Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Fort Rucker. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query Fort Rucker. Sort by date Show all posts

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

IN SEARCH OF THE CHIRICAHUA SNOW

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WE CROSS A STREAM OF MELTING SNOW WATER

Well, let’s get off the future Florida options and get ourselves back to the here & now in good old Arizona.  Since arriving at the Ranch a couple weeks ago we basically haven’t done much and have hardly left the property.  Today, we went in search of ‘snow’.

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From the first day we rolled into the Sulphur Springs Valley I noticed a fair bit of snow in the distant Chiricahua Mountains.  Had a nice sunny day going for us so we loaded up the Pheebs and headed for the snowy peaks.  Wanted to get Pheebs out playing in the snow plus I was curious about the damage caused by the devastating forest fires early last summer.

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PHEEBS CHECKS OUT A HERD OF CATTLE ALONGSIDE THE ROAD  

North of Elfrida we turned right on Rucker Canyon road and headed east for the Chiricahua Mountains.  Could see a fair bit of snow had already melted but we didn’t let that deter us.  This is familiar territory for me, having made about half a dozen trips into Rucker Canyon over the past 4 years.  One of my favorite places.  Anyone typing ‘Mary Kidder Rak’  or ‘Fort Rucker’ into our blogs search bar can read of our trips to old Camp Rucker and Mary Kidder Rak’s homestead.  Mary Kidder Rak wrote the book, ‘A Cowman’s Wife’ and after reading the book a few years ago, her and Charlie’s old homestead took on a nice bit of meaning for me.

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CROSSED A FEW MOUNTAIN STREAMS TODAY

We made our way along the winding and scenic gravel road up into Rucker Canyon.  Didn’t stop at the Fort or Homestead today but rolled on by into Tex Canyon.  We saw evidence of fire damage along the road from near Fort Rucker all the way into Tex Canyon.  Not severe damage and you had to look hard to see the burn marks at the base of some trees.  Overall, everything looked fine with no change to the great scenery.

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THIS HILLS WERE ONCE FORESTED WITH 'PINE TREES, AGAVE, PRICKLY PEAR CACTUS, MESQUITE TREES, ETC.

About 10 miles past the Fort we did begin to notice whole hillsides off to the east that had been burnt.  In some places right up to the road we were driving on.  Must have been quite a fire line they had along this road because the fire was beaten back and never jumped across the roadway.  We also noticed there was not a speck of snow to be seen anywhere.

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IN THIS AREA THE FIRES SWEPT DOWN THOSE HILLSIDES AND WAS STOPPED AT THE ROAD IN THE FOREGROUND

Made a U-turn and headed back to the Fort Rucker area & made a right turn heading up to a camp ground we knew to be at the end of a dead end road.  Still no snow and we began to realize we were not going to find any either.  The snow was on the higher peaks to the North. 

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A CURIOUSLY GREEN TIPPED SET OF ROCKS ALONG A ROCKY RIDGE

Last time I had been up this road was last winter when I led a couple car loads of Bisbee hikers into the area to scout out some new trails for their Mule Team Hiking Club.  You can read my post about that day here at….MULE TEAM.

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ALWAYS BEAUTIFUL SCENERY IN ANY MOUNTAIN RANGE

This Rucker campground is really secluded and we have never seen anyone here.  A mountain stream runs right through it and it is completely forested with tall Pine trees.  It is also at the extreme end of the road.  Picnic tables, BBQ grills, steel containers for food and garbage.  Keeps the Bears away.  Wouldn’t recommend bringing a big Motorhome up the road but truck campers, Class B campers, and small Class C’s would be just fine.  I think smaller 5th wheels would be fine too.

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A LAST LOOK AROUND……. AND THEN WE WERE GONE 

Time was getting on so we slipped quietly back down Rucker Canyon road and out of the Chiricahua Mountains into the long ranging & rolling grass fields of Leslie Canyon.  Just another super great scenic drive.  By 3:30 we were back at the Ranch and an hour later I had the chores done for another day.

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Ranch dog Gleeson stayed for a sleep over last night and Pheebs thought that was pretty special.  I thought it was pretty special too:))  And, who knows what Motor is thinking half the time.  Pheebs really gets along well with Charlie the Cat over in the Ranch house too.  But then again, Pheebs just gets along with everything……..:))

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Couple things regarding Monday night’s post.  I mistakenly put in our own link for Deb’s FIND AN OUTLET.  I have since corrected that.  Thanks Pat:))  Question about where we buy our travel insurance….Canada.  Wild Blue Yonder left a very informative comment on Monday’s post about medical insurance and dealing with hospitals, etc.  Thank you….couldn’t seem to locate your blog site.  Another question about family members.  When I referred to two family members left I meant my Aunt and Uncle.  Yes, I have one Son and 3 Grand Children.    But, that’s a whole blog or two in itself which I may write about at some point in the future.

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TRYING TO GET PHEEBS TO POSE FOR A PICTURE

Three new Blog Followers to welcome today. Kathleen, AVERY'S WANDERINGS, and Mary Sprow. Welcome aboard and thanks for reading our blog.  It’s you folks who give me the inspiration at the end of each day to keep the blog current on a daily basis:))

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ROLLING HOME THROUGH SCENIC LESLIE CANYON

GROANER’S CORNER:(( Five-year-old Becky answered the door when the census taker came by. She told the census taker that her daddy was a doctor and wasn't home because he was performing an appendectomy.
"My," said the census taker, "that sure is a big word for such a little girl. Do you know what it means?"
"Sure do! Fifteen-hundred bucks, and that doesn't even include the anesthesiologist!"

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-Tourists see the world, travelers  experience it.
- Home is where your pet is:))
BAYFIELD BUNCH PHOTO ALBUMS https://picasaweb.google.com/117858411710794543295
The only thing better than right now  will someday be the memories of
right  now...AL.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

WE ARE AT THE RANCH….BUT OUR JEEP IS 63 MILES AWAY:((

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FORT RUCKER IN THE CHIRICAHUA MOUNTAINS

(This is Monday’s blog despite Tuesday’s date)

There is something about the crowing of a Rooster in the early morning hours that just kind of puts a nice spin on the beginning of any day.

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HEADING FOR LESLIE CANYON

Late getting to the computer tonight so I am going to try and make this short or I will fall asleep before I finish it for sure.

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From reading my blog over the years Aunt Jean had a few places in the area she wanted to see this week and one of the them was Mary Kidder Rak’s home in the Chiricahua Mountain’s Rucker Canyon.  Decided to take the Jeep in case we got into a little ‘off roading.’  Of course that meant Kelly having to ride in the back again but she was able to catch up on a bunch of her reading.

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BEAUTIFUL LESLIE CANYON

The Ranch is on the west side of the Swiss Helm Mountains so we decided to take the Leslie Canyon route to Rucker which swings around the southern end of the Swiss Helms through the beautiful sweeping grasslands of Leslie Canyon.  With big white puffy clouds in the deep blue Arizona sky we had a perfect morning’s drive.  Air was on the cool side but warm in the Jeep.

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SCENIC RUCKER CANYON

Jean was anxious the see the tall green mountain forests I have often described in my posts and you can bet I was anxious to show them to her.

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LOOKS LIKE ONE OF THOSE ARIZONA MOOSE BUFFALOS 

With long lazy cloud shadows playing across the distant mountain sides around us we finally made the swing out of Leslie Canyon eastwards into the higher altitudes of Rucker Canyon.  As soon as we began our ascent from the Valley floor the landscape began to give way to taller trees and early signs of green forests to come.  Tall Sycamore and Cottonwood trees began appearing.  Agave and Prickly Pear Cactus were abundant as were taller Mesquite trees, Juniper, and scrub Pines and Junipers.  Crossed a trickling mountain stream, dodged a few cows on the road and just kept climbing our way further up the Canyon. 

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LOVE THESE MOUNTAIN FORESTS

It was apparent Jean was really enjoying herself as we skipped along the winding dirt road leaving a huge trail of dust in our wake.  She had many questions and I had many answers.  It is a part of Arizona I love and have spent time in these past 5 winters.   I have done a fair bit of reading about the areas history.

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SPLASHING THROUGH SOME MOUNTAIN STREAMS

We arrived at the parking area where old Fort Rucker and Mary Kidder Rak’s house remain hidden from view in a line of green Mesquite trees a short distance from the road.  Anyone typing Fort Rucker or Mary Kidder Rak into my search bar will find my posts from half a dozen previous visits to this historic spot.  Mary Kidder Rak wrote several books over the years and it was A COWMAN'S WIFE that so impressed me a few years ago.

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ON THE GROUNDS OF OLD FORT RUCKER

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The silence at old Fort Rucker is overpowering if you take the time to listen.  The beauty here is also overpowering if you take the time to see and appreciate it.  How nice to be here with my Aunt Jean.  And how nice to be able to show her such a special tranquil and peaceful place.

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OUTSIDE THE OFFICER’S QUARTERS

We walked the short lane to the dry creek bed and gingerly made our way across the scattered rocks and sandy bottom.  The old barn and original wooden corrals were before us as we headed left onto the grounds of what once was a bustling military camp back in the 1800’s.  Hard to imagine all the soldiers bustling about on these very grounds we were walking.  A few reader boards had been installed years ago so we stopped to read each one as we made our way along old and long forgotten grown over pathways.  The camp’s Bakery building is still standing as well as a section of wall from the army commissary.  An old water tank and a small adobe officers quarters bear silent reminders of the way things were a hundred and thirty years or so ago.  Indian Chief Geronimo had been through here and captured east of the Chiricahua mountains in Skeleton Canyon. The troops who captured him had left from here.

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THESE READER BOARDS TELL THE FORT’S HISTORY

Despite the cool winds blowing we made our way to the old wooden poll barn near the Mary Kidder Rak house.  Having read Mary’s book about her life and hard times at this very spot it was easy for me to imagine all the things I had read about.  I could see the many Indians, cowboys and drifters who had come to her door.   I could imagine their old car sitting by the barn.  The many cattle they had, their horses, and so much more.  It was all once right here.  

Made our way along a warn path from the barn and entered the silent and slowly crumbling house through an open front door.  I am always struck by the tiny rooms with their different levels.  I could see the warm kitchen with Mary’s cooling pies sitting on the window ledge.  The fireplace where she once set the walls afire.  The root cellar outside where she kept supplies not only for her and husband Charlie, but other passing strangers as well.   And then there is the impressive big blue room with a fireplace at one end.

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MARY KIDDER RAK’S HOUSE

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IN MARY’S KITCHEN LOOKING AT THE WINDOWS WHERE APPLE PIES WERE COOLED

How nice it was for me to be back to a place I have read so much about.  How nice to see the adventuress spirit of my Aunt Jean taking everything in and enjoying it all.  Like myself, Jean is a history buff as well with a spirit of the old West in her.  A determined lady with a will and persistence much akin to Mary Kidder Rak herself.

From the house we were soon making our way back around the old barn through tall dried grass.  Jean remarked it has been years since she has enjoyed walking through tall grass like that.  That made me feel good:))

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CHECKING OUT SOME GOURD LIKE THINGS FOUND GROWING ON THE GROUND

After walking the short distance back to the Jeep I always take a last glance back with the same thought in my mind each time I leave this area of many memories .  I wonder if I will ever be back here again.

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WALKING BACK TO THE JEEP

Before leaving Rucker Canyon we slipped up one other road where I knew the tall Ponderosa Pine trees lived right next to a bubbling mountain stream.  This was the area of mountain forest Jean had been wanting to see and we all marveled at the beauty as we turned off the Jeep’s engine and listened to the melting snow waters of a small stream.  Gurgling and bubbling along it tumbled it’s way over rocks and boulders from tall snow capped mountains to the North.

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STOPPED IN A MOUNTAIN STREAM CHECKING OUT SOME CATTLE

The afternoon was getting on so we pointed the Jeeps nose down the mountain and headed for the Valley floor below.  Crossed a few more mountain streams, waved at some cows along the roadside, slowed for a few curves, kicked up a lot of dust and eventually we made it out to the center of Sulphur Springs Valley where we finally reached highway 191 about 5 miles north of Elfrida.  And, then our day’s fun activities abruptly changed.

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SAY, HAVE I MENTIONED HOW MUCH I LOVE ARIZONA:))

As soon as I pulled away from the dirt road’s stop sign making a left hand turn onto the pavement I knew something was wrong from not only the sound coming from the Jeep but by the way the Jeep was suddenly handling.  I knew instantly……flat tire!!!!

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Managed to quickly get the Jeep pulled over on the flat shoulder of the opposite side of the road.  Yep, the rear passenger side tire was flatter than a pancake.  Oh well, no problem I thought because I had changed this very same tire a year ago when we had a flat.  Kelly located the bottle jack and tire iron while a swore a bit under my breath.  Couldn’t swear too darned loud you know because my Aunt was there.

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Slipped the bottle jack under the axle and loosened all the tires normal studs….except one.  All our wheels have one locking nut on each wheel to prevent theft supposedly.  It requires a special tool to unlock that one nut and remove it.  No problem, I had that special tool but when I went to use it the locking nut was totally immovable.  It had obviously been put on way too tight by an inexperienced tire person.  I wrenched and wrenched at that stubborn nut with the tire iron until eventually I stripped the the cheaply made mechanism.  That was it….we were dead in the water with no way to get the tire off.

A helpful Forest Service worker stopped and tried his luck but the nut was toast.  Had a compressor in his work truck so he tried pumping up the tire that but it would not hold air.  In the meantime Kelly and Jean were outside the Jeep with Kelly working her cell phone contacting our roadside service provider, COACHNET.  Took awhile to get the girl on the other end to understand exactly where we were but eventually things got figured out and a tow truck was dispatched from Bisbee.  Kelly also called a Jeep dealership in Sierra Vista for advice.

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NICE OF THIS FELLOW TO STOP AND TRY TO HELP…WE HAD SEEN HIM WORKING ABOUT AN HOUR EARLIER IN RUCKER CANYON

The winds were picking up and it was cold there beside the road so Kelly also phoned a neighbor of Jeanie & Ray’s wondering if he could come out and pick them up.  Doug was immediately in his truck heading the 14 miles to our location arriving about 20 minutes after Kelly called.  Aunt Jean and Kelly went with Doug back to the Ranch and I stayed with the Jeep to await the big flat bed truck which arrived about 20 minutes after the girls had left.

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THIS FLAT BED DRIVER AND I WERE BORN THE SAME MONTH OF THE SAME YEAR BUT I GOT 23 DAYS ON HIM:)) 

Didn’t take the fellow long to lower his flat bed, hook onto the Jeep and pull it up onto the truck, level it out and snug it down.  We had some paper work to do in the cab of the truck and then it was off to the Ranch where the driver dropped me off.  Because of the stripped lockable lug nut on the wheel the Jeep had to stay on the truck and be taken to the Jeep dealer in Sierra Vista some 63 miles away.  The garage said that lock and tire would have to be taken off by a technician.  Kelly had made all the arrangements with the garage via phone so needless to say we are going to have them replace all 5 of those ridiculously stupid locking nuts with ordinary tire bolts.  We will head to Sierra Vista with Jeanie & Ray’s truck in the morning to pick up the Jeep as soon as things are repaired.

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THE FLAT BED DRIVER DROPS ME OFF AT THE RANCH

While in Sierra Vista Tuesday we hope to continue our sight seeing to Ramsey Canyon and CORONADO PEAK.  Been some talk about popping into the Texas Road House for some good old mashed potatoes and gravy for AL too:))

Well, for starting out to do a short post I sure have run off at the fingertips again:((  Wish us luck at the Jeep dealer Tuesday.

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OUR LITTLE JEEP HEADS TO SIERRA VISTA WITHOUT US:((

The Last Paragraph: Some posts roll off my keyboard with ease while others turn out be a real grind.  If I write my blog as a simple diary or journal of the day’s events I consider that an easy and reasonably safe uncontroversial post.  If I throw some creativity and humor into it I consider the post a fun challenge.  If I include personal thoughts, feelings and opinions, I consider it a post of substance. Those ‘substance’ posts can be difficult to write for obvious reasons.  It is always an everyday challenge as a daily blogger to come up with something new, something different, something interesting and sometimes, something exciting.  For me, repetition is an arch enemy and always a concern every time I sit down at the computer.  Some folks consider Jigsaw or Crossword puzzles a challenge, others a game of Solitaire.  For me, it’s the daily challenge of putting an interesting post together in a manner readers will enjoy reading.  And, for me, that is what blogging is all about and why each and every day I sit myself down at my keyboard……….10-4:))     

GROANER’S CORNER:((  Middle age is when you are warned to slow down by a doctor instead of a policeman.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
-Tourists see the world, travelers  experience it.
- Home is where your pet is:))
BAYFIELD BUNCH PHOTO ALBUMS https://picasaweb.google.com/117858411710794543295
The only thing better than right now  will someday be the memories of
right  now...AL.