Showing posts with label Cochise Stronghold. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Cochise Stronghold. Show all posts

Wednesday, February 26, 2020

The Picture At the Top

1.Feb.24 - I changed the picture (banner) in July of 2023. This story below is about the previous one, the one shown here. It was taken on the east side of the Dragoon Mountains at Chochise Stronghold in Arizona.




In the 1930s my Dad immigrated from Germany and joined the American Army. During the second world-war he served as a double agent. He was proud of helping many people escape the Nazis and a cherished memento is a picture of him in a bunker with about 20 other men; in the foreground stands Der Fuhrer. It was obviously taken in collaboration with the photographer; Dad is in the middle (at the back) clearly visible, with the other men equally divided on either side.

Known as a fan of the composer Richard Wagner, he did such a good job during the war they, the U.S. military, gave him the Wagner home in Bayreuth to live in...along with a chauffeured car, a cook and gardener.

A pianist, we have pictures of his grand piano in its own room and 8mm movies of he and my mom, with friends, skiing the Alps; the sunshine so warm the women are in their bras. (Knowing my parents, I like to think she and her friends just put them on for the movie.)

Years ago I had an office in a division of the University of New Mexico's College of Education formally known as Language, Literacy and Sociocultural Studies (LLSS). It was an agglomeration of 22 professors who taught teachers, primarily graduate students, to teach cultural diversity. There was a Buddhist, a Jew, a Fascist, quite a few from Native American communities including the pueblos of Zuni and Cochiti. Many were/are famous authors.

There was a Chinese woman who came from somewhere in the western part of the country who when I asked if she spoke Mandarin, huffily informed me there were over 27 languages in China of which she spoke six, including Mandarin. There were also several lesbians: a militant, a moderate, and a sensualist, each, of course, with a unique view of patriarchy.  The rest were mostly Spaniards, descendants of the Conquistadors.

I, a mere administrator, designated myself The German-American and taped a brown paper sack with the German eagle on it to my door.

After my four-hour stint, I would cross the street to run my art gallery (NW corner of Central & Pine). My boss, the department secretary, came from an entrepreneurial family of Italians who'd immigrated to Gallup to be miners. Over the years she allowed me to run several businesses...as long as the faculty were kept happy.

When we first returned from Germany in '62, we went to Nashville, Tennessee. I was not quite ten and had never encountered racial prejudice. Living through the Stokely Carmichael and Martin Luther King riots I saw first-hand the hatred and violence of Whites toward Blacks. Today, in an era of nationalism that reminds me of Germany in the 1930s, I occasionally fly the German flag as a show of pride in my heritage. Of course, it's nothing like being Black, or any of the flavors of sexual orientation, or -- there but for the grace of god go I -- FEMALE, but I like to think when folks see it, it'll give pause for thought. Maybe they'll wonder what those Germans are doing over there! (They presumably know what everyone else is doing.)

Once, when I was flying it, the flag that is, on a bluff above the Takhini River in the Yukon, my girlfriend, said, "There's no place for politics in the wilderness." I agreed and attempted mollification (she's Dutch) by saying it was a joke. She didn't think it was funny. And frankly, neither did I. But it's the best I can do in the face of the lines being drawn. (Born in Nϋrnberg, I fly its flag along with Germany's.)

I don't know who took the photograph I'm holding, but women have played pivotal (ovarial...as compared to seminal) roles throughout my life -- I'm a polyamorist -- and the image is an expression of their (ongoing) significance.

Finally, Wahnfried was the name of Richard Wagner's (the composer) home in Bayreuth. It means madness-free. Nomadicism has done the trick for me.

Sunday, November 26, 2017

Tucson Ho!!!



This could be my next blog banner. There was rumor the shorts had fallen into the fire, but they resurfaced. Hah!!







The photo I'm holding was one of many by Eadweard Muybridge, famous for his "motion studies."
Poetry in motion; don't you agree?





A painting bought from a cafe in Ajo, Arizona. The proprietor said the artist had returned to Michigan to die of cancer. It "livens" each day for me.








View from the west wing: Feet up. Sunshine. Freedom!!


Sunday, January 8, 2017

Cochise Stronghold

There's a campground but there's no water so why go there? We found a spot where the road descends into a ravine and, as you come up the other side, you have to lean waaaaaayyy over in order to get around the gully the rains have cut. Nothing longer than a pickup gets in, or out, alive. Between the fierceness of the approach and the fact that it's a little off the beaten path means there's rarely more than two passersby in the course of a day. 




The flag helps hold the spot when we're away.






Smith enjoys summiting the oaks and having some decent rock(s) to hone her sabers on. Here she shows off her au-naturale camo ensemble. 


She was still a kitten at the time of our last visit. She'd grokked the need to do our best to live off the land so I was pleased when she strode into camp mit ein fine Trophy Vole. This time she brought down a full-sized mouse. Aye, it'll not be long afore we'll need buy nought but gin 'n' vermouth.

Sunday, December 4, 2016

Sunsites, Arizona

Just down the hill from Cochise Stronghold, Sunsites is an up and coming arts community. Sunny, who commutes between her chiropractic practice in Tuscon and the one in Sunsites, recently organized a gathering that attracted 48 people. Not all self-identified as artists, but for the most part...

In the afternoon I bought a ticket to the art auction fundraiser for the library. That evening, upon seeing the 300 cars in the parking lot, I forced myself to the windows and looked in. There were at least 600 people....in one huge room! Reeling in horror, I fled. 

Everyone I met on the street was great! Check out the Produce Wagon Grocery and Blue Bear Trading Post & Gallery. The Trading Post & Gallery is run by Sunny's husband Larry, who is letting go of his lifetime collection. There are some real treasures. 


Monday, January 25, 2016

I Can Hold My Nose!



Eggbert eagerly awaits each issue of Overland Journal. And although I know he thinks about how rakish he'd look with a snorkel, I can't help but smile when he begs me to watch and says, "I can go underwater holding my nose!"



Enroute to Cochise Stronghold




Saturday, March 14, 2015

Sunsites, Arizona & Cochise Stronghold

As you likely know, this is the time of year for touring southeastern Arizona. The nights are chilly, just right for sleeping, and the days are perfect for hiking. I found the best campsite near Cochise Stronghold and was pleased to hand it off to a couple from Alaska.

My new used camera from Ebay was defective so all I have are navel gazings. And we all know how interesting they are.

Still, for the record, the weather is fine, the gin is slo. Now if only some fast women would show up....or maybe just one, even?