Sunday, March 6, 2011

Desert Life-Part Two

I told you in part one, what went on in our first 4 months of boondocking in the Desert. Besides spend all of our money (ha, ha-he, he), we did enjoy being out here in the desert for the winter months. Now mind you, I don’t think I would like to boondock out here come summer time. the heat can get pretty extensive and there are critters constantly roaming the desert in the summer time, that I don’t think that we want to encounter.

Since hitting the road and other than our first winter out, we majorly spent our winter months down in the Valley of Texas; whether it was at Mathis, Corpus Christi, North Padre Island or Mission. This was being our first year away from Texas; okay I forgot, one winter we spent half in Texas and half in Casa Grande AZ. But the year we spent at Casa Grande, we don’t think we gave it a fair chance, for we ended back in Texas again.

Texas winters and Arizona winters are by far different, no comparison-other than they are both warmer than our Northern States that we hail from. Our Texan winters consist of constant humidity; which means wetness all the time. Unpredictable weather changes; meaning one day could be in the 90’s and bam the next day plummets to the 40’s with strong northern winds. Out here in Quartzsite AZ in the middle of the desert, you have no humidity; so you don’t wake up wet and you don’t go bed feeling wet. The sun also is out a lot more here in Arizona.

Down in the valley of Texas around Mission, Donna and so forth, you tend to get a “valley” smell that wasn’t always a pleasant smell to the nostril; but you learned to live with it. Out here in the Desert, you don’t get any nasty smells what-so-ever. After a rain out here in the desert, you get the most refreshing smell from the bushes and scrubs around you that just would make you want to keep taking in deep breaths. Here you don’t see much rain, and when you do, you welcome it to help settle some of the dust and dirt.

The native folks around here are willing to speak English to your face; which you didn’t always get in Texas.

Now it sounds like I’m putting Texas down, no, just stating the facts as they are. However, with that said, I have to admit that I do miss a lot of things in Texas, that you don’t seem to have here in Arizona. The number one is all of the wonderful friends we met while down there. We miss being apart of their winter lives. I miss the great entertainment people we met along the way, the ones that made you laugh and smile (oh, they know who they are). I miss the great Mexican food and cheap drinks. You can find reasonable entertainment on a daily basis and never get bored while in Texas for the winter months. There is always something to do! But I think the thing I miss the most, is the sound of the Gulf waters hitting the sand. I miss walking on the beach, along the waters edge, watching our little dog, Leah go crazy trying her best to “dig” up that sand crab or finding that unique and one of a kind sea shell.

The winter down here in the desert is really a different world and to some folks, they may never like it here. You don’t have the constant activity that you might find in Texas. Living out here, it’s easy to isolate yourself, which a lot of folks have done; such as us for part of it…It’s very peaceful, for the most part with only the sound of the light breeze blowing through or the coyotes howls at nighttime; which can get eerie. Or you can park as close to your neighbor as you want and not isolate yourself, but then you have to listen to their noises (meaning running generators) as well as them listen to yours, and maybe eat more dust because of the constant traffic in and out.

We probably were not as warm as what we had in the past in Texas, some folks even thought that we might had frost. Although it did get a bit chilly around here at night, we never really saw any frost. We did have some good windy days, but so did Texas! Our daytime highs this past winter never reached higher than in the 70’s with most days probably staying in the upper 60’s and nights reaching into the mid to upper 30’s. I know Texas saw lots of warm days; but we never saw ice, like they did in the Valley of Texas. Only once and just recent did we see a dusting of snow on the far edges of the Mountain tops; and with that I had to zoom in on the camera to get a good picture of the mountain.

There is no grass to speak of around here; it’s mostly sand/gravel with lots and lots of rocks of all sizes. Some that will even jump out and trip you if you’re not careful; so walking can be a challenge. You have varies types of cactus around you and a few that you have to be careful not to get too close to; as our pooch did once or twice and she still hasn’t learned her lesson. We don’t have any large trees to speak of, just some Palo Verde (which by the way gets no leaves, but large thorns) and some Iron Wood. The trees that can be spoken of are usually close to the wash basin.

There is so much desert, with lots of surrounding mountains that you can explore and even get lost in, if you wish to. We have walked miles of the desert floor and climbed a few of the mountains. We have gone cross country, not knowing where we would end up at-thank goodness for a GPS system to help us get back home safely again. The winter months are the best time to do all of this, because those nasty critters such as snakes are hibernating and won’t bother you. Now as February has gone and March is here, our weather is turning to warmer days and nights, so therefore our wandering the desert floor will be limited to the roadways for our safety.

So with all that said, I think that next year we will return back here once again to the desert life and living. We are not done exploring the desert floor or we haven’t climbed all the mountains yet….

Moon rising over the mountain

Snow cap mountains

1 comment:

  1. Great observations ! One of our luxury stops is at the Apache Gold Casino on the Jicarilla Apache Reservation just East of Globe Arizona. We stop in there to catch up on tank dumps and water topping off. The price is really right also.

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