Just another WordPress.com site

Archive for the ‘USA’ Category

Friday, 12 March, 2010 – Around Bellflower

Today was designed to let me adjust again to a change of time zones – this time 8 hours different with time in the UK. So I got up at just after 7 a.m. and chatted for a while with Angie in Amesbury, UK, where it was 15:00 hrs. At the same time, Eunice was panicking about some improvements to the shower, that seemed to be going wrong big time. As always, everything was fine in the end. I managed to finish the ‘credits’ portion of next Sunday’s presentation and gave Eunice a preview of what I had prepared. 

Around four p.m. we went to visit the gardens at the Dominguez Rancho Adobe where the Long Beach C&S Society hold their monthly meetings and where, three years ago, I had given my first presentation to an US audience. How time flies. By 9 in the evening, my body reminded me hat it was already 5 a.m. the next day in the UK and I was ready to pass out.

Thursday, 11 March, 2010 – Amesbury, UK to Bellflower, CA

Just about a week after getting home from Cuba and I’m on the road / in the sky again, this time on my own.

Once again, Peter was so kind as to drive me to Heathrow and usually I then add the travelling day’s Diary page by reporting that the journey was uneventful, but not this time…..

Remember, the audience for these pages also includes friends who have not the faintest interest in cacti. But most of all, I write these notes for myself so that years later I can check what happened when, where and with whom.

First item worth reporting was at Heathrow, T1. As the queue was snaking its way to the security X-ray machines I suddenly found myself face to face with someone I thought I recognised from the past. It was like dawn breaking as both our faces seemed to show the same reaction. ‘Charles?!?’ ‘Paul?!?’ Then laughter and shaking of hands as the others in the queue watched in bemusement as we renewed our friendship that was put on hold when I left the company we both worked for, in 1988, 22 years ago! Once we cleared security we shared a coffee before we went on our way again, Charles on to his skiing holiday – French Alps if I remember correctly and me on my last leg of this winter’s cactus trip(s).

Next item worth reporting: Arrival at LAX. Where was Eunice? No idea. So let’s call her mobile. Great idea, but it would have helped if I had remembered to bring her number. Never mind, she had mine and surely would soon call or text me to explain what had happened and what to do next. An hour later. Nothing. My flight ticket had not indicated at which of the nine terminals and we had assumed that I would arrive at the same terminal that I would leave from next month, T7. So where was I? At the International Flight arrival centre, somewhere between T3 and T4. Ah.

I figured that Eunice was trying to find me, so the best strategy seemed to stay put, rather than miss each other while we were both on the move.    Another hour later, still nothing. So Plan B seemed appropriate. What Plan B? I had her home address, so got a taxi. I worried that there would be nobody home when I got there, but no need. A very surprised Eunice opened the door. She had assumed that with a 10 hour flight, I would arrive tomorrow, a day after leaving the UK, but of course, as I was flying in the same direction ‘as the sun was travelling’, I actually landed some two hours after departing, but Pacific Time, rather than GMT. Never mind.

Last item worth reporting: San Gabriel C&S Society meeting. My ‘early’ arrival made it possible to go to this event, which Cliff & I also attended last year. It turned out that the speaker was Guillermo Rivera, our friend and guide on our 2005 Argentina trip. He was touring California with Woody Minnich, another friend from the 2005 trip and again this year in Rio Grande do Sul. So it was big hugs in the hall. Then there was Chris Rogers, another guy from the 2005 Argentina trip there as well. Again, more handshaking. Then – as other members recognised me from our visit exactly one year ago, more handshaking and smiles. ‘Where is Cliff?’ was the frequently heard question. ‘Give him our best wishes!’

By the end of the club evening, I had been up for 24 hours and was getting light headed. So what better way to finish off the day then with a visit to BJ’s, a pub/restaurant for a couple of pints of Guinness and pizza. ‘Wow, you seem thirsty!’ said the guy next to me, as half a pint disappeared in one go. ’43 years of practice!’ I smiled, pointing at the Guinness rugby shirt that I was wearing, bought on my ’40th Anniversary of Guinness Drinking’ trip to Dublin in 2007, which of course included a tour of the Guinness Brewery museum.  

I wonder what tomorrow will bring!!

Tuesday, 31 March 2009 – Flights home

Alain was dully dispatched at LAX at around 8:45 a.m. while Cliff and I had another 12 hours around LA, so Eunice took us shopping for a book (Flora of the Mojave Desert) of which Alain had bought the last copy at a shop a couple of days earlier. Then on to Vern’s place, where again we were impressed and surprised of how many of the plants that we struggle to keep alive in heated greenhouses in Europe were doing very well, either planted out in the garden or in pots on the large patio.

Just one small incident on our departure from LAX – my bag weighed in at 61 lbs, with an allowance of 50 lbs, so a potential extra cost of US$ 150!! Must be all those maps and a few books that I had acquired over the last 5 months. Nobody in Chile or Peru seemed to have worried, but here the check-in clerks were on the ball. It turned out that as a long haul passenger, I was allowed two free bits of hand luggage and it just so happened that right at the bottom of my hold-luggage bag, I had a spare rucksack, having left my worn out purple monster behind at Eunice’s. So right in the middle of the departure lounge, a quick repack ensued, with dirty clothes strewn around to trip up bemused onlookers. Next hurdle, I was convinced that the guy at the check in had kept my passport as well as the tags for my bag. He claimed that he had not. So once again bags were opened and searched top to bottom when as usual, it proved that I had one more pocket than I had allowed for and this was where the missing travel document turned up.

The plane was 30 minutes late leaving and I slept most of the way to New York’s JFK where we arrived at 7:30 a.m.

Monday, 30 March 2009 – A day at the Huntington Botanical Gardens

Today’s visit (S1399) had been on both Cliff’s and Alain’s wish list and although we had returned our rental car, Eunice kindly offered to pick us up and drive us there.

For me this was my fourth visit, so while the novelty factor was missing, knowing my way around by now, I was able to enjoy four hours of photography on my favourite subjects. I probably spent longest at the corner where the Creeping Devils (Stenocereus eruca) were densely planted. This had been my favourite spot last year, after seeing the plants in habitat in Baja. It seemed that this little corner had grown since then. Are they really creeping to extend their territory?

After a nice meal out and our last Margarita’s (probably the best of the whole trip), it was time for an early-ish night as Alain had to be at LAX at 9 a.m. for his 11 o’clock flight back to Brussels.

View 2009-03-30

Sunday, 29 March 2009 – Rest day at Los Alamitos

We really did very little today, other than starting the massive exercise of copying each other’s digital images to our respective plug-in hard drives, thus significantly increasing the already huge numbers of images that we had taken ourselves. Why? The exercise provides us with back ups of our images just in case some small disaster should befall our computers. Plus, it is the first opportunity of looking at each other’s images, as by the time that we have down loaded our own images each day there is no time to share what we saw with our fellow travellers.  While we tend to take pictures of each other as well as of the plants, we never get round to taking pictures of ourselves, so it is a good opportunity to collect evidence, if it were needed, that we ‘were there’.  And last but not least, as a group we see much more than as single individuals, so it is always worthwhile, if time permits, to check through each others pictures for something rare and unusual that one person saw and photographed but that had escaped the rest of us.

Eunice got the car washed and valletted and we returned our home for the last four weeks to Dollar Rent A Car in good time, where its return to the fleet went without any hitches.

Saturday, 28 March 2009 – El Cahon to Los Alamitos

We had a nice and relaxed day along the sea front, looking at Feros. Eunice had selected two spots where she and I had found them last year, the first (S1397) at Point Lomas, and the second (S1398) at La Jolla Glider port. I can’t remember the stop numbers for these locations used in 2008, so had better repeat that we found F. viridescens, in flower, both tallish solitary as well as squat and offsetting plants, casting a bit of doubt or need to clarify the differences between ssp. viridescens and ssp litoralis. Also there Agave shawii, Bergerocactus emoryi (S1397 only),  Carpobrotus sp. – an invasive African Mesemb that seems to be invading many temperate zones at the expense of the endemic vegetation, Mammillaria dioica, some in flower, Opuntia sp. (boring fa.), three different species of Dudleya, of which I’m sure one was D. edulis.  There were also some escaped Aloes, again African, that were conveniently being used as a feeding station for a hummingbird, close to where I was sitting.

Strange that an Old World plant (Aloes are restricted to the African continent) have become a favourite with the Hummingbird, a New World native, only found in the Americas. I’m sure somebody will tell me what pollinates Aloes in nature in their home habitat.

Apart from pressing camera shutter releases, we just lazed around and took in the sun in a light breeze, knowing what is in store in Europe in a few days time. Just topping up the reserves.

We’re spending the last 3 nights of our trip in a Best Western in Los Alamitos on the outskirts of LA. The off licence next door sells Belgian beer and Chilean wine, so we’ll be fine but may not be issuing many more Diary reports 🙂

Monday, 2 March 2009 – Indio, CA to Tucson, AZ

Despite our late night, we were up at a reasonable time and on the road to Tucson a 362 mile drive. We made just two plant stops: S1293, near Cottonwood Springs, AZ, where we saw Ferocactus cylindraceus, many in bud, a couple in flower, Fouquieria splendens, Opuntia basilaris, including a few in flower, while most were bursting with buds, and Cylindropuntia ramosissima.

The next stop was another turning off I-10, signposted for Dome Rock, a popular location for RVs. The track took us between two rocky outcrops, the one to the north of darker probably volcanic origin had Carnegiea gigantea and Cylindropuntia bigelovii and C. echinocarpa or is it C. fulgida? or both? and Fouquieria splendens. Across the track, the rock seemed to be a bedded limestone, overlaying with quartz. There were no Carnegiea to be seen here. Instead, we found Mammillaria sp (M. grahamii or M. microcarpa?), Echinocereus engelmannii and Opuntia basilaris. This hillside also had Fouquieria splendens, and a few of the Cylindropuntia.

We had an excellent steak dinner, in the same restaurant where Alain & I ate in 2008. As Alain said: it was as though we had never been away.

Tomorrow we head for Mexico.

Sunday, 1 March 2009 – Buena Park to Indio, CA

We had a not unusual panic when it transpired that I had left most of my field data, this time for Mexico, on my desktop machine at home in England. Once again Brian Bates saved the day so that we can attempt to name a few of the cacti that we’ll see in weeks to come.

Cliff & I are getting quite used to last minute packing for a trip – the secret is to never unpack. Eunice does not have experience yet, so was into a full last minute panic, while Cliff & I watched while enjoying the use of her fast internet connection.

Alain was due to arrive at 21:10, but at which Terminal? LAX has somewhere between 8 and 12 terminals! We looked up the flight number on the internet, but there was no such flight!. The problem is possibly due to the large number of airlines sharing the same plane, each with their own flight numbers (and pricing). We resolved the problem by positioning ourselves near the airport (Eunice wanted to post a few parcels from the 24 hour post office at LAX. We had already worked out that the majority of flight numbers commencing ‘US’ used the near by Terminal 1. So we relied on Alain contacting Eunice on landing to advice which terminal he was at. Great plan, but in the end his plane was early and his call came when he was already outside the terminal, looking for us to pick him up. We told him to sit tight, as we were only minutes away but had not counted on the very busy Sunday night airport pick ups and drop offs Eventually we saw him and got him and luggage on board.

Next, picking up the rental car. We have a Toyota 4Runner, a bit larger than last year’s Jeep Grand Cherokee, especially more leg room.

Then to Eunice’s place in Bellflower to load up the 4Runner, followed by a 121 miles drive on quiet roads to Indio, our jump off point for Monday’s drive to Tucson. We were all very tired, especially Alain who had been on the road for 28 hours!

Welcome aboard, Alain!

Saturday 28 February 2009 – rest day at Buena Park

With all pictures safely backed up onto my plug in hard drive I was able to see that I have so far 16,575 images taking up 94 Gigabyte during the last 120 days, an average of 138.125 images per day. As you can tell, we’re getting bored.

Friday 27 February 2009 – Long Beach to Buena Park

The plan for today was to rest, do our washing (so that we could enter Mexico with clean clothes) and catch up with writing the Diaries for the last few days. Great plan, BUT it turned out that the Motel 6 we were staying in at Long Beach did not have a Laundromat. A search on the internet revealed that the Motel 6 Buena Park – Knotts Berry Farm ticked all the boxes, and so Eunice kindly interrupted her rest day to pick us up and drive us over.

On re-reading my notes for 25 February, at S1287 I should have mentioned that we also found Opuntia sp. (probably O. chlorotica) and Grusonia sp. probably G. parishii.