Friday, June 30, 2017

TREKABOUT WALKING CLUB-July 2017


Walks are graded on a 1-4 scale (with 4 being the most difficult)
Meet Every Tuesday - hikes starting at 7:00am at trail head (subject to change)
HIKING SHOES RECOMMENDED/CARRY WATER/DOGS MUST BE ON LEASH
To join TrekAbout Walking Club, please email at jen.mabery@yavapai.us
Or call: 928-634-6877/928-301-6143
Get up and get moving! And it’s free

Tuesday July 4th!
Happy 4th of July!! Get out and do something!


Tuesday July 11th
Doe Mesa Trail” – This is about a 2.5 mile trail with a steep elevation gain. There are some very beautiful view rewards at the top!

Level 2.5(if your not used to the climb a 3)

Directions: From Cottonwood head to Sedona and turn left on Dry Creek Rd, Follow to the first T and turn left, follow to the second T and turn left. Go past the Fay canyon trail head and the next big parking lot on the left is Doe Mountain trail head.

Tuesday July 18th
Mingus Mountain” (Don’t know the real name) – I would say about 3-4 miles out and back. Go through some pines along the way to a very nice outlook view. Nothing too strenuous.

Level 2.5

Directions: From Cottonwood, Head up to Jerome, continue 4.2 miles beyond Jerome. You will then see a large pull out on the right that also has a big brown Prescott National Forest sign.


Tuesday July 25th
Cathedral Rock Summit” – This will only be about a 1.5 mile hike, but it has a very steap scramble to the top/center of Cathedral Rock. It is so awesome in the heart of the rock. Time to sit and stare or explore.

Level 2.5

Directions: It’s in the village of oak-creek, so coming from Cottonwood; head to Sedona via 89A then turn right onto HWY 179. Follow to Back O Beyond rd. and round-about to the right. Follow that until you get to the trail head.









Tuesday, June 20, 2017

The Big Block Walk - 170615


Several times during the past few weeks I have felt the urge to do a longer walk than the 2.5-mile jaunt around my immediate neighborhood. At first, in response to that urge, I ventured up Rio Mesa Trail to Quail Run and continued as far as I felt comfortable in going. Eventually, I substituted Desert Jewel and a small section of Contention for part of Quail Run because it is a more interesting route. Finally, rather than returning from my walk the same way I had gone, I continued to the south end of Quail Run, turned east on Quail Springs Ranch Road and followed it down the mountain to Old Hwy 279 (Camino Real) which I then followed north to Arrowhead Lane and then home. This route, 4.7 miles in length, is shown on the following map. I call it The Big Block Walk.

The Big Block Walk
As noted, I had walked this route several times before today, but always going counterclockwise. Today, having determined that the climb to Quail Run would be more gradual that way, I hiked it in the clockwise direction.

Leaving home, I followed Arroya Vista and Arrowhead to Old Hwy 279 (Camino Real) turned south and continued to Quail Springs Ranch Road. This was still a gravel road in the early 2000s when I first walked this way. I think the county must have paved it primarily as a dust abatement measure and I suppose it serves that purpose adequately. However, the road bed was not prepared properly before the asphalt was applied and much patching has been required since.

Much-patched Quail Springs Ranch Road
Just a short distance along Quail Springs Ranch Road I noted one of those ubiquitous road adoption signs which are used to announce organizations and individuals who have committed to keeping particular sections of road clean. This section appears to have been adopted by a public-minded tin lizard. He seems to have been doing a pretty decent job of it; there was very little debris scattered along the right of way.

The tin lizard who adopted a highway
The next noteworthy site along the walk is Quail Canyon, a gated community of 1.6- to 3-acre parcels. It boasts of “Electric Gas Water Paved, Curbed Roads.” Altogether, it appears to be an exclusive community of those who consider themselves a cut above the unwashed masses. To me that all added up to a group of people seeking to limit access to their community. However, when I paused for a closer look I noted something very odd about the physical arrangement of the main entrance to the complex. There are two separate gates, one for entry and another for exit. The entrance was unguarded and the entry gate stood wide open. It appears that anyone can enter but it is not evident that one can leave without a gate pass as the exit gate seems to be securely fastened.

Free to enter. But what about leaving?
Emblazoned on a sign near the entrance was a likeness of the bird for which the complex is named, Gamble's Quail (right). This bird is sometimes confused with the California Quail. As a matter of fact, I was told they were California Quails when we first moved to Arizona and only recently learned the difference. The example shown here is a male, distinguished by the copper-colored top feathers.

There are a number of side roads leading off Quail Springs Ranch Road, mostly just leading to one or a few homesites and ending. Some of these appear to be private drives while others seem to be maintained by the county. So far as I can determine a white sign with brown lettering indicates a privately-maintained road while a green sign with white lettering denotes a road that is maintained by the county.

However, some markings defy this neat logic. For instance Anica Lane is marked with a green and white sign on one side but sports an older sign on the other side proclaiming it to be a private drive and prohibiting trespassing or turning around. It could just be a left over sign from before the county adopted the road. Or it might be a small group of property owners struggling for exclusivity on the cheap. On the other hand, perhaps green on white really does not indicate that the road is maintained at taxpayer expense.

A mistake or struggling for exclusivity on the taxpayer's dime?
Continuing up the gently-sloping mountain I soon reached Quail Run and turned north. This is a road that I have walked often over the past fifteen years as a part of the Big Block Walk, at first as a break from report writing while I was still working.

A short distance from Quail Springs Ranch Road I found an unexpected patch of dodder (left). This is a parasitic plant that I was familiar with from growing up in East Tennessee. I tended to associate it with that sort of relatively high-humidity climate and was surprised to find it growing in such a dry spot and hosted by such sparse vegetation.

A little farther along, while crossing the wash below Pasture Well, I noted a sign (right) that warned passersby to “Beware of Dog,” the sort of sign that is more commonly posted on private property such as a fenced yard where a dog is kept. This looked more like an attempt to prevent people from walking up the wash on National Forest land. There are a couple of private homes located up that way and I am sure they have dogs. However, it they are left free to roam on the National Forest, an area open to the public, after the owner has already admitted by posting the sign that they are dangerous, I wonder about the legal consequences if someone were attacked. On the other hand, this is Arizona and reason doesn't always apply.

A short distance farther along Quail Run I crossed Christina Draw Wash, the same wash that runs by my house about a mile down the slope from here. This wash drains a large section of the eastern slope of Mingus Mountain south of Allen Spring and north of Black Canyon. Although normally dry this wash can become a raging torrent during monsoon season, overflowing its banks and damaging road crossings as it struggles to drain the water falling on the mountain slope above.

The short, not very difficult, climb out of Christina Draw Wash going north on Quail Run is the steepest part of The Big Block Walk when traversed in the clockwise direction. When traveling in the counterclockwise direction on the other hand the climb up the mountain on Desert Jewel (or on Rio Mesa, whichever is chosen) is much more difficult because elevation is gained more quickly.

On this day, refreshed by a cooling breeze which quickly evaporated the perspiration generated by my exertion on a 100+ degree day, I moved right along, soon turning east on Rio Mesa Trail. I made another right at Contention and then turned down the mountain on Desert Jewel. I usually choose this particular route because I just find it more interesting than Rio Mesa. For example, one house displays an eclectic gathering of artifacts grouped at a mailbox.

Eclectic collection of artifacts grouped at a mailbox
The purpose for the mailbox is obvious and I think the stove likely expresses the householder's opinion of junk mail. I have no idea what the cart with the half-barrel containers mounted on it represents. Nor do I know what the Indian (?) God or Goddess might represent.


I continued down the mountain to reconnect with Rio Mesa Trail at the end of Desert Jewel. Rio Mesa then took me to Camino Real which I followed to Arrowhead Lane, on to Arroya Vista and then home. As already noted the distance was 4.7 miles; the highest elevation was 3711 feet and the total ascent was 480 feet.

Friday, June 16, 2017

The Neighborhood Walk – Update 170614


The Neighborhood Walk is a 2.5-mile walk that grew from a 1.5 mile walk that I started doing around my neighborhood in Verde Village Seven when I commenced chemotherapy earlier this year. I then extended the walk to 2.3 miles by including another street and finally to 2.5 miles. The 2.5-mile walk is shown below.

Neighborhood Walk – 2.5 miles
A short section of the 2.5-mile walk is down the wash at the bottom of Christina Draw and, although the wash is open and affords easy passage, there is a short, steep descent to enter it at the end of Meadowlark Drive. Today, I decided that I would build at least a rudimentary trail for the descent. The dirt was loose and easy to dig with a shovel-shaped rock I found nearby and there were plenty of other rocks to use for shoring up the lower side of a narrow scooped-out trail. After about 15 minutes of effort I would up with what I consider a much-improved descent into the wash.

Improved descent into Christina Draw Wash
The official monsoon season starts tomorrow and I am hoping the rains arrive soon afterward. That should help to consolidate the work I did today and show me where I need to make improvements.

For the most part this walk has already been described and photographed in a previous report:

In this report I will just point out a few new sights and some seasonal seasonal changes I have noted during the time I have been traveling this was. For instance, today I met a friendly rabbit (right) who hesitated long enough for a photograph before he decided I was probably a predator out looking for lunch and scampered off into the brush.

Since the last report on this walk I had stopped at my friend Angel's house to have my photograph taken with him and to collect a photograph of Angel in uniform during the Korean War.

Ellis Price and Angel Vargas – 26 May 2017
Angel Vargas during the Korean War
Having already spent several minutes constructing my trail into the wash, I did not stop today at Angles house (or museum as I call it) to chat and admire his collection of antiques from his old homeplace, the Alvarez Ranch at Sycamore Canyon. These can be seen, along with other items collected during his career in the National Guard and while working as a munitions expert in the already cited report:
As I continued on down the wash, I was alert for other wildlife; in addition to the pervasive quails and frequent lizards, I have seen at least one jackrabbit, albeit a little further down the wash between Arroya Vista Drive and Old Hwy 279 while on another walk. I was much too slow with my camera to photograph it; however, I did find a good photograph1 (left) on Wikimedia Commons.

Leaving the wash and heading west on Brook Hollow Drive, I paused to photograph a century plant (right) I had been patiently watching for several days as it slowly came into full blossom, gradually turning yellow .from the bottom up. Finally, on this 14th day of June, it was in full bloom, framed by matching Mexican bird of paradise shrubs and shown against the background of Mingus Mountain.

Continuing west on Brook Hollow Drive, I turned north onto Acoma Drive, a short street that runs downhill and ends just 0.2 miles ahead at a wash . I walk down and back on it because because it adds 0.4 miles to my walk and presents a nice, invigoration climb on the way back.

Just a short distance along Acoma Drive, a very short street called Acoma Circle leads to the west. This is actually more a driveway than a real street as it just leads to a single, vacant, hillside lot, still for sale. I checked it out several times waiting for some large sunflowers to bloom, finally with success.

Sunflowers blooming on a vacant lot at the end of Acoma Circle
After walking to the end of Acoma and returning to Brook Hollow, I turned north on Agua Fria Drive. Along the way, tucked under a sugar sumac shrub and protected from the hot afternoon sun, I found a vibrant, sacred datura (left) in full bloom.

At least three of the houses along the way have been re-roofed since I began doing this walk. In one instance the roofer had come up with a rather ingenious method of shielding himself from the sun. He had erected the sort of portable canopy one often sees at campsites. The roofer said it cost him about $150 at WalMart.

Roofer protected from the sun by a portable canopy
Still on Agua Fria Drive, there is a vacant, overgrown hillside lot for sale that supports all sorts of indigenous plants. The most striking among these for now is a gorgeous cactus (right).

Agua Fria Drive ends at Del Mar Drive and the homeowner on the corner of those two streets has a motley collection of three very noisy dogs. One is a medium-sized mutt and the other two are small, extremely shrill yappers. They all seem to think it is their duty to alert the entire neighborhood every time someone walks past in the street. I finally resorted to carrying a dog whistle and stopping dead in the street and blasting their ears with all my might until they stopped barking. The larger dog soon got the idea and shut up. The smaller ones took a while longer. But I can now walk past with a minimum of barking; a couple of blasts from my whistle usually does the job.

After reaching Del Mar Drive I turn back on S Arrowhead Lane, return to Brook Hollow and follow it to Arroya Vista Drive and then home. But because that does not quite make a 2.5-mile walk, I take a short detour up and back on Elk Circle. Elk Circle is a pleasant street with attractive homes. However, glaring in its contrast with the otherwise pristine surroundings, is an old abandoned car. I noted it when I first started walking this way, primarily because a piece of side molding had come loose at one end on the driver's side door and was hanging down to the street. Sometime later the attachment at the front end of the molding strip had also given way and I kicked it under the car where it is at least less visible. Meanwhile, the derelict vehicle continues its steady deterioration. Today I noted that the left front tire is flat. It will soon be time for cinder blocks or a tow truck.

Its about time for cinder blocks or, hopefully, a tow truck.
Back on Brook Hollow Drive, I cross Christina Draw Wash once to reach Arroya Vista Drive and then again in the remaining short distance home. There I am greeted by a gorgeous bank of yellow lantana. We planted the lantana in an iris bed several years ago and found that it takes over and begins blooming each year just about the time the irises are done and continues until frost. We remove the dead foliage each fall and wait for the cycle to begin again with the return of the irises in the spring. We eventually planted another bed of lantana, red this time, for a bit of contrast.

Yellow lantana in the foreground; red lantana and Texas sage in the background
This is not a very long or very strenuous walk; however, in the heat of summer, I am always ready for a quick nap when I get home.


1Jessie Eastland (https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:Big_Ears_Sitting.jpg), https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/4.0/legalcode

Tuesday, June 13, 2017

Ellis Health Update - 170613

Background

I am undergoing treatment for Stage 4 Mesothelioma Lung Cancer. The problem started with chest pains on 2 January 2017 after I returned from my workout at the gym. A trip to the emergency room resulted in a CT (computed tomography) scan that revealed a mass in my right lung. A later biopsy indicated it was mesothelioma; a sample was sent to the Mayo Clinic for a second opinion; Mayo concurred in that diagnosis and I was sent for a PET (positron emission tomography) scan at the Verde Valley Medical Center clinic in Sedona, the nearest facility with a PET machine. Following the PET scan I was referred to the Arizona Oncology Center Sedona facility in the same building. I saw Dr Anthony at the oncology center who discussed treatment options and recommended chemotherapy consisting of the following two drugs: Pemetrexed and Carboplatin, treatment which I am now undergoing.

Previous posts touch on this subject are shown at:
and
and

Current Status

On 6 June we went to Sedona and saw Dr Lindquist (Dr Anthony has accepted a research position at an institute in California) for a scheduled chemotherapy visit; however my platelet count was too low and she rescheduled it for next Tuesday, 13 June (my 85th birthday; she noted that and offered another date but I declined because I like the Tuesday schedule). She also changed me from a three-week schedule to a 4-week schedule and scheduled a PET Scan for 22 June. Dr Lindquist prescribed temazepam to help me sleep while taking dexamethasone (steroid) tablets for the three-day period surrounding each chemo treatment. It seems to work as I slept for almost 8 hours the 0n 12 June, the night before today's chemotherapy session. I usually have a couple of down days following chemo. Perhaps some of that has been caused by sleeplessness.

Additionally, she referred me “to Dr David Sugarbaker at Baylor College of Medicine for an opinion on surgery for mesothelioma.” I fly to Houston on 25 June and expect to return home on 1 July. At my advanced age, I am an unlikely candidate for surgery, but if there is a chance that surgery could be performed, possibly resulting in remission, I am willing to consider it. After all, the chemo treatment I am now undergoing is only intended to keep the cancer under control, possibly prolonging my life for another couple of years and I suspect that my quality of life would deteriorate significantly over that time.

Meanwhile I am still holding up quite well. I did my usual 2.5-mile walk yesterday and would have aimed for the 4.7 mile “big block” walk today had not the chemo treatment interfered. I will see how I feel tomorrow and perhaps go for a walk after Julia leaves for the airport. She has been a very welcome and most helpful visitor for the past ten days.

Both she and Diana will meet us in Houston for the evaluation with Dr Sugarbaker's team. Hopefully, Julia's husband, Rick, will also be able to come. I have not seen him for some time.
My next update will likely be sometime in early July

Monday, May 22, 2017

Ellis Health Update - 170522

Background

I am undergoing treatment for Stage 4 Mesothelomia Lung Cancer. The problem started with chest pains on 2 January 2017 after I returned from my workout at the gym. A trip to the emergency room resulted in a CT (computed tomography) scan that revealed a mass in my right lung. A later biopsy indicated it was mesothelioma; a sample was sent to the Mayo Clinic for a second opinion; Mayo concurred in that diagnosis and I was sent for a PET (positron emission tomography) scan at the Verde Valley Medical Center clinic in Sedona, the nearest facility with a PET machine. Following the PET scan I was referred to the Arizona Oncology Center Sedona facility in the same building. I saw Dr Anthony at the oncology center who discussed treatment options and recommended chemotherapy consisting of the following two drugs: Pemetrexed and Carboplatin, treatment I am now undergoing.

Two previous posts touch on this subject they are shown at:
and

Current Status
I underwent my fifth chemotherapy session on 17 May 2017. The doctor was happy with the associated lab results.

The laboratory results are meaningless to me. However, the most pertinent in my case (based on the doctor's emphasis) seems to be my Hemoglobin level, so I looked that up online at the Mayo Clinic website. Low hemoglobin results in anemia, a condition which is somewhat normal for me.

The specific parts of the test he seems most interested in are the HGB (Hemoglobin, the oxygen-carrying component within the red blood cells) and the HCT (volume of red blood cells in a specific volume of blood).
The lower HGB level for continuing the treatment I am undergoing is 7 g/dl.

On the 21 April test, my HGB reading was 9.9 g/dl, so I increased my intake of blackstrap molasses (for iron) and Potato chips (for sodium) and the 15 May test results showed an HGB level of 10.4 g/dl.

With the chemotherapy port in place (installed at the time of the last treatment), the treatment on 17 May went smoothly.

I have been having a problem with my eyes watering recently. The doctor called it “easy lacrimation” and suggested an antihistamine such as Benadryl. He said that should also help me to sleep during the three-day period surrounding chemotherapy treatments during which I take a steroid (Dexamethasone).

I normally have a couple of down days following chemo sessions, days on which I really don't have any pain, but just feel listless. These listless days are usually the second and third after treatment. This time was no exception. The first day after treatment, I went for a 2.5-mile walk and still felt good. The second day, still feeling good in the morning, I walked 4.7 miles and that may have been a bit too much: because by early afternoon I was really dragging. My listlessness continued through another day.


This morning, 22 May, the doctor's office called to tell me to start taking two iron tablets each day. Hopefully that will help with the anemia. Later in the morning, I got out and walked about a mile before spending most of the rest of the day watching pre-recorded TV shows with daughter Diana who is visiting for the week. I think that I am now ready for some more substantial activity and Diana and I have a 2.5-mile walk scheduled for tomorrow morning.

Friday, May 12, 2017

Ellis Health Update - 170512

At the Tuesday, 25 April visit with the oncologist we reviewed the results of the CAT scan taken last Monday along with the lab tests from the last blood draw (Friday, 21 April).  The blood tests all showed my white cell count to be OK but that I am still anemic as usual.  The doctor didn't seem worried about the anemia, but maybe I will increase my intake of salty potato chips and blackstrap molasses just in case.  The really good news is that the tumor is shrinking and in anticipation of that, based on results of the previous blood tests (the last previous to this Mondays tests), he had added something (he called it bone cement) to fill in the defects left in my rib as the cancer retreats .  Based on these results he recommended continuing the tri-weekly chemo for another nine weeks.  My next office visit and chemo is set for 17 May at 0930.

A  chemo session was originally scheduled to immediately follow the Tuesday, 25 April doctor visit; however, my blood vessels absolutely refused to cooperate.  The nurses successfully inserted needles in five different locations (pretty much without pain, I might add), but my body had apparently learned that they were trying to insert a foreign substance and just refused to accept it. That meant that the installation of a port to facilitate injections would be necessary.  The nurses said that if we could get a port installed the next day at the hospital in Cottonwood and still get to the Oncology Center in Sedona by 1400 they would do the chemo the same day.  That was important to me because I must take a steroid (dexamethasone) twice a day -- the day before, day of, and day following each chemo session.  I get little or no sleep on the days that I take the steroid and by delaying the chemo only one day, I could just continue the steroids for one more day rather than start a new three-day regimen of sleepless nights.

The surgeon at cottonwood saw me late in the day on the 25th (the day for which the chemo session was originally scheduled) and got us scheduled for surgery to install the port (Bard Power Port on right chest with a lead to an artery near the heart) early in the morning of 26 April. When he installed the port he left it ready for chemo and we were in Sedona early enough that the treatment was completed and we were home a little before 1400 on the 26th.

On arrival back home, we were faced with a sprinkler leak where I had apparently damaged the system while planting flowers the day before. That took about 45 minutes and when finished I was feeling spry enough that I finished clipping the already-bloomed irises except for the few alongside the backyard steps/walkway that were still in bloom. The exercise did me good after being confined to hospital beds, wheelchairs, car seats and chemo-treatment chairs for almost eight hours.  The only good part of that confinement was that I knew nothing from the time they wheeled me into surgery until they were ready to take me out again and that I managed to get in a couple of quick naps while undergoing chemo. With the port in place, the chemo went very smoothly.

The few days following the port installation and chemo session, were pretty rough. I had diarrhea for two days and, a severe reaction to the anesthesia used during the surgery to install the port. I did not feel up to resuming my daily walks for several days. After that I recovered nicely and even went for a 3.2-mile walk to Tavasci Marsh with the Skyliners Wednesday walking group on 10 May. I blame most of the problem on an adverse reaction to anesthesia and expect the chemo session scheduled for next week to go smoothly.

Before completing and posting this report, I waited for the doctor's visit report. Arizona Oncology has a website that should make such information available. However the website provides nothing resembling office visit reports. They do complete the reports in a timely fashion and I thought that I had requested that they mail me a copy as soon as it was completed. However, I apparently failed to make clear what I wanted and, after waiting a week, I called to find that they had not understood what I wanted. To make matters even worse, they really did not understand what I was calling about and I had to call again the next week. Finally, after talking directly to the doctor's assistant, I received the report in the mail today, just five days before my next scheduled visit.


Wednesday, May 10, 2017

Hike to Tavasci Marsh


Lila Wright, leader of the Skyliners hiking group, recently added a separate weekly hike that she calls a “walk” to the regular October through May schedule of hikes. The regular hikes are still scheduled for Saturdays. The weekly walks, however, are scheduled for Wednesdays, thus allowing those who wish to participate in both activities to do so.

Today, 10 May 2017, the Wednesday “walk” was scheduled to be along the river starting at the old Jail in Cottonwood and ending at Tuzigoot Bridge. However, the day was a little chilly and that trail would be largely shaded by the trees growing along the river. Because of this, she switched hikes and we hiked from Tuzigoot National Monument to Tavasci Marsh instead, delaying the hike along the river until next Wednesday. Never having been to Tavasci Marsh before, I was pleased with the change.

We carpooled from the Safeway parking lot in Cottonwood through Old Town, turned onto Tuzigoot Road and were shortly at the Tuzigoot National Monument parking area. There is a $10.00 per person charge for entering the monument but, luckily no charge for parking. We were thus able to park there for free, skirt the monument entrance, and hike along a concrete walkway that leads about 0.35 miles from the north end of the visitors center down the spine of a ridge to an overlook on the west side of the marsh. We turned off the concrete walkway about 0.1 miles from the visitor center onto what was once a section of Tuzigoot Road and descended the ridge.

This overlook and the concrete walkway to it are described in an article posted at gjhikes.com1. That article notes that there is a $5.00 fee for persons over the age of 15. Our leader told the ranger at Tuzigoot what we were doing and we did not pay a fee, perhaps because we were not going all the way to the overlook on the west ridge. The same article also notes that the marsh is named after the Tavasci family who “ran a farm there from 1928 to 1991.”

Biologist and local resident Doug Von Gausig, is quoted in a 23 April 2001 article in the Verde Independent Newspaper as follows:

"It was a cattle pasture," He explains. "A dairy reclaimed it as pasture land and that destroyed Tavasci Marsh for 50 years." 

According to Von Gausig when Arizona Game and Fish along with the land's owner Phelps Dodge allowed the beaver dams to return, the marsh slowly, "recreated itself in a natural fashion. They created a new habitat that had to gather new species."2

The following photograph of the concrete walkway to the marsh overlook on the west ridge was taken looking back toward the Tuzigoot Visitors Center. The walkway is almost completely hidden from the parking lot.

Looking back toward visitors center and parking lot from concrete walkway
A number of plants growing along the walkway were identified by signs. Some of these are shown below along with identification and usage information.

Catclaw Acacia (right). This is a plant with claw-like thorns that you will never forget if you stumble into one while on a hike. The associated sign includes the following information: “On long journeys, ancient travelers relied on the fruits for food. The green seed pods can be eaten fresh or dried, or ground into flour to make mush, cakes or bread. The branches make good drumsticks and furniture. Bees that feed on the blossoms produce a delicate and distinctive honey.

Four-Wing Saltbush (left). The associated sign provides the following information: “Named for the four-winged bracts on its fruit, this common high desert shrub provides food and medicine and is burned during ceremonies. The leaves, young shoots, seeds, and fruit are edible.” The sign goes on to say that the ashes from burned leaves make a baking soda that fortifies “baked goods with calcium and minerals.” Additionally, it says the leaves can relieve pain when chewed and applied to insect stings.

That use of saltbush leaves reminded me of an old folk remedy from my childhood. Grandmaw chewed tobacco leaves and applied them to bee stings when we children got too close to Grandpaw's bee hives. What made this use of tobacco leaves so memorable was that Grandmaw was adamantly opposed to the chewing of tobacco, declaring it to be the nastiest of habits, and would not allow the men in the family to do so in her house. She would have no nasty spittoons scattered about the premises and would not allow anyone to spit tobacco juice in the fireplace. Strangely enough, we later learned that she put aside a couple of hands of tobacco leaves each year and kept them hidden in the back room along with a small silver knife. She would then, on rare occasions, quietly sneak into the backroom, use the silver knife to cut a dainty plug and chew away to her heart's content. We never did find out where she expelled the chewed leaves and the juice except, of course, on those occasions when it was for medicinal purposes.

But enough of this trip down memory lane. One other plant that was identified along the walkway to Tavasci Overlook was Mormon Tea (right). The sign in this case was so far from the plant being identified that one could choose from several different plants. In other words had we not already known what Mormon tea looked like, we would not have learned to identify it from this sign. According to the sign, “Southwesterners add the dried stems of this shrub to hot water to brew a popular and tasty tea. Slightly bitter to the taste, it is a mild stimulant similar to coffee. Medicinally, Mormon tea is an antihistamine and relieves cough and allergy symptoms.” I have tasted Mormon tea and can attest to its slightly bitter taste. I did not find it unpleasant; however, I prefer green tea. As to the medicinal properties, I have never tried using it as an antihistamine.

As already noted we followed the concrete walkway for only about 0.1 mile and and turned down a dirt trail (an old road) to descend the ridge. This was the only part of the hike that was not essentially level. Even here the descent was only around 35 feet in about 150 yards.

We were traveling almost directly south as we descended the ridge. At the bottom we turned generally northeast and continued for about 0.3 miles to very near the southwest corner of the marsh. The trail then made a sharp turn to the south (actually ,at first, a bit to the southwest) and continued for 0.5 miles before turning back north to the southeast corner of the marsh where we found the below sign.

Sign posted at the edge of Tavasci marsh
In effect our track had formed the shape of a large jug about half-a-mile deep with an opening at the top that was about a tenth-of-mile wide. In looking at old maps, I determined that the top of the jug was once closed by a section of Old Tuzigoot Road, shown by the short straight yellow line in the map below map.

The trail takes the form of a large jug with a quarter-mile opening at the top
I am not sure whether it would still be possible to follow Old Tuzigoot Road directly across the neck of the bottle, The marsh may have reclaimed that section of road. In any case, the walk around the bottle was a pleasant stroll along a level section of trail, so there was really no great incentive to shorten the hike.

About 0.2 miles beyond the Tavasci Marsh welcome sign, we came to the east overlook, a sturdy, recently-built platform from which one could view the marsh and the wildlife it supports. Unfortunately, at the time of our visit wildlife was scarce. We saw only a couple of redwing blackbirds. However, I understand that the marsh is normally a great place for bird watching. We paused for a time at the outlook looking out over the marsh.

Across the way we could see the west over-look (telephoto view, left) at the end of the con-crete walkway. It was perched high on the ridge west of the marsh as opposed to being at the very edge of the marsh as was true of the one where we stood.

The photo-graph shown here (right) shows a bit of the marsh and a corner of the east overlook platform located at its very edge.

Before leaving the viewing platform, I took a series of photographs that I could stitch together into a panoramic view of the marsh.

Panoramic view of Tavasci Marsh
On the return trip just past the southernmost tip of the trail (that is just past the bottom of the jar), several of the hikers broke off and followed the Old Tuzigoot Road along the river to the river access point (boat ramp) near Tuzigoot Bridge. One member of the breakaway party carried my GPS so that we would have a recorded track for that route. They came out at the large parking area provided for the river access point. The trail ends at the posts shown in the photograph (left), taken from the parking lot.

The included map (below) shows the track from the visitor center to the east overlook (heavy red track), the route along the river to the river access point (light red track) and other points of interest mentioned in this report.


The hike from the visitor center to the east overlook and then on to the river access parking area was 3.5 miles. The highest elevation was 3380 feet and the total ascent was 218 feet.




1http://www.gjhikes.com/2013/03/tavasci-marsh-overlook.html

2 https://www.verdenews.com/news/2001/apr/23/the-bird-man-of-tavasci-marsh