Friday, December 30, 2022

The Fibonacci Moons Project

 


This project was conceived just after I had finished the "Month of Moons" project, about the time I was teaching HUM 201HN, a Grand Canyon University course on intersections between the arts, humanities, and sciences. The main student project in this course was to present a project that described some kind of intersection between art and science, using some artistic medium.

The scientific concept I was trying to describe was the Fibonacci sequence, which is connected to the Golden Ratio. It happens that the Fibonacci sequence, in which succeeding numbers are the sum of the two previous numbers (1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21 . . .), describes a spiral which can be seen in many natural structures (do a Google Images search on the Fibonacci sequence, and you'll see what I mean).


I'd intended to finish this project in a month (since I only needed 14 images), but in practice, it took me over a year.

I had several issues:

  1. The lens I was using (the M.Zuiko 14-150mm f4.0-5.6) proved difficult to focus in the dark. Since it didn't have a scale on the manual focus ring, I attempted to focus manually on the moon using the magnifying viewfinder, as suggested by sources. That method sometimes did not produce focused images. So, I used auto-focus whenever I could, but the autofocus was constrained by the position of the moon in the frame (if the moon were too close to the edge of the frame, it was impossible to get the AF to target the area). I didn't understand the magnitude of this problem until I began the compositing process.
  2. To get the images to composite correctly (using the Olympus Workspace feature), I shot at two focal lengths (150mm and 100mm), so that I could resize in Workspace. That issue, plus the limit on the number of photos that could be composited in Workspace, limited my options unacceptably.
  3. A few days per month, even in Arizona, were cloudy, plus, using my ephemeris program to plot the position of the moon in the sky sometimes made me miss the optimum dark time for shooting. Therefore, even the initial phase of the project took more than a month.
I discovered these issues in full during the compositing process, which I unwisely left until after the shooting process. Because of that, I spent a couple of months compositing in Workspace, then reshooting the out-of-focus images. Over the next several months, I continued to have problems 1 and 3 during the reshoots.

I finally was able to composite a complete image in GIMP, using the RAW files generated by my shooting process. Using GIMP gave me more control over image enlargement and placement. So, the end result is not optimal--I'd prefer to have the phases of the moon show more consistently throughout the spiral, and I would like to shoot these images in sequential order as well. So, let's call this project a first draft.

Thursday, December 1, 2022

Grandpa Does the Arizona Trail: Passage 4


Well, I finally hiked the section of Passage 4 from Patagonia to the Temporal Gulch Trailhead (about half of the passage) on October 29, 2022 (my birthday present). We dayhiked from the Temporal Gulch Trailhead, where we were dropped off by Ken of Ken's Shuttle Service (a very nice person). We got the information from Ken that this portion of the trail is in the process of a reroute, to avoid the dirt roads it is currently following, and to avoid the Mount Wrightson wilderness. In the process, it will also avoid going directly through Patagonia. In my opinion it would be a loss to stay out of the wilderness area, and Patagonia is a very nice town.

At the Temporal Gulch Trailhead, they've installed a number of informational signs--
you can see from the picture that there's a triptych of information about the trail itself, then to the right of the picture is a standalone sign commemorating the Native American heritage of the area; in this case, these are the ancestral lands of the Tohono O'odham people. What was interesting was that this sign was in Spanish, with some O'odham words. I looked around for an English translation, but didn't find one (I didn't look at the other side of the sign). I've been told that there should be both a Spanish and English version there, but I did find it odd that one colonial language should be represented, and not the other. Again, maybe I just missed the English side.

This section, as currently routed, is all on Forest Road 72, which becomes 1st Avenue going into Patagonia. The day was perfectly clear, around 65 degrees, with sweeping landscapes and great bits of small nature. About half way through the hike, we could see the town of Patagonia in the distance. To the north is Mount Wrightson. Though it's not wilderness, we did have a day in which we saw few other people before re-entering town. It's clear, as well, that the people of Patagonia appreciate hikers on the AZT. The town is a great mix of cowboy and mining history, with plenty of young families and (apparently) a growing gravel bike scene. Also, some great food and coffee.

Mount Wrightson
The town of Patagonia in the distance
Some small nature . . .

Signs of history . . .
Interesting mesquite . . .

Vista

\
Nice charity from townspeople . . .

"Downtown" Patagonia, across from the Stage Stop Inn.





Tuesday, November 15, 2022

Grandpa Does the Arizona Trail: Passage 1



And so it begins . . . Again. This iteration of my writing about my experience of the Arizona Trail starts, appropriately enough, on my 67th birthday, and with two grandchildren. So, it’s now “Grandpa does the Arizona Trail;” this is a far cry, and 23 years, from my first hike on the trail (Passages 23 and 24) in 1999, with Richard Duerden. It’s taken until retirement for me to redefine my basic goal of hiking the entire trail; I’d originally conceived this as something that I’d do in passage order, all the way through. Wiser heads have convinced me that Gramps is probably not up for that, and that I ought to, instead, fill in the gaps that are left from my 23 years of travel on it so far. I will still probably retrace some steps, as well as filling in the gaps, and I may not walk all the way, since some of these passages are bikeable.

I’ve got other goals as well this time around. First, I want to give back something—I plan to participate in trail management and restoration activities as I have the opportunity. Second, I want to acknowledge: the Arizona Trail Association has begun to highlight the fact that we walk on Native lands, and I want to learn about the Indigenous perspectives about the land, as well as meditating on what has been my academic specialty for the past forty years or so—non-fictional European travel narratives of the Early Modern Period (approximately 1500-1700). Though my focus has been on British narratives and collections, I’ve also examined the Iberian exploration and conquest narratives that dominate this region. I’ve looked at the ways that the Spanish and British conceived of their colonial projects, and considered their perspectives on new landscapes.

It’s no surprise that my academic specialty has become politically incorrect, but that’s the problem with history—it often fails to correspond to ideals of historical progress. It’s also the case that, for better or for worse, there is a syncretism between various perspectives on the land and its meaning. We do need to deal with what is, rather than recast history into what we would ideally like it to be. I would like to think more deeply about this troubled relationship.

Wow. That was philosophical/pedantic. To get back to goals—I’ve gotten interested once again in photography. In its digital incarnation, photography has become much more versatile, and I’d like to document my travel in photographs and video, as well as words. With new digital equipment, I can do that now. I can also be more connected, using social media. Let’s see how much all this purpose modifies itself as I go.

So, here we go, with Passage 1. In September 2013, in the course of another trip, Chris and I had driven to the Montezuma Pass Trailhead, which is the nearest vehicle approach one can make to the Mexican border (unless, of course, one is a contractor working on the Trump-era border fence). I began to hike down the trail from the roadside overlook, toward the Coronado Monument on the border. I was smart enough to notice that it would take too much time to get there.

 On October 28 of 2022, just as before, Chris and I had planned a trip to southern Arizona wine country, this time staying in Patagonia. On our way there, we stopped, as planned, at the pass, intending to hike to the border and back, a total distance of just under 4 miles (thus, the two initial miles of the trail).

 The day itself was perfect (as the panorama above shows). A temperature in the high 60s made hiking bearable; the trail was just rough and vertical enough to be moderately difficult. The crystalline beauty of the sky and the brightness of the sun obscured the fact that it was quite chilly in the shade. The desert scrub plant community characteristic of this this altitude featured piñons, scrub oak, yucca and cholla, as well as desert grasses (some of which may have been introduced or invasive). The cholla had either yellow tips or yellow fruits. A few wildflowers remained in bloom.



We saw a total of two groups, both at the trailhead parking area. The rest of the trip, we were alone. The trail winds down to the border, losing just under 1000 feet in altitude, providing panoramic views all the way to the end. Surprisingly, the trail (which may have been rerouted by fence construction) approaches the border from the northeast, so that many of the loops of the descent give a view of a broad swath of Mexico. Some small buildings seen from above are actually on the Mexican side of the border. In the absence of the high border fence, the border is essentially invisible. At the small obelisk monument that anchors the southern end of the trail, the ironies of the border become most apparent. The border fence has been built from what looks like the memorial boundary to just west of the small monument itself. The area immediately north of the border seems to have been graded (strangely, there is a bench at the top of a grade cut opposite the actual obelisk, suggesting that at one time there was a 30-foot or so descent by the trail from the viewpoint bench.) Now it is about a 15-foot bank.


The segment of fence lends a surreal air to the landscape. The wind hums through the bars of the fence, and the scale of the construction suggests a scene from “2001: a Space Odyssey.” This surreal air is not dissipated by the sight, about a mile to the west, outside the memorial boundary, of the interim double-high “wall of containers” currently being built by the state of Arizona. But the whole situation is incongruous. One warning sign at the entrance to the memorial warns individuals: “Do Not Flee from Law Enforcement.” A volunteer at the memorial office said that travel in the memorial was “very safe in the daylight.” The volunteer also mentioned that the Arizona Trail is at this point relatively highly monitored by state authorities and the Border Patrol. (I’m not sure what I think of hiking under surveillance when I do the rest of the passage.)

As I explore more fully, I'll enter more.

Here's the map of the hike from that day: https://hikearizona.com/dex2/profile.php?I=3&u=146&ID=46&start=15&MI=T200563#T__200563_______1


10.30.2023

View from Parker Canyon Trailhead, Looking east.
 Another birthday trip, this time southbound from the Parker Canyon Lake trailhead toward the border. The trip itself was about 3.2 trail miles total (so, 6.4 out and back). We went southbound from the Parker Canyon Lake Trailhead. The trailhead is one of the most scenic I've been to (outside of places like Yaki Point at the end of the South Kaibab trail through the Grand Canyon). It was great hiking for about 2 miles south (clear skies and temps in the low 70s), but about .84 miles southbound from the Scotia Canyon Trailhead, the trail is torn up (they seem to be decommissioning a two-track road with some small bulldozer), and sections are obstructed by deep ravines and downed timber. It is clear that there's construction going on, because the new AZT gates and construction concrete are cached at two spots where there are currently crude gates through barbed wire fences.

Past these fences we began to see bear sign/scat on the trail. As we walked the scat became more and more common and fresher. There was a significant crosswind and a fair amount of brush; we did have bear spray, but still felt a little exposed, as we wouldn't have in a larger party. So, at mile 3.2, still seeing scat, we turned around.



There is a windmill with solar panels, shown but not labeled on the Route Scout map. However, the official Arizona Trail map (the 2023 official PDF mapbook) places the windmill at Mile 17.1, about 3 miles from the Parker Canyon Lake Trailhead. It is actually at mile 18.1 (about 2 miles from the trailhead), if one is using the miles marked on the official trail map.


The trail itself winds from some Sonoran grassland upland that looks somewhat like California, down through a set of canyons, climbing up toward Miller Peak and the Miller Peak Wilderness north of the Coronado National Memorial. The land around the trail from Parker Canyon Lake looks a lot like historic ranch country, given the grasslands and the water-bearing canyons that bisect it. The cow skull we saw, carefully set on a cut stump, indicates that cattle have been run here in the recent past, and the bear sign suggests wildness. The piñons, junipers, and live oak woods in the canyon bottoms parallel the creek, and the trail is bisected by downed timber and washouts. The windmill, an mixture of old (the windmill) and new (solar panels, which now apparently run the water pump for the tank), make it feel as though the 19th century has met and married the 21st.

 Here’s the Route Scout map and triplog from that day: https://hikearizona.com/map.php?TL=210578

 As of October 30, 2023, I’ve now done approximately 5 miles of this 20-mile passage.








Wednesday, September 1, 2021

Maricopa Trail: Gilbert-Queen Creek-San Tan


Here's the Maricopa Trail online map for this section.  The first part of this ride is documented in the Mesa Canals 14 post (a ride to Bergie's Coffee Shop in downtown Gilbert).  The map above goes from the turnoff point to Bergies on the Consolidated Canal, to where the Trail crosses the Loop 202 South.

Most of this part of the trail winds with the canal through new subdivisions.  The road crossings are generally safe, though there is at least one complicated crossing, I believe at Chandler/Williams Field Road, where it is necessary to wait for two stoplights.

Gilbert has landscaped and graded these canal paths well, and it is possible to ride on either side most of the way.  North of Elliot Road to the Bergies turnoff, however, riders will want to be on the West Bank of the canal; the east bank is blocked by some SRP structures.

At one time, much of this section must have looked like the section on the Pima-Maricopa Indian Community:  mostly farm fields and wide vistas.  Now, however, it is far more closed-in with surrounding subdivisions.  It is well-used, but not to the overly-trafficked point.

Click here for a short video on You Tube that gives a quick sense of this section of the trail (my action cam videos are still in test/learning mode).


Tuesday, August 31, 2021

Maricopa Trail: Scottsdale-Granite Reef-Mesa and Filling Blanks






Finally, the second installment:  this one covers most of the Scottsdale-Granite Reef-Mesa map (for which I'm now embedding links in the appropriate posts), though the Prelude post has more of it, and I still need to do the bit from Granite Reef at Bush Highway-Power Road to Usery Mountain Park (that will be added when the weather cools).

The two maps above show my routes on April 9, 2021 when I finally rode again the section of the South Canal from its intersection with the Eastern Canal at McDowell Road to the intersection point with the Consolidated Canal, and a new (to me) section from Hayden Road to the Mesa Landfill (on tribal land near SR 87).   Both of these routes were done with Chris; if I can ever get my action cam to work right, I'll have pictures and video, which I'll post. 

The top section is one that I've done before in the Mesa Canals series (posts 7 and 12), but it was good to do again.  The The South Canal is the north side of the fork intersection with the Consolidated Canal, and immediately goes down a steep slope.  Once down the slope, there is an underpass at Gilbert Road, before the canal grade goes through Lehi.  There's a surface crossing at McKellips Road, as there is again at Horne street (watch the traffic).  The trail skirts Mesa's Park of the Canals, before connecting with the Consolidated Canal just north of Brown Road.

The bottom map is a ride done May 31, 2021.  Most of this stretch is over the Pima-Maricopa Indian Community, and skirts farm fields, where we saw much wildlife, including a rattlesnake and some burrowing owls.  As with the South Canal stretch between McDowell and Granite Reef, this route feels like the country, though roads cross and there are other travelers (including riders of gravel bikes, who are apparently using the Maricopa Trail as a shortcut from Scottsdale to SR 87 (the Beeline Highway).  We stopped just before riding past the landfill, which was not aesthetically pleasing.  According to the map, the Arizona Canal skirts the northern edge of the landfill before curving back down to a surface crossing (!) of the Beeline Highway.  See the Prelude post for the Maricopa Trail section southeast of the Beeline.

So, this fills in one blank of this section (the big curve to the Consolidated Canal).  The next blank is the trail (near Hawes Loop) that leads to Usery Mountain Park.


Tuesday, May 4, 2021

Maricopa Trail: The Prelude (Scottsdale-Granite Reef-Mesa)


The Scottsdale-Granite Reef Map

This is starting more slowly and weirdly than I thought it would.  When the Maricopa Trail was announced several years ago, I started collecting maps, planning to do a project in the next year to cycle the whole trail.  But things change on the Maricopa County Parks website:  The Maricopa Trail connects in spots to the Sun Circle Trail, which I first became aware of around 8 or 9 years ago, and the maps have been changing and going away from their original website homes to different places.  So, now, the first part of my task is downloading the new maps and ordering them in my personal file.  Here's the current website home of the maps:  https://www.maricopacountyparks.net/park-locator/maricopa-trail/trail-maps/.

Chris and I thought we'd be able to cycle most of this together as well, but in October 2020, Chris injured her knee and has been rehabbing since.  She can ride now (with her new new bike [a long story]) but is not up to the multi-mile trails or the rougher park routes yet.

So . . . on March 28th of this year, we planned a shakedown trip of about 4 3/4 miles one-way from the Granite Reef Dam parking area on Power Road/The Bush Highway to the crossing of SR 87 (the Beeline Highway) along the Arizona Canal.  Here's a short test video (this was also a shakedown of my new action cam).  What we found:  the trail follows the southern shore of the canal all the way to SR 87.  It's also a relatively complicated and not well-signed route from the Bush Highway parking area past Granite Reef Dam, over a bridge, across the dam spillway, to the Arizona Canal.  Once on the canal path, however, the desert is open and relatively deserted (though we met several gravel bike riders, apparently cruising over from the Beeline).  Great views of the Pima-Maricopa native lands, as well as Red Mountain in the distance.  There's little noticeable elevation gain or loss.  It was also a lovely, sunny day, though a little hot (this is probably too hot for riding in full summer).

On April 11, we took another ride out the South Canal from near our home.  Starting from just past Gilbert road, the actual distance we rode on the Maricopa Trail was about 3.8 miles.  I've biked this stretch many times (see my Mesa Canals entries--7 and 12), as well as searching for the marker for the historic Lehi Crossing (Mesa Canals 1).  This stretch has more traffic, but also gets the Mesa city dweller out of town and into the scenery.

And so it begins (with a whimper) . . . my attempt to ride around the whole of the Maricopa Trail by the Spring of 2022.  The next challenge:  map reading.  It turns out the the spur from Granite Reef to Usery Mountain Park goes through a Tonto National Forest area locally known as Hawes Loop.  Should be interesting, though maybe not in the heat and snake mating season.

Thursday, April 29, 2021

Bike Touring with Google Maps--Palumbo Family Vineyard, Temecula, CA

 


We took our mountain bikes to California when visiting family after getting vaccinated.  The main purpose of the trip was to see the grandkids under controlled outdoor conditions.  Since we could not stay with family, we found a beyond-excellent AirBnB, Rusty Fork Ranch, in the wine country around Temecula, about half an hour from an in-law family cabin.  It was just a wild hair--bike to vineyards as we had during the wine-country tour that we had done in Sonoma in 2018.  On that trip, though, despite my extensive route-planning and saving routes on Strava (not a complete success), we sometimes found ourselves on unacceptably busy roads.

So, this time, Chris said, in essence, "No riding on arterial roads with lots of traffic."  As well, the shoulders on many California roads are not what I would consider sufficient.  This wine country is also rolling, with a number of steep short hills (over 10% gradient).  So we asked our Rusty Fork host, Tyler, for a recommendation--a winery reachable by gravel road, off arterial highways, around 5 miles from the Rusty Fork.  He suggested the Palumbo Family Winery, which included a stretch on the gravel Via Fernando.

Instead of using paper maps or an app like Strava, I just entered Via Fernando on Google Maps.  That indicated a route that included only one quarter-mile stretch of arterial road (with shoulders--the Anza Road section on the map above).  Google Maps worked effectively, getting us to Via Fernando nicely; at that point, I entered the address of Palumbo Family Vineyards, and charted a course from the current location.  Perfect.

If I'd known how relatively easy using Google Maps was to find decent routes while biking, I'd have used it more extensively in 2018.  Especially helpful was the verbal direction function, which I turned on, and just put my phone back in my pocket.  It let me know what turns were coming up, and which way to go.

The Palumbo Family Vineyard was excellent in itself:  we arrived just as the tasting room opened (under COVID rules, there's only a pickup of glasses/bottles at the window, then tasting outside only, socially-distanced), and treated ourselves to a flight of reds, from which we picked two bottles to buy. Superb! (I won't tell which wines here; if you like reds, try them for yourselves.)

Just a few notes on the route:  Mountain bikes or e-bikes might be in order if you don't care to climb grades up to 11% with a high-geared road bike; though the grades are short, they are quite steep, so gear down early.  Also, be sure to bring enough water to make it for about 5 miles (the actual route is 8.95 miles from and back to the Rusty Fork).  Palumbo has water available, but there's nothing in between.  Be sure to bring something to pack the wine back in!