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Archive for the ‘Local Attractions’ Category

Seafood In Tucson: What’s The Big Deal?

Friday, March 29th, 2013

Not too long ago I posted an article about our Behind The Scenes Tour of the new Warden Aquarium at the Desert Museum.

Desert Museum Aquarium Touch Tank

Lacey, our guide on our Behind The Scenes Tour of the new Warden Aquarium, teaches two young gentlemen about sea creatures in the Touch Tank.

In that piece I included a photograph of two young gentlemen, perhaps 5 and 7 years of age, with their hands in the Touch Tank learning about sea life up close and personal.

Unfortunately, when they grow up, there will be little eatable, protein-rich seafood for them to enjoy. Why? Given human over-population, our voracious appetite for seafood, and the utterly careless way we destroy ocean habitat and practice unsustainable fishing methods, our ocean bounty is being depleted … rapidly.

Pollution
Unregulated coastal fish farms pollute the ocean with fertilizer and other chemicals. Untold thousands of square miles of ocean surface are now littered with human waste and trash. Unsuspecting fish die by the millions when they consume the plastic and other garbage.

Desert Museum Aquarium Sustainable Seafood Exhibit.

Overfishing
And then there’s “overfishing”: the taking of wild sea creatures at rates too high for a given species to replenish its population.

This is nothing new. In the1800’s, whalers seeking blubber for the lucrative lamp oil market, decimated the whale population. More recently, some fish that we eat, including Atlantic cod and herring and California’s sardines, were harvested to the brink of extinction by the mid-1900s.

These and many other isolated, regional depletions were highly disruptive of the food chain. By the late  20th century, the problem was global and catastrophic.

In the mid-20th century, international efforts to increase the availability and affordability of protein-rich foods led to concerted government efforts to increase fishing capacity. Favorable policies, loans, and subsidies spawned a rapid rise of big industrial fishing operations, which quickly supplanted local boatmen as the world’s source of seafood.

These large, profit-seeking commercial fleets were extremely aggressive, scouring the world’s oceans and developing ever more sophisticated methods and technologies for finding, extracting, and processing their target species. Consumers like me soon grew accustomed to a wide variety of fish species at affordable prices.

Only 10% Remain
But by 1989, when about 90 million metric tons of catch were taken from the ocean, the industry reached its high-water mark, and yields have declined or stagnated ever since. Fisheries for the most sought-after species, such as orange roughy, Chilean sea bass, and bluefin tuna, collapsed. In 2003, a scientific report estimated that industrial fishing had reduced the number of large ocean fish to just 10 percent of their pre-industrial population. A study of catch data published in 2006 in the prestigious journal Science predicted that if overfishing continues at the present rate, all the world’s fisheries will have collapsed by the year 2048.

What Can I Do?
I know what you’re thinking. The problem is too big. What could we as individual consumers do about it? After all, we just buy whatever seafood is in the grocery store, right? Turns out, there’s a lot we can do if we are armed with the necessary information. And the solution to this global problem was right there at the Desert Museum’s aquarium.

Desert Museum Aquarium Bycatch and Skillet of Shrimp

Net with 50 pounds of “bycatch” above yields a skillet of shrimp below.

One of the exhibits is about sustainable seafood. First, it elegantly, simply illustrates one of the primary fishing practices that cause the depletion of seafood. At waist level is a skillet containing perhaps a pound of shrimp. Well above is a fishing net containing perhaps 50 pounds of miscellaneous sea creatures.

In the process of scrapping the seabed for shrimp, trollers rake up “undesirable” species, which die and are discarded. So, for every pound of shrimp we buy at our local grocery store or fish market, 50 pounds of other sea creatures are destroyed.

According to the Aquarium’s exhibit, “Many fishing nets and lines intended for one species catch others by mistake. Turtles, marine mammals, and birds are included in this “bycatch”. Shrimp fishers are responsible for 35% of the global bycatch, even though they contribute only 2% of the world’s seafood.”

Moreover, “Trawls and dredges drag along the bottom and destroy seafloor ecosystems that are breeding grounds and shelter for many other species.”

Now that’s waste on an industrial scale. It is an immediate, HUGE, and worldwide problem for the next generation of little humanoids … your children, grandchildren, or great-grandchildren as the case may be.

Next to the skillet of shrimp is a small rack with a tiny brochure from Seafood Watch (dot com), a project of the Monterey Bay Aquarium. In color-coded lists of green (Best Choices); yellow (Good Alternatives), and red (Avoid), this organization offers its recommendations, based on the latest scientific research, for which seafoods are OK to buy (meaning farmed or caught using sustainable methods) and which should not be purchased because the species on this list are being driven to extinction.

Ranking The Supermarkets
In a related effort, Greenpeace ranks supermarket chains according to their seafood policies. In 2012, Safeway and Whole Foods finished at the top of the list, as the first two retailers to receive “Good” rankings since Greenpeace’s first report in 2008.

Last month, Whole Foods announced that it would discontinue the sale of red-listed seafood that is “caught from depleted waters or through ecologically damaging methods,” reported the Associated Press.

The Worst
Two of the worst are Trader Joe’s and Kroger’s, the largest U.S. supermarket chain, that includes Ralph’s (Southern California), Fred Meyer in Oregon and Fry’s Food & Drug in Arizona.

Currently, Whole Foods is doing a MUCH better job than Safeway of informing their customers about which seafoods are raised and/or caught using sustainable methods. First, Whole Foods labels all the wild-caught seafood in its North American stores according to the sustainability criteria.

That means you’ll see green Best Choice, yellow Good Alternative and red Avoid labels next to EVERY item in the seafood case, and similar information (using Whole Foods’ own criteria) for farmed seafood. Second, Whole Foods has also pledged to eliminate all red-list seafood by April 21st; Earth Day 2013.

Safeway is not nearly as proactive. When I questioned my local Safeway store manager and butcher, neither were aware of any of this, nor did they show the slightest interest. So when Safeway customers buy seafood there, chances are they have no idea which seafoods are on the Red list and which were farmed or caught using ecologically sustainable methods. Safeway ranks much higher than other local supermarkets, but until they identify the seafood in their case according to sustainability,  I will switch my loyalty to Whole Foods, even though their location is not nearly so convenient.

Part Of The Problem; Part Of The Solution
Now that I understand that I am part of the problem, I also realize that I can be part of the solution. Henceforth, I will be purchasing my seafood only at Whole Foods and only from the Green List which is kept current by SeafoodWatch.com on line and through their iPhone and Android apps.

On the subject of Earth Day, the 19th Annual Tucson Earth Day Festival is scheduled for Sunday April 21, 2013 at Reid Park. The Festival begins at 9:00 a.m. and ends at 2:00! The event features environmentally themed exhibits, music, performances, and food vendors.  Admission is free, and all exhibits include hands-on environmental activities, so bring your children.

$5 Discount
If you would like a $5 discount for one of the 4 Behind The Scenes Tours, click on the Desert Museum’s display ad in our Parks & Gardens section of SouthernArizonaGuide.com. If you are looking for Things To Do With Kids, these tours are highly recommended.

 

What’s up on the I-19 Corridor this Weekend?

Wednesday, November 28th, 2012

While Jim is out of commission, (back surgery) I will be hosting his blogs along with some knowledgeable guest bloggers. My name is Karen Ratte, wife and personal webmistress. Here is my first blog. My blogs will generally be about my personal favorites, I will leave the history lessons to my husband and his guest bloggers.

________

As most Tucsonans know, there is plenty to see and do along the I-19 corridor any time of year. Perhaps this will just serve as a reminder; some suggestions for the next couple of weekends before Christmas.

fiesta de tumacacori

Fiesta at Mission Tumacacori National Park

Saturday and Sunday, December 1 & 2 marks the 42nd Annual Tumacacori Fiesta where the park and grounds will be featuring music and dancers on stage, as well as foods, crafts tours and guided walks. The festivities are free and as is entrance to the park. The park as recently been refurbished with new walkways. For the kids there will be touch tables, live raptors, adobe making, mano and metate mesquite bean grinding as well as other exciting activities. Pinata breaking will take place twice a day. Photography will be limited at some of the events. For more information visit the Tumacacori National Park website. If you miss it this year, it is an annual event, the first weekend in December.

P.S. Across the street from the mission grounds is a great little gift shop.

Santa Cruz Chili Company Inc

Santa Cruz Chili & Spice Company

And if you are in the mood for some unique Christmas shopping, head further south on the frontage road just a bit to the Santa Cruz Chili & Spice Company, a small, family owned manufacturer and retailer of fine chili products, spices, herbs, cookbooks and more. they also have a quaint but interesting Western Museum documenting the rich history of the area. They are closed Sundays. You may also go online and order your gifts delivered.
www.santacruzchili.com/

Heading north again on the Frontage Road at Carmen on the right, look carefully, you will notice a mesquite lumberyard and gallery of products made from this fine wood.

Wisdom's Cafe Famous Burro

Wisdom’s Cafe

Further on, heading north again towards Tubac, stop at Wisdom’s for lunch on the patio, margaritas or their famous Fruit Burro. Family owned for 4 generations, Wisdom’s is a local treat.
December 7th and 8th

If you can’t take in the Fiesta de Tumacacori this weekend, try heading on down for some Christmas shopping in Tubac, Friday, December 7th or Saturday, December 8th and enjoy Luminaria Nights from sunset to 9 PM. There will be a tree-lighting ceremony on Friday at 5:30 PM. Hundred of luminarias, refreshments and holiday music throughout the village.

 

Tohono Chul Park Announces Amazing Fall & Winter Offerings!

Friday, September 14th, 2012

Flowers at Tohono Chul Park, Tucson ArizonaThis morning in my mailbox was the new Tohono Chul brochure about the upcoming Fall & Winter activities either at, or sponsored by, the Park.

Graphically, this download-able brochure is one of the best I have ever seen. More importantly, it beautifully illustrates the Park’s amazing array of special programs, including: art, culture, music, gardens, history, tours, workshops … and their magical Holiday Nights. They even offer a whale-watching tour to Baja.

For those of you who love our Sonoran Desert and want to learn more, click HERE to download the brochure.

Tohono Chul is one of our family’s favor places. For those who don’t know much about this serene oasis in the midst of suburban Tucson, you might want to watch our short video in which Jo Falls, Tohono Chul Park’s Director of Education, talks about its many beautiful gardens and other features, such as the art galleries and greenhouse. Just click HERE.

I’m going to have lunch today at the Park’s new Garden Bistro. I hear good things. Will let you know in a couple of days.

 

 

New Art Exhibit Coming To The Desert Museum + A Bonus Video!

Friday, September 7th, 2012

Most everyone who reads my blog or visits our SouthernArizonaGuide website knows the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum is one of our family’s favorite attractions. We’ve been members since we moved here 10 years ago. When our grandchildren visit, it’s the first place they want to go. In the past decade, we’ve taken more than a hundred out-of-town visitors to the Museum, in part because it’s the best place for them to get oriented to our beautiful, biologically diverse desert. It’s a bonus that the Museum’s Ocotillo Café is one of the 2012 Best Restaurants in Southern Arizona.

I know the ASDM is working on a new riparian (river) exhibit area that will be open later this year. One of its purposes is to show what our Sonoran Desert was like before all the ranchers, towns, and cities sucked up most of the water. We used to have surface water and running streams and rivers year ‘round. Hard to imagine, isn’t it?

In the meantime, the Southern Arizona Watercolor Guild (SAWG) is holding its 16th Annual Juried Exhibition in the Ironwood Gallery September 15th through October 28th.

Members of the Guild have submitted their works and juror, Kim Johnson, has selected the ones that will be exhibited. In other words, the best of the best in Southern Arizona. Should be a great show!

The exhibit’s opening reception, entitled Fiesta Sonora, will be held on September 15th from 2:00-4:00 PM. Gallery hours for the exhibition are 10:00 AM – 4:00 PM daily. As watercolor is Ms. Karen’s favorite medium, I know we will be going.

Did you know?
ASDM offers over 60 art classes and a certificate program in nature illustration. The classes cover a variety of media including watercolor, oil, sketching and photography. For class schedule, click here.

Bonus Video
Southern Arizona Guide specializes in recommending Dining, Lodging, & Things To See & Do in our unique corner of the Grand Canyon State. That said, sometimes I happen across something unrelated, but so special that I have to share it.

Neighbor Mike sent me this video along with this brief caption.

{2006} Stacy Westfall rides a horse that she has trained for only THREE weeks. The song she chose is dedicate to her recently deceased father.   

The horse she is riding is not even hers. She rides without a saddle or halter & bit, employing the method used by American Indians.

 

More Cool Things To Do In Tucson

Wednesday, June 20th, 2012

Tucson Museum of Art New Exhibit of Scott Baxters Large PrintsBeginning July 1st, the Tucson Museum of Art will offer FREE admission to students 18 years of age and under. Also included in their new FREE admission policy are active military, vets, and of course museum members.

This pricing is particularly timely as the Museum is now exhibiting the large B&W photographs of Scott T. Baxter entitled 100 Years 100 Ranchers. I’ve seen several of these fine prints last year at Sky Harbor and they are exquisite. This exhibit will continue until September 23rd.

If you are not a member, college students pay $5; seniors $8; and all other adults $10. Memberships start at $40.

“We wanted to help make art as accessible as possible for everyone in Tucson; especially the younger population,” says Robert Knight, CEO of the Museum. “With an increasing number of fiscal cut backs, high school students are not offered many art electives in school.  So, TMA would like to grant them free admission to our museum. Inspiring young people to not only appreciate but also learn from the art in our exhibitions, this new admission policy will go into effect July 1, 2012.”

Museum Hours:
Wednesday, Friday, and Saturday 10:00 am – 5:00 pm
Thursday 10:00 am – 8:00 pm
Sunday 12:00 noon – 5:00 pm
Closed Monday, Tuesday, and Major Holidays

Tucson Botanical Gardens 3rd Thursday ConcertsTomorrow evening, Thursday June 21st, I will be attending the first of three garden concerts at Tucson Botanical Gardens. It will be a pleasant way to spend a summer evening.

Come join us from 5-8 PM.

 

Recommended Summer Getaways (Part One)

Tuesday, June 19th, 2012

Great Southern Arizona Getaways.

Two & Three Day Summer StayCations For Locals

San Pedro River: Arizona

San Pedro River. Courtesy of Tucson Citizen Archives

Southern Arizona StayCations are only a bit complicated because you folks in Sierra Vista may want a mini-vacation in Tucson to see a play or concert or enjoy one of our terrific museums. By contrast, you Tucsonans may want a weekend in and near Sierra Vista to hike Ramsey Canyon or explore the San Pedro River Valley.

Either way works but I have to write from the perspective of a Tucsonan since I live in the foothills of the Tucson Mountains over looking the City and Ramsey Canyon would be a respite from the summer heat. That and there are about a million more Tucsonans than Sierra Visitians.

If you’re coming into Tucson for a great weekend getaway I can happily recommend several excellent establishments for dining & lodging. Just go to Southern Arizona Guide > Main Menu > Dining & Lodging Reviews.

If you’re a Tucsonan headed to the wilds of Southern Arizona, you can do the same in reverse. I have recommended dining and lodging in Bisbee, Tombstone, Tubac, Safford, Duncan, and many other places in Southeastern Arizona.

Well, I need to modify the above slightly. I stay at the Tombstone Bordello B&B when I visit “The Town Too Tough To Die”. At least here I can get a good night’s sleep and an excellent breakfast, fresh fruit and all. Plus I like Ms. Lynda, the innkeeper. As soon as she says two words to you, you’ll know where she comes from.

But there are zero four & five Saguaro restaurants in Tombstone. If you want a better than average dining experience, go to Bisbee. I say this knowing it will upset the good folks of Tombstone who depend for their livelihood on tourism, but if they really gave a damn about us turistas, they would have a better-than-average restaurant. Don’t blame the messenger.

Great Summer Getaway #1: Bisbee
At a mile high, Bisbee is much cooler than Tucson and the lower elevations of the Sonoran Desert. In many ways, most of Bisbee is a living history museum. Just get out in the morning or evening and walk the town with your camera. You’ll bring home a couple of great photos as well as memories.

The Shady Dell In Bisbee, AZ. 1950's Airstream Trailers

The Shady Dell: Bisbee, AZ

Recommended Lodging
(a) Sometime this summer I’m going to stay at The Shady Dell. This place just looks too cool not to experience it.

(b) For a first-rate B&B, definitely Joy Timber’s Calumet & Arizona Guest House. Joy has a lot of valuable local knowledge that will help you enjoy your time in Bisbee.

Recommended Dining
Breakfast: Bisbee Breakfast Club

Lunch: Jimmy’s Hot Dog Company. The only hot dog joint I know of that is recommended by Gourmet Magazine. Say “Hi” to Jimmy for us at Southern Arizona Guide.

Lunch: High Desert Market. Located a short drive up Tombstone Canyon from Old Town Bisbee.

Dinner: Café Roka (make reservations well in advance) This is one of the few 5-Saguaro restaurants in Southern Arizona.
Dinner: Rose’s Little Italy (ditto on the reservations)

Other: Also I hear Santiago’s has good Mexican food. I’m going to dine here this summer and let you know.

Bisbee Colored Post CardRecommended Things To See & Do
(a) A cocktail on the veranda of the historic Copper Queen Hotel.

(b) Copper Queen (underground) Mine Tour.

(c) Bisbee Mining & Historical Museum (so good it’s affiliated with the Smithsonian).

(d) Art galleries & other shops along Main Street. It looks pretty much as it did in this old postcard.

(e) Just walk around the hilly streets above this lovely old city, once the most populous between St. Louis and San Francisco.
(e) Check out the Bisbee Events Calendar for special events.

Great Side Trips from Bisbee Coming or Going

Tombstone, of course.

Avoid the OK Corral gunfight re-enactment (rent the video). Don’t miss the Tombstone Courthouse State Park or the office of the Tombstone Epitaph. Eat at Crystal Palace Saloon where you can admire one of the Old West’s finest bars.

Do take Dr. Jay’s Tombstone Walking Tour. You’ll learn many fascinating things about the town you thought you knew all about. Do call for reservation: 520-457-9876. Tell Dr. Jay “Hi” from Jim at Southern Arizona Guide. Maybe he’ll give you a deal.

I did on-camera interviews with Virgil Earp and Tom McLaury just before they left the saloon to head down to the OK Corral. Not surprisingly, their accounts of the events leading up to the most famous gunfight differ somewhat. If you go to Tombstone, don’t miss the tour of the Bird Cage Theater. In 1882, the New York Times referred to the Bird Cage Theater as “the wildest, wickedest night spot between Basin Street and the Barbary Coast.” I have no doubt.

The thing I like most about Tombstone is that the facts, should you do the necessary research, are far more interesting than the legends. Check out my recommended reading about this fascinating remnant of the Old West. Great reads!

Karchner Caverns State Park at Benson.

Excellent exhibits in the visitor center and a fine guided underground tour. Do make reservations. (520) 586-2283.

Holy Trinity Monastery at St. David.

Here the Benedictine monks have guesthouses for you, an RV park, a lovely little chapel, and pleasant tree-lined trails on 92 wooded acres … perfect for bird watching and a bit of serenity.

Fort Huachuca at Sierra Vista.

This old U.S. Army fort was the home of the Buffalo Soldiers and has two outstanding military museums. Today, Fort Huachuca is home to the U.S. Army Intelligence Center.

Ramsey Canyon Near Sierra Vista, AZ

Ramsey Canyon

Ramsey Canyon just south of Sierra Vista.
This Nature Conservancy Preserve is one of the most beautiful places in Southern Arizona. Go to the bookstore, get an orientation from the helpful folks there, then take a hike up the canyon. It sometimes amazes me that a place this wild still exists in our over-crowded planet. Take your camera and send me your best photos of the many bird species and wild critters. Watch out for bears.

The San Pedro Riparian National Conservation Area
This 56,000 acre preserve is located 6 miles east of Sierra Vista. Activities include: wildlife and bird watching, picnicking, primitive camping, pre-historic and historic sites, hiking, fishing, biking, horseback riding, guided hikes, interpretive sites, and weekend children’s programs.

Here you will find the Murray Springs Clovis Site, a significant archaeological area that contains evidence of the earliest known people to inhabit North America. An interpretive trail leads visitors to the site. The area also features the ruins of the old mining town of Fairbank. The San Pedro House, a 1930’s-era converted ranch house, serves as a bookstore and visitor center.

Road to Cave Creek Canyon near Portal, AZ

Road to Cave Creek Canyon near Portal, AZ

Great Summer Getaway #2: Portal, AZ

Sitting at just under 5,000’ elevation on the eastern slope of the Chiricahua Mountains, Portal is the gateway to beautiful Cave Creek Canyon.

Here you can indulge in all kinds of outdoor activities, including camping, picnicking, bird watching, hiking, plus great photographic opportunities.

Fair warning: services, particularly gas stations, are few and far between out here.

Portal Arizona: Lodge, Store, and Cafe

Portal Arizona: Lodge, Store, and Cafe

Recommended Lodging

Portal Peak Lodge
520 558 2223

We stayed here April 2012. Clean, simple rooms, adjacent to the Portal Store and Café. Free WiFi. Only restaurant in these parts as far as I know.

Aside from a good night’s sleep, the most important thing to know about this place is they sell a fairly detailed copy of a map to these parts for $0.25. Buy one! You’ll thank me later.

No cell phone service or GPS out here.

Birders B&B

We have not stayed here, but it looks lovely. A 1930’s renovated stone guesthouse with two spacious rooms, each with private baths and patios, private phones with
modem setups.  Both rooms are located close to Cave Creek.  One room
has  a queen-sized bed, sofa bed, shower and dressing room.

The other is a handicapped accessible studio apartment with queen-sized bed, king-sized sofa bed, fully equipped kitchen, large bath with jacuzzi, and fireplace. Breakfast prepared to order.

Cave Creek Ranch
520-558-2334

I have not stayed here either, but this place gets rave reviews. Three cottages, two lodges with three apartments each, and the Ranch House. Some units have fireplaces. Each unit sleeps from 2 to 6 people. All have fully-equipped kitchens.

Bring most of your groceries with you as the nearest super market is in Willcox, except for a few items available at the little Portal Store.

The American Museum of Natural History Southwestern Research Station
520-558-2396

This is a working research center well up into the canyon. Occasionally they have rooms for non-resident researchers who just want to enjoy this beautiful setting.

To the extent it’s a drawback, meals here are served at specific times. During the day, I can only imagine you will want to be picnicking along one of the many trails above the canyon.

The George Walker House in Paradise.
This cabin, 5 1/2 miles from Portal and Cave Creek, is a 100 year old house with two  bedrooms, a dining room, a living room, a bathroom with shower and tub, a well-equipped kitchen stocked with coffee, tea, breakfast cereal, muffins, and juice, and a laundry room with washer and dryer.  There is also a screened-in front porch, and a shady patio area with picnic table and a barbecue grill. The yard is completely fenced. We have friends who think this place is wonderful.

Recommended Dining

Portal Café

As far as I know, this is the only restaurant for miles around. I gave them a 3-Saguaro rating.

 

Great Side Trips From Portal Coming or Going


Faraway Ranch House in Bonita Canyon, Chiricahua National Monument

Faraway Ranch in Bonita Canyon

Chiricahua National Monument is just over the mountain from Portal via Forest Service Road 42. On the way from Portal to the Monument or vice versa, you will see evidence of the Horseshoe 2 Fire of 2011. Not pretty. But there are other rewards along this back road.

Plan on about a two hour drive over the mountain. It’s worth it.

Once you enter the Monument, stop at the visitor center to get oriented and find out the schedule for guided tours of Faraway Ranch. Take the tour.

 

 

 

Bonita Canyon Campground, Chiricahua National Monument

Bonita Canyon Campground

 

You can camp beside the creek in Bonita Canyon, one of the best AZ campgrounds I’ve seen. From the campground and visitor center, continue up the mountain to the Wonderland of Rocks. Quite a sight. And excellent hiking trails. Keep an eye out for the elusive coatimundi.

 

 

 

 

Coming from or going to Portal or Chiricahua National Monument, you’re likely to go through Benson and Willcox on Interstate 10. Between Benson & Willcox, just off I-10, is Texas Canyon, a place of massive boulders and one of America’s finest private museums featuring rare artifacts found throughout North and South America. The Amerind also has one of Southern Arizona’s best art galleries and picnic areas. Highly recommended.

Out this way along I-10 you will be annoyed by dozens of billboards enticing you to stop and see THE THING. Avoid the temptation.

Willcox

Last chance to fill the gas tank before heading up to the Chiricahua National Monument. Also tank up on groceries. If you’re a huge Rex Allen fan (who?) Willcox has a museum to this singing cowboy. If you were born after 1960, you won’t have a clue.

Recommended Dining

Big Tex BBQ  Dining Car by the railroad tracks. Excellent BBQ ribs.

Coronado Vineyards Near Willcox, AZ

Recommended Wine Tasting

Coming from or going to Portal or the Monument, do stop at Coronado Vineyards. For very few coins, you can sample some of the best wines produced in Southern Arizona.

Also they serve dinners there Thursdays – Saturdays starting at 5 PM.

Located a few miles east of Willcox just off the I-10.

More Recommended Summer Getaways to come.

Flandau Science Center & the Mt. Lemmon SkyCenter to host Eclipse Events!

Friday, May 18th, 2012

Yesterday I posted here about the upcoming solar eclipse this Sunday in the late afternoon – early evening. I have since found out that both the Flandrau Science Center and the Mt. Lemmon SkyCenter will hold viewing events.

Either event will be a wonderful experience for the whole family. Take the kids.

Flandrau Science Center on UA Campus
Flandrau will hold its “Crescent Sun Over Tucson” viewing party at their facility on the UA Campus. Astronomy experts and students will be available to answer your questions and help with telescope viewings and other activities.

Perhaps best of all, Flandrau will have solar viewing glasses for sale for only 4 bucks AND following the celestial event, will put on a free showing of Flandrau’s popular Dark Side of the Moon laser show. Such a deal.

SkyCenter Atop Mt. Lemmon
Atop Mt. Lemmon, Adam Brock, one of the world’s premier astrophotographers, will host a special viewing event. As of yesterday afternoon he still had a few tickets left.

According to Mr. Brock, “Up here at 9,000 feet, we’ll be able to see all the way to the horizon and watch the eclipse through special equipment as it unfolds. What makes this eclipse remarkable is that it occurs at sunset, so it’s a rare treat to be able to watch this celestial occurrence happening with the added beauty of the southwestern landscape.”

For more information, contact:

Flandrau Science Center: 1601 E. University Blvd. Tucson, AZ 85719 (520) 621-STAR

UA SkyCenter: (520) 626-8122
Tickets
Please click here to visit our online ticket website.

To view my SkyCenter post on my website, click >  SouthernArizonaGuide.com.

Coming This Sunday: One Spectacular Sunset!

Thursday, May 17th, 2012
Annular Solar Eclipse As Seen From Tucson Arizona

This is about what we in Tucson can expect our sky to look like at 6:40 PM Sunday.

On May 20th, three days from now, the late afternoon sun will disappear. At least for a several minutes. And from Tucson, it won’t entirely disappear. Nevertheless, the event will be spectacular.

On Sunday, beginning around 5:31 PM our time, we will be able to witness an annular solar eclipse whereby the moon will obscure about 86% of the sun.  Those of us viewing this celestial event from Tucson will see it at its zenith at 6:40 PM. The event will end at 7:41 PM give or take a fraction of a second.

An annular solar eclipse is one where the moon appears slightly smaller than the sun. This happens when the moon is farther away from earth than during a total eclipse of the sun.

Diagram of an annular solar eclipse.

Diagram of an annular solar eclipse.

To see the total annular eclipse, you will have to be in the center of its path. Specifically, you will have to be standing on the roof of a houseboat on Lake Powell or on the rim of the Grand Canyon. Or you can wonder over to Albuquerque. The Navajos of Canyon De Chelly will have a particularly good view.

No matter where you view the eclipse from, do not look at the sun without eye protection. For more on eye safety go to the NASA website.

Here’s  more ideas for protecting your eyes: http://earthsky.org/

New Video: Mom Hummingbird Feeding Chicks At Desert Museum

Saturday, April 21st, 2012
Hummingbird On Arm

A hummingbird at the Desert Museum Rests On A Person's Arm

 

Last week, we had friends visiting from Virginia. As we always do with friends and family here for the first time, we recommended they go to the Arizona-Sonora Desert Museum. It’s such a great place get an orientation to the geology, plants, and critters of our Sonoran Desert.

When they returned, they said that they had spent quite a bit of time in the hummingbird enclosure. To our delight, they took this video with their mobile device.

CREDIT: Southern Arizona Guide
CAPTION: Mom Hummingbird Feeding Chicks At Desert Museum - April 2012

Carnival of Illusion – Amazing!!!

Sunday, April 1st, 2012
Picture of Roland Sarlot & Susan Eyed of Carnival of Illusion

Roland Sarlot & Susan Eyed

For some time, Ms. Karen & I had been wanting to see Roland Sarlot’s and Susan Eyed’s Carnival of Illusion. I had read so many rave reviews about their performance that, if the show lived up to the hype, I wanted to add it to our “Things To Do In Tucson” Section of our website: Southern Arizona Guide.

So, I purchased two tickets on their Carnival of Illusion website, which also offered us dinner for two at half price at the Cactus Rose Steakhouse in the Double Tree Inn on Alvernon where their performance takes place. This sounded like a real bonus because I love a good dinner and show close together so I don’t have to drive and park twice. For me, this makes the whole evening much more relaxing and enjoyable.

Proximity to very good restaurants is one reason I highly recommend the Fox Theater downtown. There we have a choice of dining at two of my favorite restaurants, Cafe’ Poca Cosa around the corner or Caffe’ Milano next door, then walking the short distance to the performance. The Carnival of Illusion takes place in a small room only  few yards from the Cactus Rose restaurant.

I’ll make the dining review short. Even at half price, our dinner wasn’t worth it. Cactus Rose Steakhouse in the Double Tree Inn … definitely NOT recommended. We’ve had worse meals …  just couldn’t recall when. Nevertheless, I want to emphasize that the Carnival of Illusion is NOT responsible for this hotel or its food. They are separate entities.

With dinner thankfully behind us, we checked in at the Carnival of Illusion ticket table and were told that we could bring drinks into the performance. Conveniently, the hotel’s cocktail lounge was only a few yards away. Moreover, we could pre-order our drinks so that they would be ready for us at the brief intermission. This we did. Two glasses of a New Zealand Sauvignon Blanc. Very good.

Finally, it was time to enter The Parlor for the performance. Passing through some heavy, dark drapes, we were suddenly

Carnival of Illusion - Audience Participation

Inside The Carnival of Illusion Parlor - Audience Participation

transported to a different time and place, perhaps Paris before the war. Ms. Karen & I were seated in the front row, for which I had paid a little extra. I wanted to be close enough to the performers to see if I could detect how they perform their illusions.

As it turned out, we were seldom more than 6 to 10 feet from Susan and Roland throughout the 80 minute performance. There was only one trick they performed that I think I know how they did it. Otherwise, it was an evening of complete mystery. One mind-boggling illusion after another much to the delight of an appreciative, but mystified audience. These guys are good!

The venue was small – the whole room hardly bigger than our living room – which makes for a certain intimacy between some 40 folks in the audience and the two performers.

Susan and Roland clearly delight in involving their audience … and audience participation was half the fun. For example, Roland asked a gentleman in the audience to take out a bill. Said gentleman proceeded to extract a twenty dollar bill from his wallet. Roland then asked him to mark the $20 with a black marking pen. The obedient gentleman scribbled his initials and also the initials of the state from whence he came – FL.

Then, with the trust of a 3-year-old, he handed the marked bill to Roland who showed it to the rest of us for verification. In the meantime, Susan had asked a lady seated toward the back to pick a fruit from a basket. She picked a large grapefruit.

With slight-of-hand, Roland make the marked twenty dollar bill disappear. Susan held up the grapefruit so all could see that it was a normal, unsliced grapefruit. Susan held it as Roland proceeded to cut it open. And from the open cut Susan pulled a bill dripping with grapefruit juice. Roland wiped the bill so it wouldn’t drip all over the Persian rug and held it up so all could see. You guessed it. The gentleman’s marked $20. How do they do that?

This was just one of dozens of amazing illusions – some might call it magic. I don’t want to spoil the event by telling you too much. Let me just say that the finale involves butterflies … lots and lots of butterflies.

Susan’s and Roland’s performances were quaint, funny, vaudevillian, charming, energetic, and at the same time amazingly sophisticated and highly professional. Carnival of Illusion … highly recommended! Go. See if you can figure out how they do that. And take the kids. jg

 

 

 

 

 

 

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