Tuesday, March 27, 2018

Reconnaissance

Currently in Cottonwood, AZ
Moving on to Southern California

Our former next door neighbors and good friends, the Webers, are going to spend their Spring Break with us in Cottonwood.  So Johnny and I went on reconnaissance to the Grand Canyon so we can make the most of our time there.

Here is our first look from the Watchtower at Desert View.
The Watchtower itself is pretty cool. Architect Mary Colter, who was also the architect of many other buildings at the Grand Canyon, designed it in 1905.  Pretty rare for a woman at that time.
At the top of the watchtower, you are 7000 feet above sea level!
There are so many cool views of the Grand Canyon that our iPhones can't possibly capture.  Here are a couple of our favorites.

















They have a really cool shuttle system now so you are fighting for space on the roads with all the other visitors.  It worked great for us as we got to the different vistas pretty easily.
Other things we saw:
The Grand Canyon Railroad used to bring folks to enjoy the Canyon.  Now it runs was a commuter train from Williams, AZ


El Tovar Hotel - where said people above stayed in the early 1900's as well as today!
lobby

outside

enjoying a hot chocolate


Hopi House - more cool architecture.
We took a quick hike on the Bright Angel Trail.  Hope to see more of it with our friends.



We can't wait for the Weber family to join us here!

Johnny and I also heard that the ghost town of Jerome is fun.  So we checked that out too.  It was an old copper mining town in the late 1800s that went the way of some other towns we have seen on our travels.  This town reinvented itself and attracts a lot of tourists.
Since blast furnaces are close to my heart, I loved looking at this old one.  Quite a story about getting the necessary coke up the mountain including mules and the railroad!

Lots of old buildings here - each with there own story.  Two of my favorite are the hotel and the postoffice.  Both are still in use!


We hope to go with the Webers to the Haunted Hamburger since it has a great story and a beautiful of the Verde Valley.  In the meantime, we settled for a restaurant that is 5,280 feet above sea level!





Thursday, March 22, 2018

Sunny Days

Leaving for Cottonwood, AZ today
Heading to Cali in early April


We have and beautiful weather in Phoenix!  The sun has been out every day.
We have been in Phoenix a while, but have spent much of the time visiting with family and friends, including a trip home to the Chicago area for me.

Before I took off, we were able to catch a White Sox spring training game at the Brewers ball park.  Our White Sox are going to struggle this year, folks.  But we had a good time at the ball park including watching the Sausage Race.


I celebrated St. Paddy's Day and my sister Jamie's birthday while I was at home.  Plus, I got in a nice visit with my mother.  Johnny visited with friends while I was gone.
















Once I returned, we got in one hike in the backyard of our friends, Greg and Joan Christenson.  We got to the other side of the small mountain and Johnny showed me an owl sitting on its next in a saguaro cactus.  It was so cool.  You can't really see it in the photo, but I got a good look with the binos.
The trail behind their house

Looking over the houses from the hill

Owl nest at the base of the arms
We also walked around Old Town Scottsdale one afternoon.  It's so quaint!
We enjoyed the 5th avenue shopping area where these historical markers are in the sidewalk.
We walked along the street that has the historical adobe Mission and the Blacksmith shop.
















I enjoyed a couple of the sculptures placed around the Old Town.
Bronze Horse Fountain
Elk Woman - "Blessings to All"




















Johnny and I visited with many friends who are local to the Phoenix area.
Maria and Brad

The Hitzman clan at Joan and Greg's
Doris and Rey
Doris and Rey Martinez took us to a restaurant in Scottsdale called "Cien Agaves".  Tequila is made from the blue Agave and this restaurant has 100 (Cien) kinds of tequila.  That's a lot of tequila.  
Or, ta kill ya.
100 tequila bottles lined up across the bar


Wednesday, March 21, 2018

Wild West

Currently in Buckeye, AZ
Then on to Cottonwood/Grand Canyon and Southern California


Johnny grew up on old Westerns.  So a visit to Tombstone, AZ and  Old Tucson were definitely in order for us.  One is a real town and one is just a movie set, but both are set up for tourists to enjoy.

Tombstone is famous for the gunfight at the OK Corral involving Wyatt Earp, his brothers and their longtime enemies, the Cowboys.

The gunfight is reenacted several times a day in Tombstone.  It's kinda corny.















But we also learned a lot about the history of Tombstone as a silver mining town.  The population grew as mining progressed but once the mines hit the water table and flooded, the mining stopped and people left.  The town reinvented itself for tourists.
Another famous place is the Birdcage Theater.  It was a saloon and dancehall.  You can take a tour of it today.  It was a raucous place!
Currently, the rest of the town is shops and restaurants.  There is a Courthouse that is now a museum, although we didn't go in.   You still see a smattering of the people who live in Tombstone and enjoy the downtown area.  These horses were hitched at a restaurant.
We met these fine gentlemen at the bar of the Crystal Palace.  The older man in the red jacket was a horse wrangler for John Wayne's horses during his movie making years.  The man looking away from the camera is from Wisconsin and lives in Tombstone now!
We also took a quick peek at Boothill Cemetery on the way out of town.  Most people buried here died in the late 1800's and many graves are marked "unknown".  The McLaury brothers died in the OK Corral gun fight and are buried here.  Other graves tell stories of accidents, illness and fights that show just how hard life was in the West at that time.
It was a day mixed with fun and a little learning.
On another day we went to Old Tucson, a movie studio built in 1939 in the Tucson Mountains.  Johnny had seen most of the movies that were made there so our visit had a lot more meaning for him.  We started by walking around the museum that had many artifacts from all the movies and television shows, like Little House on the Prairie, made here.

We took a couple of tours - this one was about the life of the cowboy on a cattle drive.  It focused on the chuck wagon and the role of the cook (who was also medic, disciplinarian, and advisor).
On another tour we were told that the Blacksmith shop and the structure to the left were the 2 oldest buildings in Old Tucson.  The studio did experience a fire in the early 1990's, but these buildings were spared.  The other structure is a gift shop now, but was John Wayne's barn in "El Dorado", among many other films.
Here is the backside of that barn that was used in many movies.  They would just make small changes, such as signs, and be ready to go!
We saw a movie being filmed!  It was for a Spanish language TV show. But overall, the Old Tucson Studio sets don't get much use anymore.
This train was refurbished after its useful life was over and then went on to appear in over 400 movies and TV shows.  By the way, those mountains in the background are real!
Below is the front of the ranch from High Chaparrel (lower left) with the Golden Gate Mountain in the background.  This area is hardly used at all anymore.
One last historical note: I mentioned before that Tucson was inhabited by the Tohono O'odham tribe.  This same tribe was tapped to build the studio buildings in 1939.  In 40 days they built 50 structures from adobe bricks.  Some of them also appeared in the movie "Arizona".  This is a memorial at Old Tucson that honors their contribution to the success of that movie.