Banks are way to flippin’ friendly lately. Somehow I ended up joining in and embarrassing myself. (Again). The teller had her eyes waaaay to wide open, eyebrows up high above her glasses wrinkling her forehead, big jack o’ lantern smile. Her smile stretched so big I truly thought she was trying to send me subliminal messages. Such as- “Get help, this isn’t my real smile.” After a few minutes the smile turned a little strained so I imagined the following- “I just passed gas behind this bullet proof glass and hope it doesn’t escape through the little speak hole.”Which made me laugh a little. It was fascinating to watch and you know when someone has an accent and you start speaking the same way… Well, I am finished with my transaction and say “have a nice day” opening my eyes wide and big ol’ smile. She was not amused. 
Just WOW! At Rincon Creek Ranch
Wow what a spectacular experience! We were treated to a luxurious stay at Rincon Creek Ranch for my niece’s wedding.
I must say the beauty and serenity of this place is nothing short of magical.
What they call “casitas” are beautifully furnished one and two bedroom homes.


Each Casita is different and a work of art.



Since my family was staying in the other casitas, I was able to visit them all and even picked up a few decorating ideas! Here are some interior views!






The views are spectacular here as it borders the Saguaro National Park Wilderness Area.



Then there are the Arizona skies which never disappoint as they provide the most beautiful sunsets and sunrises from our front porch view top of the hill view.




To top it off the proprietors Gretchen and Bill are beyond hospitable.

There are special touches everywhere such as a luxurious air bubble tub complete with four choices of bubble bath, thick bathrobes, candles and lighters hanging on pretty ribbons. The kitchen equipment is fully stocked and there was even basket of fresh eggs in the refrigerator!



On to the wedding. There are many special touches with the ranch as a beautiful backdrop.




Everywhere one looks there is something special and unique to see!






Rincon Creek Ranch was a much needed retreat. The family was still feeling the loss of our patriarch two weeks prior so the relaxing reflective atmosphere was extremely healing.


For me, well, I took the time to enjoy all that Arizona nature was showing off that weekend and thought my Dad may have had something to do with it after all.

Because of Rincon Creek Ranch I was able to celebrate my niece’s special day knowing that is what my dad would have wanted for his loved ones. It’s just that kind of place. Healing, romantic, fun, delightful, and very special. I highly recommend finding time or occasion to stay at this wonderful Ranch!

More fun below:








What a great experience!
Boots On The Ground In Patagonia
This weekend I found a way to get my “boots on the ground” like my daddy said to me the day he died. G packed the truck with all the picnic & hiking supplies along with gold panning, & first aid equipment ( just in case). We drove past the city limit to find a place I knew Dad’s boots had been. He had taken our family camping all over Southern Arizona and once we broke away from the freeway I started to feel lighter.
Finally the painful gravity pulling my soul out of my body started to lighten up as the miles rolled by. I thought about my Dad. I thought about driving with him enough miles for the Chet Atkins 8 track to repeat a few times. I hear his music in my head as the world rushes by. Oh how he loved this land. This was healing as I allowed myself to feel the pain of the loss of such a great man.
Soon we pulled in to the tiny town of Patagonia, AZ and I saw this amazing tree. The proprietor says it’s over 300 years old. I’m staring wondering how. How did this tree stay? (Why couldn’t you stay?) Daydreaming and imagining the secrets this tree knows I touch it with the respect it deserves. I highly recommend hugging a 300 year old tree.
Patagonia has a short street with a lot of cool old buildings. We decide to return when we feel like exploring at a later time.
Continuing south we know what we are looking for; Desert mountains, grasslands, fresh air, streams
We drop down toSan Rafael Valley and we are just a few miles from Mexico. You can see Mexico in the distance over G’s shoulder.
Finally the truck climbs high enough on forest roads to see my dad’s favorite tree, the Manzanita. It’s my favorite too. The world smells different here. Old, fresh, green, dusty…..
We drive up a long forest road to higher ground and find a good ol’ hollowed out tree to sit under for a picnic.
I decide to crawl inside this burnt out tree for no other reason than to see what it feels like to be INSIDE A TREE. It was EASY going in but once inside I can’t figure out how to get out without touching one of the thousand spiderwebs. There is no graceful way to exit and I am trying not to get eaten. G thinks it’s hilarious since he told me not to try it.
There are many abandoned mines in the Patagonia Mountains. Some of the mining towns have disappeared completely but there are a few left to explore. One adobe building and a graveyard remain here at Harshaw.


While I was taking these pictures an ant crawled up my pants leg and bit me. Just so you know (and the campers nearby know) why I was whooping and taking off my pants in broad daylight.
Harshaw Graveyard-
G read a book once about this area that took place in the 1800’s. A 9 year old boy had been thrown from a horse and died. Several years ago we found that young boy’s grave. For years we would return to make sure his grave was clean and well kept. We haven’t been back to this area for a while and were very happy to see that others have been taking care of it. For some reason that feels oddly comforting. Families still live in this area and some return to maintain their ancestor’s resting place. Gone but not forgotten. That’s the comfort for me today.




Putting my boots on the ground made all the difference today. I hugged a tree, smelled the fresh air, got bitten by an ant but NOT a spider, laughed hysterically, crunched through the fallen leaves, lost my sunglasses, brushed against the soft grass, touched my favorite Manzanita trees, imagined living in an old town, and mostly celebrated nature as my father taught me. Thanks Dad.
In memory of Jack born October 8, 1931 died October 14, 2016
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Because Socks, That’s Why
We discovered the most comfortable socks by Russell which are specific right and left foot. Worn properly they are super comfy. However, I do not have the kind of patience to match socks from the dryer (It’s kind of my thing). As long as they feel similar in texture I am great! Color & style doesn’t matter so there will be times when one is green and an anklet and one is white and a footie hidden down in my shoe.
G on the other hand has a very organized sock drawer. He even has ‘going to the doctor socks’ which still look brand new. It could be the reason I can’t wait until it is cool enough to wear boots. In the summer ONE HAS TO MATCH SOCKS because people can see (and are a bit judge-y).
Today G was talking with me while I was dressing and I couldn’t find the super comfy Russel R sock (so basically wearing two left socks…again). He’s laughing at me as I search my sock drawer and find L, L, L, L,… I mutter “how does this even happen?

G answers my rhetorical question very animated; “I’m reading a book where the detective thinks the dead girl was murdered. She was a runner and the evidence that she had been re-dressed was that the left and right socks were on the wrong feet. That theory wouldn’t work for you”.
Great, now I am thinking about getting murdered and no one would know. BECAUSE OF MY SOCKS!
The Bell
It’s 4am. I am sitting in THE most comfortable chair in the world outside my father’s bedroom and I hear the bell ring. I snap to attention to get him what he needs. I am so grateful for that bell and so happy he is still here for me to help. I place my hand on his back. I focus prayerful energy to his patchwork heart, my hand heats up and I simply know he will be OK today.
It wasn’t always that way with the bell. I really used to hate the sound of it. My first encounter with the call bell was because my brother had asthma. We shared a bedroom and a bell was given to me to wake the house at the first sign of wheezing. Oh I tried ringing it once or twice, but it seemed they took too long to get there, the bell was in my way. It was just much faster to drag him by his blue footie pj’s down the hall to the bathroom, fill it with steam, and climb on the counter to reach his inhaler out of the medicine cabinet all while yelling Mooooooommmm! at the top of my lungs. Still didn’t hate it yet, just didn’t have the time in my tiny impatient mind to use it.
It was actually my grandmother who I associate with my disdain for the bell.

The bell pictured above hung at the end of my grandparent’s sidewalk. For some reason my Grandmother would find the need to scold us whenever we were near that bell, even though we weren’t touching it! She would sternly lecture us that it was only for emergencies to call the workers. We felt angry and guilty (like when a patrol car pulls behind my car and I panic for no reason). She scolded that if we rang it we would be like The Boy Who Cried Wolf which is ironic when I tell you the rest of the story. Toward the end of her life she moved in with my parents. As older people sometimes do she became childlike and bratty. She couldn’t be left alone so there were times I had to grandma-sit. I was in college so I believed it would be a quiet time for me to study.

The grandma sitting started off by checking her water glass (Ice all the way to the top),finding the remote in her blankets so she could turn her TV up to ear piercing levels and making sure the blinds were the way she wanted. “I will be right outside the door.” I would shout while handing her the bell. As soon as I plopped down, opened a book and started to concentrate; ding-a-ling-a-ling-a-ling-a-ling-a-ling and I rushed in. “I need more ice” She would say. “YOU don’t put enough in!”
“Grandma, the ice cubes are full even poking out of the top, I can’t fit anymore in.” She wasn’t having it so I took the glass out to the hall, then brought it back. “That’s better.” She says while giving me a stern nod. She rarely drank the water. Sometimes the call of the bell was to open the blinds, minutes later to close them. Often times to find the remote. Once and a while she really did need something. I thought maybe she was lonely but she didn’t want me to stay in the room and she wouldn’t come out to the rest of the house. This scene repeated itself every 10 minutes or so throughout the day. Each time my butt hit the chair; ding-a-ling-a-ling-a-ling-a-ling-a-ling!! The bell. That damn bell.
Fast forward to today, and just like Quasimoto I have learned to love the bell. The frustrated young woman I was is replaced with the reality that the bell has always been a lifeline. As long as my dad can ring it, I know he is still here. I wait impatiently for the brassy sound or actually ANY sound. When I don’t hear it I check on him way too often. I know there will be a time when the bell is silent, when no one needs me to rush in and administer medication, fluff a pillow,comfort a child, or open blinds. I know someday I will need to summon a person to get ME ice (haha..my poor daughter). Until then I will rush in at the call of the little brass bell.
How Shocking!
I was electrocuted in Mexico. Shocking?
Not if you know me. It could have ended badly but I channel Wile E. Coyote regularly so I just went with it. I wish someone had filmed it so I could see the cartoon I picture in my head – my skeleton blinking while my hair stands on end and a loud buzzing noise. After it was over I kept looking up for a piano or an anvil to be speeding toward my head from above.
The Electrocution: I was standing at the rear of the RV washing sand off my feet reached out and grabbed the ladder for balance. The ladder sent 117 volts through me for about 6 seconds. All I kept thinking was let it go, let it go LET IT GO…which I did. Now that damn song is stuck in my head. Perhaps forever, who knows with electric shock.

This is the culprit. There is a beautiful view from this angle. Looks in code right?
I see my friends come running while I lay in the dirty puddle of water and am truly embarrassed. This is way too much real life attention for me. I am fine and now I keep thinking get up, get up GET UP! Which I do and notice a cramp in my foot is gone!

The cure for foot cramps is ELECTROCUTION! Who Knew?
It’s been 3 days now and the new thing I learned about electrocuting myself was that is not the just the voltage but the length of time. (Good information to have if you are standing in a puddle of water holding on to an electrified piece of metal) Luckily I didn’t hold on long enough for burns but the tingling stayed. It did effect the part of my brain that won’t allow me to sleep and I relive the event in my dreams. I need a just need a new dream catcher, this one is fried.
Update: I was just informed that one must die to be electrocuted, so I must correct myself that it was an electrical shock (because one must be accurate). Apparently. Unless you’re Bill Murray

Facebook KNOWS!
Morning rush, gulping coffee, brush hair, overly multitasking> notice toilet needs cleaning, squirt cleaner, hair brush makes earring fly into in toilet….WHAT?? Now I have to decide how much I like these earrings. DAmmit.
Fast forward to this afternoon and this add pops up on my Facebook 10 things to keep out of your toilet (It’s like Facebook KNOWS!)
Mt Lemmon Meanderings…
Today my parents have been married 65 years. Holy matrimony! I can’t even commit to a show on Netflix to binge watch. In their honor we decided to take a picnic to Mt Lemmon. We are so lucky to have this beautiful piney forest just minutes away from the hot desert floor. Along the way we spotted a few waterfalls in the 7 Cataracts area.


Tucson is around 2400 feet and in a few minutes we are pulling into Rose Canyon Lake at 7000 feet. We arrive at the lake early (but not too early, puleeze). It’s around 10 and there is a family excitedly walking up the trail toward us with a very full stringer of fish.
The approaching kids exclaimed loudly that they used worms, elaborating on all the gross details of putting a live worm on their hook. Of course we had an OBLIGATION to hear their fish story. They were showing off as local experts sharing their knowledge and establishing themselves as Rose Canyon Lake Royalty. Once at the bottom of the very easy trail we see the lake shining on this clear day.

The lake has a cement walking path on the right (South? I am all turned around up here! ) There is a nice a dock for fishing too. The cement walk and dock are full of giggling families. We turned left on the dirt trail and soon found a picnic spot. Voices carry across the water which make it so fun to hear the glee of the children as they celebrated their catch! We watched two men teach another grown man how to fish for the first time. Sheepishly he followed their instructions, made a beautiful cast and wham! Fish! He was so happy and sounded exactly like the children across the lake.

A few years ago we watched this mountain in horror from the valley below as most of the trees in this area burned. At night it looked like the crack in Amelia Pond’s room. (Random Dr. Who reference for my whovians)

I am now happy to report there are a lot of new trees beginning their young life. I know I won’t get to see the forest regrow my lifetime. I am just so happy for future hikers and future families that the forest will return to the glory I remember.

It’s not easy being a tree here on this granite mountain. Sometimes fancy roots are the only answer.

A breeze swirls around transporting the most delicious pine smell.
This is THE perfect place for a picnic.


After a while we head back down to the valley with a fresh sense of being. Beautiful day here at Rose Canyon Lake.
What do people live for?
Pokemon Go I Have Questions…

Watching the Pokemon craze on the news, I have questions Poke players.
The existential question; If a Pokestop exists and nobody is there to find it does it really exist?
The virtual reality question; When it rains at a Pokestop, does it rain in Pokeland?
The clueless question; How many Pokemon could their possibly be?
The rhetorical question; Why didn’t I think of something like this? (It’s GENUS!)


