I bought an iOttie phone mount for my car a few months ago but didn't get around to installing it till this week. I wanted it so that I could use my cell phone as a car cam. I took it out to some unpaved Forest Service roads for a try out. It worked out ok as you can see below. The portrait position was more stable than the landscape but I like the landscape. I'm thinking that a little sandbag may improve things.
AzBarite
This is a hobby project that is very irregularly maintained. The subject matter ranges from local history to botany to geology. The area that gets the most attention is the Tonto National Forest near East Mesa, Arizona. The maps included below are interactive. Click on an icon for more information and a link to a photo. To see additional posts, page down.
Wednesday, October 28, 2020
Car Cam
West from Fish Creek Overlook on AZ88
South on Forest Service Rd 80
Adios
Saturday, April 25, 2020
Milkweed Map
The Tonto National Forest has been supporting the Monarch Butterfly migration by planting milkweed. Here in the Sonoran Desert the Mesa Ranger District and volunteer organizations (Friends of the Tonto Nation Forest and Southwest Monarch Study) have been working to increase the population of Desert (Rush) Milkweed (Asclepias subulata). Milkweed plants are critical to the Monarch Butterfly life cycle because the adults lay their eggs on the plant and the larvae only eat milkweed.
As a volunteer with Friends of the Tonto National Forest (FOTNF), I've participated in planting seedlings in the Tonto NF. Out of my own interest, I've planted milkweed seed in my home gardens and used a phone app to photograph and map milkweed plants.
Update: I added some points (black dots) to the map from Google Maps that I need to verify. I had originally saved them as "Labeled" locations in Google Maps. They don't have photos attached and I'm not sure of the location accuracy.
The photos below are of a Rush (Desert) Milkweed grown from collected seed.
I'm looking forward to collecting more seed this year once the milkweed plants start producing seed pods.
As a volunteer with Friends of the Tonto National Forest (FOTNF), I've participated in planting seedlings in the Tonto NF. Out of my own interest, I've planted milkweed seed in my home gardens and used a phone app to photograph and map milkweed plants.
Update: I added some points (black dots) to the map from Google Maps that I need to verify. I had originally saved them as "Labeled" locations in Google Maps. They don't have photos attached and I'm not sure of the location accuracy.
The photos below are of a Rush (Desert) Milkweed grown from collected seed.
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Rush Milkweed in Home Garden |
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Rush Milkweed in Home Garden |
Adios
Monday, April 13, 2020
Tortilla Creek and Hewitt Canyon Riparian Photopoint
The following are photos from Tortilla photopoint #1:
The next photos are from Tortilla #2:
Hiking up the streambed and hoping from rock to rock to cross the creek was tough at some points but it was nice cool day and a pleasure to be out.
Update:
The next week, we drove to Queen Creek and Hewitt Canyon to continue collecting photos of the riparian areas. We first drove out Hewitt Station Road on Forest Service Road (FSR) 357 to the turnoff to Hewitt Canyon and the Queen Creek crossing of FSR 172. We had two sites on Queen Creek: one at the road crossing and another a few hundred feet upstream where Hewitt Creek entered Queen Creek.
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Queen Creek at Road Crossing |
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Queen Creek at Confluence with Hewitt Creek |
We continued up Hewitt Canyon Road (FSR 172) and took photos at 3 sites along Hewitt Creek. The road was unpaved and rough in spots but was easily traveled with a high clearance pickup truck. We found the first two sites relatively easy but the directions to the third were a bit confusing. Once we found the third spot, its location was obvious due to the stone enclosure clearly seen from the road.
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Second Site on Hewitt Creek |
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Third Site on Hewitt Creek |
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Landmark for Third Site |
We got the photos at the right time. The temperatures the next were in the 90's and a brush fire near Hewitt Canyon had limited access to the area.
That may finish the photopoints for 2020 unless Apache Trail opens up beyond Fish Creek Canyon. I have the documents for Fish Creek and Lewis & Pranty Creek but the sites are relatively inaccessible until the road opens.
Adios
Saturday, February 22, 2020
Fern and Bryophyte Map
As you can see from the previous posts, I developed an interest this winter in shady micro-climate plants such as ferns, liverworts and mosses. The plants need moisture but seem to thrive in their own little niches here in the Sonoran Desert. I was originally mapping them in the plant category of my interactive map (Azbarite Map). Since I was interested in a finer subset of plants (ferns, liverworts, spike mosses and mosses), I decided to break them out into a separate map called "Ferns and Bryophytes".
The new map makes it much easier to locate specific data related to ferns, liverworts, spike mosses and mosses.
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Star Cloak Fern with Club Moss |
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Parry's Lip Fern with Liverwort |
The mapping process involved creating a new Epicollect5 project called "Fern Map" for field collection describing ferns, liverworts, spike mosses and mosses. Fern Map was then created in Google Maps using existing data filtered from the Azbarite Map data base. Additional new data is added to Fern Map through a new map layer.
The new map makes it much easier to locate specific data related to ferns, liverworts, spike mosses and mosses.
Tuesday, February 4, 2020
More Botanical Notes
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North facing boulders in dry stream bed |
Bryophytes were some of the first plants to emerge from ancient seas hundreds of millions of years ago and colonize dry land. Much like algae, bryophytes lack a vascular system for moving water and nutrients inside the plant. Ferns and spike mosses have vascular systems but also developed very early in the history of plants.
Here are some photos from recent walks.
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Liverwort with reproductive structures |
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Moss with reproductive structures |
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Parry''s Lip Fern |
And finally, a spike moss.
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Spike Moss (center) |
The weather is starting to warm up and rattlesnakes also enjoy boulders and canyon cliffs so I'll soon be moving on to spring wildflowers as long as I can see what's laying underneath them.
Adios
Adios
Wednesday, December 18, 2019
Trailcam (Heads & Butts)
I hiked out to swap the memory card in the trailcam this week. It turned out the location for the camera was too close to the trail and all I got was heads and butts. A horse and deer ambled by at night but they were so close to the camera that most was cut off. I went back the same day and moved the camera to another location. We'll see how that turns out.
Giving the camera a look |
Sunday, December 15, 2019
Some Botanical Notes
This winter I've developed an interest in Sonoran Desert plants that thrive in cool wet weather. These plants include ferns, spike-mosses, mosses and liverworts. We've had some cool wet weather this month and these plants seem to be doing well. They are generally found in small niche communities on north facing slopes or cliffs. Many of the plants prefer sheltered clefts in rocks and I've come across them on the bluffs east of Butcher Jones Beach near Saguaro Lake and in canyons on the north side of Usery Mountain. Mosses are bright green and abundant on boulders on the north side of Coon Bluff.
The spike-mosses are creeping plants that can form dense patches in wet areas. The leaves are only green during wet periods but curl inward and become dormant during dry periods.
Another cool weather, shade loving plant is the liverwort. Liverworts are unusual due their lack of leaves and vascular system. The plant consists of a flattened multi-celled structure containing green photosynthetic material (chloroplasts) and a single-celled rhizome for an anchor. The plants can form large mats in wet, shady areas but completely dry out in arid periods.
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Parry's Lip Fern - Canyon on north side of Usery Mountain |
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Star Cloak Fern - Bluff east of Butcher Jones Beach |
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Wright's Lip Fern - Bluff east of Butcher Jones Beach |
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Spike-Moss - Bluff east of Butcher Jones Beach |
Another cool weather, shade loving plant is the liverwort. Liverworts are unusual due their lack of leaves and vascular system. The plant consists of a flattened multi-celled structure containing green photosynthetic material (chloroplasts) and a single-celled rhizome for an anchor. The plants can form large mats in wet, shady areas but completely dry out in arid periods.
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Liverwort - Canyon north of Usery Mountain |
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Liverwort - Bluff east of Butcher Jones Beach |
The cool, wet weather has also refreshed the moss communities. The following photos were taken along some boulders on the north face of Coon Bluff near Phon D. Sutton Recreation Area.
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