I had a great night’s sleep with some
early morning dreams. It was late when I (we) went to bed and even later by the
time I dropped off to sleep. I know I saw the bedroom (Az time) clock at 12
midnight and then again at 12:20 am for the last time. This morning, Sunday,
Jan. 13th, it was 6 am on the same clock and I dropped off until I
saw 7:40 before I (we) got up. I was surprised looking out the blind that it
was light enough outside for me to walk at 6:40 PT.
I was anxious to see the creator of this beauty when she made her appearance |
Wasting no time, I dressed for the
41F/5C and headed out with my phone and the small Canon. What an absolutely
gorgeous morning! The wind was so minuscule that I feel remiss calling it a
wind at all. I really enjoyed this walk out Rockhouse Trail to the highway and
then back again.
It was a little shy of the normal 1.5 miles I usually walk so
I meandered around to increase the steps. The sun rose in all its glory over
the eastern mountains and I was duly impressed.
The mountains to the west are beautiful That is the busy campers spot on Peg Leg Road |
Where our Rockhouse Trail meets S22 highway |
I started looking for the Marlboro Man I knew he'd been here! |
This is the view from our living room window, facing west to the Santa Rosas |
It is always sad to see these grave sites |
When I returned, I made my tea and
sat with Bill to catch up on what our blogger friends were up to. Around 8, I
made us bacon and eggs and joined the group of 4 already outside ready to go
for today’s adventure.
We gathered out front, said our good mornings and hopped into 2 trucks |
Bill and I were showing them the metal sculptures
surrounding the desert of Borrego Springs today. We were fascinated 2 years ago when
we found them all so we knew our friends wouldn’t be disappointed.
The grape pickers were first on our route |
Many of you have seen them but for
those who haven’t here is a brief bit of history behind the life size art. I’ve
retrieved this from my 2017 Feb. 14th blog post.
A close up for detail |
The story is that
over 10 years ago, a property owner, Dennis Avery, envisioned free standing art
on 3 square miles of his property surrounding Borrego Springs. When Ricardo
Breceda found he couldn’t work at his construction job due to a tragic
accident, he found himself creating steel welded sculptures, first one for his
daughter who wanted a life-size dinosaur.
We weren't 'skeered' at all! |
Commissioned by
Dennis, he set about creating 130 life-like sculptures of animals that walked
the desert floor millions of years ago. More recently, other animals of today
have joined the display.
The detail is amazing |
The
interesting part is that they are not all located in one place but instead
spread out across the property’s desert to give the tourist (us) the full
impact. Much nicer than going to a museum to see them inside a building.
So, Rob drove his 4 x 4 and George drove his.
There were a few areas that could be soft from yesterday’s rainfall. We left
Black Beauty and Clemson at home. The weather soon warmed up and I was shedding
a layer before we finished the 2 ½ hour trek. We did a lot of walking and when
we’d seen the last one on the north side of Borrego, we headed home for lunch
to meet again in an hour and go visit the village and the remaining sculptures
on the south end.
The woolly mammoth and her baby He indeed looks woolly |
When you see them from a distance, they appear to be so lifelike totally in their element, just walking around |
Goofing around |
Bill made a sandwich and I warmed up some of
my chicken soup. Clemson had some cheese so we were all satisfied. At 1 pm PT
we headed out again minus Rose and George who had opted to stay behind this
afternoon. The sun was performing a magic act, disappearing and reappearing
like an America’s Got Talent magician's audition. The temperature remained mild though
throughout around 62F so we were comfortable as we hopped in and out of the
truck.
When we arrived at the serpent's head The Dragon Riders were taking pictures of each other with the bikes under the monster |
Looks like they're 'taking care of business' but they were just posing, really! |
Our turn |
Rose and George pose with the scorpion |
Rob making friends with the llama |
and milking the big horn sheep |
I love this one Bill and Rob no doubt talking machinery skills |
We had started making note of the numbers on the sculptures when Rob first noticed one this morning. So, this afternoon we
continued on checking them with the understanding that #10 was the 10th
one that Ricardo created. As we neared the end of the southern sculptures and
found #2, 3, 4 & 5 we were excited to find #1, his first one.
Add caption |
One of our favourites but it is in a different location He is no longer sitting beside a creek |
Another one of our favourites, such detail right down to the driver's rolled up sleeves |
There was one
in the distance, the last one on our route, so Rob bounced us over the rough
trails to it. These first ones were really showing the wear and tear of the weather from 10 years ago.
You can see the deterioration of these first few created |
Tadah! We were all thrilled to find that the
eagle holding a boar in its talons was #1. That made the search complete and we
drove back into town and around Christmas Circle. We weren’t looking to stop
anywhere other than at the Visitor’s Centre on the west end of the village at
the A.B.D. State Park. When we drove up and found that staff were collecting a
fee of $9/senior for day use, we changed our minds. Thanks, but no thanks.
I think this might have been his 2nd or 3rd |
Another favourite, the eagle on its nest with 2 babies and 1 snake in his talons |
Two years ago, it was free access into the
Centre and we enjoyed seeing all the names on cacti, trees and other plants. We
also picked up some post cards and a souvenir pin. I guess it is their loss, we
won’t be spending money there this year. Rob drove back through town and after
Pat and I discovered that the Frugal Coyote Thrift Store was closed on Sunday,
we returned to our site on the Trail. It was a wonderful day. I made myself a
coffee at 3 PT and after catching up on this post, sat to finish the mystery
surrounding Joanna Brady’s kidnapping.
I didn't have the best exposure here but this is Ricardo's first sculpture # 11 |
Time to pose! |
Bill started our generator at 4 and that
helped bring our batteries up to full charge for the evening. I was stretched
out on our sofa with my book and finally had to close my eyes for a few minutes
as they were getting very droopy. It was a full day and a lot of exercise for
all of us. I know I walked over 5 ½ miles today, more than I do on most days.
Close to 5:30, I got things out to start supper.
And the boys too We found the prize! |
Tonight was leftover night and we were having
the spaghetti, my ½ Reuben sandwich and a salad for Bill. There wasn’t enough
of any one thing but this would help clean the fridge out, plus make for a nice
easy supper. With the genny running, I began to reheat the spaghetti and to fry
my Reuben in a pan. This should keep the crust crispy rather than soggy. And it
all turned out great. We were eating by 6 and had dishes cleaned up by 6:15.
Yummy leftovers |
Rob had invited us all over to their
Silverback for a game of Wizard with Rose and George so we walked over just before 6:30. His has the
perfect rv for playing games. He has an open living space and no island so he
can open up his folding table for us to all sit around. We played 2 games
until 9 pm and then said goodnight. George and Rose are pulling out tomorrow so
it was a good way to toast our friendship and have one last fun evening
together.
Occasionally, Pat and I would wander off and snap pictures of the barrel cactus They were so pretty, some redder than others |
I wanted to finish my post but I also wanted
to finish reading Downfall so I compromised. I finished the written part and
made some collages from today’s many, many pictures before sitting with my
book. In the morning, I will interpose the ones I want and get it published
before or after (as it turned out) my walk.
And this single ocotillo flower is ready to bloom |
This has been a fun day and we accomplished
the second most important thing that we wanted to do while in this area.
Hopefully, Pat and I can check out the thrift store and there is one other
thing we are hoping to do. I’ll let you know about that as it depends on the
weather.
This is what traipsing through the desert got me today I found it hitching a ride on my running shoe |
Thank you for stopping by.
Hi Pat we were in Borrego last year when they started charging to go to the visitors center, they said they only charged on weekends. We didn't go either. This year when we were there we went through the week and there was no charge.
ReplyDeleteCrap! I wondered about that! If we'd stayed, we were going back into town to the thrift store and I was going to suggest going around again, just in case. Thanks Jean, we'll know for next year!
DeleteAnother fun desert day and touring the sculptures that we have enjoy many times. Continue to enjoy your time there.
ReplyDeleteYes, always enjoyable and nice to take friends who have never been.
DeleteWe would have stayed longer had the weather been nicer.
Thank you for the pictures I truly enjoyed. I’d like to see the sculptures myself sometime but liked your tour for the moment.
ReplyDeleteYou're welcome! I have no doubt you would enjoy them in person much more but happy to show a bit now. :)
DeleteGEE WHIZ!!! Amazing sculptures and great talent to create them!!! Hours of work involved.
ReplyDeleteDon in Okla.
Aren't they something? Very very detailed.
DeleteAmazing the detail in those sculptures. It looks like you all had a good time!!
ReplyDeleteThose little burr type things are easy to pick up!!!
The sculptures are awesome for sure. A true talent, he is.
DeleteWow I can't believe the Visitor Centre is charging a fee to enter! We will no longer go there :-(
ReplyDeleteWe were bummed but Jean and Skip above say that they only charge on the weekends. we didn't know that and they sure didn't offer the info when we drove up.
DeleteHis work is amazing, to be sure. Once, quite by mistake, we entered his working building and saw all the things that had just been completed. It's fascinating to see all he has done.
ReplyDeleteWe would have loved to have gone up to see his home base. Another time. The weather affected the amount of time we stayed there this year.
DeleteFantastic sculptures! The finite detailing is amazing, thanks for sharing.
ReplyDeleteThey are very cool, sis. You would love them. Sister's week? hahahaha
Delete