Travels with Tucker

Travels with Tucker

Tuesday, December 10, 2013

Saying goodbye to Arizona...



...tomorrow we head to Palm Springs, our winter headquarters for two months.  We will probably only sporadically update this blog, so you may want to subscribe to email updates to the right -->

A colorful visitor to our camp


Sunday, December 8, 2013

Best. Museum. Ever.




We've been to the Louvre and the Vatican and the Chicago Art Institute and museums in Madrid and Rome and London and New York...but one of the most impactful we've ever seen is here in Phoenix.  The Musical Instrument Museum is much more than it's name would indicate.  This is really a museum of humanity, human culture and the diversity of our species.  Housing over 10,000 musical instruments from nearly 200 countries--from a 6,000 year old drum to the piano on which John Lennon wrote "Imagine"--the museum drives home the importance of music to all cultures.  We see and hear the incredible diversity of human expression of music and, at the same time, the common expressive impulse that we share with people of remote places and times.

They have a wonderful introductory video on their web site that gives a great overview of this place.

The MIM is less than three years old and was very well-funded by the founder of Target stores.  Its use of wireless technology really makes it work.  The entire second floor is broken into small exhibits for each country, region, tribe or style of music featured.  In each exhibit (and there must be 300) there are examples of instruments, some written background and a video looping 2-4 live recordings of the instruments being played, many with accompanying  singing or dancing.  All visitors are given headphones and a wireless receiver that picks up the sound from the nearest video display as you move through them.  So the experience is one of moving from country to country, viewing several instruments from each country while watching and listening to the best artists playing those instruments in their original home and in their home society.  It felt like a world tour crammed into a day.  And somehow it wasn't just about the music, though that was foremost, it was also seeing the homes and streets or villages and the people talking and singing and dancing.  It was nothing less than a celebration of the entirety of human culture as represented by music, the universal language.  Amazing.
Harp from Bolivia
John Lennon's piano
Band instruments made from bamboo and wicker from the Phillipines
One of the most moving stories was of a group of kids from South America who wanted to learn to play music, but couldn't afford instruments.  So their teacher took them out into the landfill and they found things to make instruments with--pieces of pipe, oil cans, coins, spoons and forks, scrap wood, etc.  They made amazing instruments from these materials and now tour the world playing (just a few months ago at MIM).
  
Violin made from an oil can a fork and whatever

Chihuly in the Desert

The Desert Botanical Garden was just ok, having spent days hiking in the REAL desert near Phoenix.  But they had an exhibit of Dale Chihuly's glass sculptures, which were pretty cool.

Saturday, December 7, 2013

Hiking the Sonoran Desert


Just past the suburbs of Phoenix, the Pass Mountains rise up 2,000 feet from the desert floor and Usery Mountain park abuts Tonto National Forest, so the hiking goes on forever.  We, however, don't go on forever but we did do a nice six-mile hike through a saguaro cactus forest to a great overlook.  Tucker got a sticker in his foot, but we got through that crisis (anything with Tucker's feet is a crisis to him).


Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Arizona!

After a six-hour drive, we've just arrived at our campsite in Mesa Arizona in time for the sunset. This is one of the most picturesque camping spots we have ever had.

Monday, December 2, 2013

City of Rocks

28 million years ago, a huge volcano about 15 miles east of Silver City erupted with the force of 1,000 Mount St. Helens.  The hot ash fell in a circle fifty miles across and some of it was so hot that it congealed into rock in tall clumps.  Those clumps were eroded by the wind and the result was a geologic formation so unusual there are only six like it in the world.  Now a state park, the "City of Rocks" is a beautiful and incredibly fun place to explore, which we did around sunset today.  We could have spent hours here wandering around the formations which stand alone in a vast desert plain.  The sunset light really brought out their beauty.
City of Rocks from a distance
 

Venus and the last of sunset at City of Rocks