March 2013

Nesting Season

Nesting Season

There are several Curve Billed Thrasher couples in the area that have shown signs of building nests in the cholla cactus around the area. I expect to find several eggs in the next few weeks in the nests that these interesting birds have built. Click on the image to enlarge.

A Desert Marigold

A Desert Marigold

I stopped and took a photo of this pretty desert marigold on our way to visit Mom today. It was growing on the side of the road about a quarter mile from here.

The Sonoran Desert Museum has this factoid about these wildflowers:

The desert marigold (Baileya multiradiata) is a member of the Asteraceae family. The members of this family are characterized by individual florets arranged in dense heads making the floret group look like one single flower. On the marigold the clusters form a head 2 inches in diameter and are bright yellow in color. The leaves are green with silver-white hairs, lobed, and grow very low on the thick stems.

These plants can be found growing on sandy or gravelly soils of roadsides, plains, washes, mesas, and pinyon-juniper communities.

The “Earth Hour” Sham

This Saturday evening, a bunch of GREENBATS® will douse their lights to celebrate their ignorance about the true cause of climate variations. They will make their self-righteous symbolic statements that may actually result in increased CO2 emissions from power facilities, all in the name of Earth Hour.

Investors Business Daily carried an editorial on the silliness of this misguided concept:

Earth Hour: Vain Symbolism, Environmentally Unfriendly

Nonsense: For 60 minutes Saturday night, those living in the shallows of our culture will kill their lights during Earth Hour to increase awareness of climate change. Some will feel self-righteous. Nothing will be achieved.

Earth Hour, organized by the World Wildlife Fund, began in Sydney in 2007. It has since spread to 152 countries, where it plumbs the depths of silliness and modern indulgence.

“It may inspire virtuous feelings,” academic Bjorn Lomborg wrote last week, “but its vain symbolism reveals exactly what is wrong with today’s feel-good environmentalism.”

As is often the case with do-good projects, Earth Hour will actually do harm to its goal.

“During Earth Hour (8:30 local time), any significant drop in electricity demand will entail a reduction in CO2 emissions during the hour, but it will be offset by the surge from firing up coal or gas stations to restore electricity supplies afterward,” Lomborg wrote in Project Syndicate, a website dedicated, it says, to “thought-provoking commentaries.”

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Bringing Mom Home

traffic.jpgOver the last two days, I have made a marathon trip to California to fetch our Mom to her new accommodations here in beautiful Wickenburg, AZ. Overall, the traffic was not too terrible, but the usual watch your @$$ factor for the California Crazies on the road did apply. There were a couple of instances where I got cut off by inadvisable lane changes where the other driver’s rear bumper was a mere four feet in front of my front bumper.

Luckily, the trip was without incident and Mom is safely spending the night here in beautiful Casa Casandro. As I write this, she is all settled in on the sofa in the great room with the TV and some of her favorite word puzzles. (Note to self – get more word puzzle books.)

Tomorrow, we will enroll her in the assisted living program at our local retirement ranch. She is sad about leaving her cats and daughter in California, but looks forward to meeting new friends and getting quality 24/7 care. She really likes our house, so we can look forward to having her over for visits and food from time to time.

Claret Cup Cactus Flowers

Claret Cup Cactus Flowers

When we went to the post office and the discount department store today, it was a pleasant surprise to see the bright red flowers on a claret cup cactus in the landscaped part of the shopping center. I got out of the truck and ran over to take several photos of the early spring blooms. I saw that there were dozens more buds on the cacti getting ready to open up.

Our hedgehog cacti are likewise getting ready to bloom with their hot pink flowers. We have some beavertail cacti that will also bloom soon. I can’t wait! Click on the image to enlarge.

The Hummingbird Feeder

Hummingbird

I used to hang hummingbird feeders when we lived in California, but they never attracted as many hummingbirds as seem to show up at my feeder here in Arizona. I photographed this little guy a few days ago when he visited the feeder. Click on the image to enlarge.