rather be hiking in the mountains than shooting from town, but different days present different opportunities and Oro Valley has some amazing views of the Santa Catalina Mountains!

Clouds around Cathedral Rock from the Oro Valley Public Library. January 2019.
Clouds around Cathedral Rock from the Oro Valley Public Library. January 2019.
Pusch Peak from Naranja Park in Oro Valley. January 2019.
Pusch Peak from Naranja Park in Oro Valley. January 2019.
Cathedral Rock Sunset from Naranja Park in Oro Valley. January 2019.
Cathedral Rock Sunset from Naranja Park in Oro Valley. January 2019.
The Cleaver in Shadow and The Thumb peaking over Pusch Ridge in the Sunset Light - from Naranja Park in Oro Valley. January 2019.
The Cleaver in Shadow and The Thumb peaking over Pusch Ridge in the Sunset Light – from Naranja Park in Oro Valley. January 2019.

Black Blobs, Ghost Camps – 1/7/2019

The Google Maps black blob covering the Cathedral Rock Area - surrounding topo map for reference. January 2019.
The Google Maps black blob covering the Cathedral Rock Area – surrounding topo map for reference. January 2019.

A message from the amazing Arizona based photographer Erini Pajak (Instagram) let me know that according to Google a strange black blob had appeared in the Santa Catalina Mountains. I was, of course, 99.999999% sure that this was something mundane like an unfortunate Google maps omission for a government agency or map data oddity/error and not a reflection of the real world. Thinking otherwise is probably the territory of theories like ‘blacked out because of an alien landing’ or ‘blacked out because new high resolution imagery clearly shows the Iron Door of mine-with-the-Iron-Door fame and Google is in the process of claiming mineral rights’ – but Google’s power and reach these days is such that sometimes it seems their information creates and influences reality rather than just reflecting it… So it was with 0.000001% relief that my recent photographs of Cathedral Rock didn’t show a black blob covering the peak!

Cathedral Rock and Window Peak on New Year's Day. January 2019.
Cathedral Rock and Window Peak on New Year’s Day. January 2019.
The Google Black Blob covering the Cathedral Rock area in Google Earth. January 2019.
The Google black blob covering the Cathedral Rock area in Google Earth. January 2019.

The images above show the black blob as seen on my screens in early January – I still see the blob on Google Maps, but changing the imagery date in the desktop version of Google Earth immediately shows the expected imagery (shown below). I can’t find any hint of the black blob in Microsoft’s Bing Maps, Gaia GPS and Backcountry Navigator Pro so it appears that the Cathedral Rock area is safe…

Google Earth - Cathedral Rock area with complete imagery. January 2019.
Google Earth – Cathedral Rock area with complete imagery. January 2019.

I suspect that any map large and detailed enough to be interesting – printed or digital – has errors, or at the very least representations that are historically accurate but not currently relevant…

Witness the Ghost Campgrounds of the Santa Catalina Mountains – current results that come up if you zoom in and search for ‘campgrounds’ in Google Maps…

Google Maps - a search for Campgrounds reveals some questionable results... January 2019.
Google Maps – a search for Campgrounds reveals some questionable results… January 2019.

From left to right:

Box Camp Trailhead: a great place to start a hike and a decent place to backpack from – but there is no campground or camping in the trailhead proper…

The Box Camp Trailhead - no campground to be seen... September 2014.
The Box Camp Trailhead – no campground to be seen… September 2014.
The closest you are going to get to camping at the Box Camp Trailhead is loading up your gear and hiking in! March 2008.
The closest you are going to get to camping at the Box Camp Trailhead is loading up your gear and hiking in! March 2008.

Bear Wallow Campground: A beautiful area for a hike, probably the best single spot for Fall color in the Santa Catalina Mountains and the first official campground on the mountain (established in 1921!) – but it has been closed to camping for decades…

No camping sign in Bear Wallow. August 2017.
No camping sign in Bear Wallow. August 2017.
An empty sign holder still standing in the Bear Wallow area - leftover from earlier days... October 2018.
An empty sign holder still standing in the Bear Wallow area – leftover from earlier days… October 2018.
A picture from as close as I could find to Google's Bear Wallow Campground marker - perhaps inviting but no campground in sight and in fact Camping is not permitted in this area. August 2017.
A picture from as close as I could find to Google’s Bear Wallow Campground marker – perhaps inviting but no campground in sight and in fact Camping is not permitted in this area. August 2017.

Santa Catalina Recreation Area: Well, I guess unlike the previous two examples you could legally camp at, or in many places near this marker – but that is true of most of the Santa Catalina Mountains that (like this spot) are away from roads and ‘civilization’ – there is no road or trail to this area and if there is an opposite of ‘Campground’ this might be it…

Google's Santa Catalina Recreation Area Campground Marker on a USGS topo map. January 2019.
Google’s Santa Catalina Recreation Area Campground Marker on a USGS topo map. January 2019.

In the case of Google Maps the map interface features a ‘Suggest an Edit’ button that allows you to submit potential corrections – I have submitted corrections to the campgrounds above perhaps by the time you look they will be corrected…

I’m sure, especially as you really dig into the details, that there are more interesting mapping oddities, mysteries and errors in the Santa Catalina Mountains – leave a comment if you want to share one!

Sunset and Storms, The Cordones – 8/13/2016

A beautiful Santa Catalina sunset from the The Cordones north of Catalina. August 2016.
A beautiful Santa Catalina sunset from the The Cordones north of Catalina. August 2016.
Sunset from The Cordones north of Catalina. August 2016.
Sunset from The Cordones north of Catalina. August 2016.

It took many years for me to realize that Arizona State Trust Land is an important portion of the lands that give Southern Arizona its character and feel – a glance at the Arizona State Trust Land Parcel Viewer shows (in blue) the large amount of Arizona State Trust Land around, at the border of and between Southern Arizona’s Sky Islands. The east side of the Santa Catalina Mountains would be a very different place without public access (for a fee) to the land that is currently owned by the State Trust.

A screen shot from the Arizona State Land Trust Parcel Viewer - the colored areas are Arizona State Trust Land. August 2016.
A screen shot from the Arizona State Land Trust Parcel Viewer – the colored areas are Arizona State Trust Land. August 2016.

North of Catalina, just past E. Saddlebrooke Blvd, a section of State Trust land covers an area labeled ‘The Cordones’. Several roads lead out into the area and in some spots the combinations of ridges, washes and hills conspire to hide many of the nearby roads and homes – occasionally making the area feel a bit more remote than it really is. I intended to catch the sunset – but being there for a storm was just good luck…

Lightning and storm over the Santa Catalina Mountains. August 2016.
Lightning and storm over the Santa Catalina Mountains. August 2016.
Lightning over the Santa Catalina Mountains. August 2016.
Lightning over the Santa Catalina Mountains. August 2016.