




This last little guy gets honorable mention because he is hanging in there!!




This last little guy gets honorable mention because he is hanging in there!!

I reduced the size of the pictures, so I apologize if the digital rendition is compromised. And where you may ask does the red come from?...iron oxides.


No water and yet the bark of the Manzanita or Mountain Driftwood is like flowing red ribbons in the desert air.
Below the trunk of the same species gives you a better look at how lovely the deep brown-red bark can be with access to so little water.
Here is a Manzanita lifting weights!
I think that this is the Alligator juniper below. It was tall and shady along one of the hiking trails we took. It's bark looks just like the photo...sharp and rough.
And finally the bark below is the underside of the roof (restored) of a traditional house for the Sinagua (meaning without water) Indians that started extensive agricultural communities in the valleys, on the hill sides and at the tops of hills and disappeared suddenly from the Arizona valleys many many years ago.



Each day we spent some time outside in spite of the cold weather. He is an outside guy. My walk on saturday was just down the road. Hubby took Xman for a "boatride."

Early on Saturday it was a real pleasure to watch him discover one of his favorite celestial bodies---the moon.
Here he is calling to his grandfather to come see this wonderful miracle.










