I often painted fragments of things because it seemed to make my statement as well as or better than the whole could.
~Georgia O’Keeffe
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I often painted fragments of things because it seemed to make my statement as well as or better than the whole could.
~Georgia O’Keeffe
Want to sharpen your senses with more great shots? Check out DeliciousBaby Photo Friday!
Prickly Pear farms dotted the horizon as we made our way south into Baja, California. I had never seen a crop so thorny that everyone said could be so delicious.
Nopal cactus or prickly pear is native to Mexico and has served as a staple food and healing plant for thousands of years, perhaps as many as 20,000 years ago with the first man to arrive in Mexico. Native Indians used it as food, mainly during drought years where it became essential to the survival of the people in the region and their cattle and livestock. The juice from the pads of this plant were also used to soothe wounds, stiffen cloth, purify water, waterproof pain, strengthen mortars and as a hedge. And, on top of all this, it’s also great eating! Both the “heart” or red flower (the fruit called the tuna) can be eaten, along with the prickly pad itself.
In Mexico, nopal is eaten in many ways: raw or cooked in salads, in soups and stews, grilled, as a base for ice cream and even as a beverage. We enjoyed ours in the form of a salad, served as an appetizer in Catavina, a little town in Baja.
So tasty–muy bueno. Salud!
Mexican Nopal Salad
How to: Cut onions, tomatoes and chili peppers into very small pieces and mix together in a large bowl. Add a few drops of lime and water and mix into a sauce. Boil the nopal pads, clean (remove all prickers) and cut into cubes, drain and add to sauce. Serve the salad on the side with your favorite Mexican dishes, like the delicious ceviche we enjoyed!
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My first trip to Mexico was a three day excursion to Baja, California. I was in awe of the rich colors, the desert, the beauty of it all.
Dying flowers against an orange wall
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For such a small place Catavina gets a lot of attention! Located on Baja Highway One between El Rosario and the Bay of L.A. junction, travelers have loved Catavina for many reasons over the years, and not just as a place to stop for gas on a long stretch of highway.
Located in the middle of the Desierto Central de Baja California, Catavina is a combination of gigantic granite boulders, unique vegetation and white sand. Hundreds of species of cacti and desert plant, many of which are endemic—like the boojum–seem almost artfully arranged between the boulders along dry river beds.
Another reason to visit Catavina is to see the cave paintings. Reported to be between 8,000 and 10,000 years old, these amazingly intact and vibrant paintings tell the story of indigenous life—both human and animal—that existed in this region.
It was awe-inspiring imagining what might have been in this very spot many, many years ago. The cave paintings are a hidden gem that we were fortunate to see. If you are interested in visiting the caves, inquire at the La Pinta Desert Inn. Our tour company, Andiamo Travels, handled our visit but I heard that guides can be arranged.
‘Cause I’m as free as a bird now
And this bird you can not change
On my recent trip to San Diego and Baja, California I saw a few really cool birds. Here are a few of them:
Peregrin Falcon – Torrey Pines State Park, San Diego
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“Touch it. Touch it. Touch it!” That’s what the naturalist yelled at me to do, on a boat in the middle of Scammon’s Lagoon near the town of Guerrero Negro in Baja, Mexico.
So that’s exactly what I did. I stuck my hand out over the water, and just at that moment, the whale flipped on her side and headed under our boat. As her fluke flew up into the air, my fingers grasped it. For one brief moment, I held a whale by the tail.
“I’ve got a whale by the tail,” I hollered at my eight comrades aboard our “panga,” a small fishing boat used to observe these giant mammals—literally—at arm’s length. In one’s lifetime, how often do you get to say that and have it be the honest to goodness truth?
Spending half a day surrounded by 2,000 gray whales was the high point of our recent trip to Baja, Mexico. Karla, our Andiamo Travel tour guide, told us that a record 922 babies had been born in the lagoon this year, and they were keeping company with nearly 1,000 adults. Sure enough, just looking out on the horizon—at any given moment—we could count not one, not two, not three….but at least a dozen whale spouts. Unbelievable!
Each fall, gray whales travel 5,000 miles from the Arctic Ocean to the warm lagoons of Baja. They arrive late December in the shallow protected waters to court, mate, give birth and care for their babies. Mothers and calves remain the longest in the lagoons, until April, when they take their young back to feed in the rich, cold, Arctic waters.
During their time in Baja, male whales show off to eligible females by breeching or throwing their entire body into the air while mamas frolic with their babies in the turquoise water. Although the number of human observers is strictly limited, having an opportunity for a close encounter with one of the many “friendlies” is a huge draw for two-legged mammals, like us.
When you consider that our boat was dwarfed by even the baby whales, you would think we’d be scared by the prospect of tour bus-sized whales at play in, around and under our boat. But the truth the only thing any of us felt was sheer excitement to be in such close proximity to these amazing animals.
We spent a few bliss-filled hours watching as the whales breached, spy-hopped, rolled, sprayed, flapped their flukes, and let their curiosity get the better of them…because it was obvious they were just as interested in checking us out as we were them.
Hanging out in Mexico with mamas of the sea and their amazing babies was just the ticket for this northwestern girl. It was an experience I’ll never forget!
San Diego at sunset.The sky lights up in colors of saffron and salmon. Palm trees form silhouettes against a blue backdrop, and everything within eyesight is set aglow.
San Diego Belmont roller coaster at sunset
Sunset and light at Mission Beach
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Please don’t stand between me and my morning coffee, but you can have my soda. Soda has never done much for me and part of the reason is I don’t like the taste of plastic or metal with my beverage.
On our recent trip to Baja, Mexico I got to sample Mexican Coke and almost changed my tune. It was pretty darn good.
Mexican Coke is Coca-Cola that is made and bottled in Mexico. It comes in a thick glass bottle and apparently has quite the following in the United Sates. Fans say it is more “natural tasting.” I read that this natural taste is partially attributed to the use of refined cane sugar in Mexican Coke, as opposed to high-fructose corn syrup found in soft drinks bottled in the U.S.
There have even been blind taste tests where tasters have commented that Mexican Coke has “a more complex flavor with an ineffable spicy and herbal note” and that it contained something “that hinted at root beer or old-fashioned sarsaparilla candy.” Sounds like chit-chat at a fancy wine tasting, but I have to say I agree on those tasting notes. Mexican coke was decidedly tastier than the acidic, chemical flavor I associate with Coke in the U.S.
And while we’re talking old school, there’s no getting around that bottle, that curvy, elegant—glass—bottle. It even has an enamel label painted on it, instead of the standard tacky U.S. vinyl label.
I sipped and sipped and sipped and then I stopped. I didn’t want to stop. But since I was traveling on a tour bus, a tour bus with one bathroom, one bathroom for forty people, one bathroom that wasn’t working…well, I didn’t want to have to spend much time in there.
We drove off into the Mexican sunset while I waxed prosaically about Mexican Coke. It was good. So good, that it almost made a soda drinker out of me.
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For years I’d heard about the San Diego Zoo. Finally, on our recent trip to San Diego, I got to go. Granted, the weather was down-right Seattle-like, rainy and cold…but it was great fun hanging out with our friend and watching the animal’s antics.
The zoo has a long history of research and breeding of rare animals, which is one of the reasons it is well-known worldwide . And, it’s an enormous park, which means you get to see lots of different animals and get some exercise in the process!
Plan on spending a lot of time, and try to avoid visiting on weekends when it gets uber-crowded (or go during a rare San Diego cold front and rainstorm like we did!). Enjoy! Here are a few shots from our visit:
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I love to garden. And take photographs. The colors, the shapes…there is always something to see that rocks my world.
But I have never before seen the perspective of a garden through the looking glass, or a kaleidoscope. On my recent trip to San Diego, I was able to do just that.
In 1817 by Scottish inventor Sir David Brewster, coined the word “kaleidoscope.” Kalos-eidos-skopeo is derived from the Ancient Greek (kalos), “beautiful, beauty, (eidos), “that which is seen: form, shape” and (skopeō), “to look to, to examine”, hence “observer of beautiful forms.”
This kaleidoscope, which can be found in Balboa Park’s Spanish Village Art Center, is positively mind-blowing. Frank Casciani, the artist, created a magical view of his tiny garden in a bowl. The way this unique kaleidoscope works is you spin the garden bed below while peering through the kaleidoscope’s lens.
Pinks, whites, yellows, greens, emerge, shift and change shape before your eyes. I could have stood gazing through this looking glass for hours on end. A tiny world of beauty to behold.
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