Today only the foundation of the original fort remains. An extensive museum contains artifacts and historical memorabilia from Tubac's past, including the printing press used to print the first newspaper. This historic village on the Santa Cruz River now attracts artists, writers, and history buffs...shoppers come to enjoy the arts, crafts, pottery, and jewelry found in small shops in present day Tubac.
Sunday, March 30, 2014
Tubac Presidio State Park
Today only the foundation of the original fort remains. An extensive museum contains artifacts and historical memorabilia from Tubac's past, including the printing press used to print the first newspaper. This historic village on the Santa Cruz River now attracts artists, writers, and history buffs...shoppers come to enjoy the arts, crafts, pottery, and jewelry found in small shops in present day Tubac.
Madera Canyon
One feature that caught our attention were what appeared to be "ghost trees". Located along a creek bed at one of the picnic areas were a number of these unusual trees...they were tall, the bark was smooth and white, and they had no leaves. From a park sign we learned they were sycamore trees...riparian, deciduous hardwoods that grow to 60-100 feet tall; found along river banks, creeks and streams; the smooth white bark is characteristic. These trees were just starting to form leaf buds in the early spring...
Titan Missile Museum
The Titan II missile is the largest missile built by the United States. During the Cold War period in the 1960's as many as 54 of these missiles were built and placed in underground silos (18 each near Wichita, Kansas, Little Rock, Arkansas, and Tucson, Arizona); missiles were active and ready to launch if state of war was declared. In 1982 Titan Missile sites were decommissioned and all operational silos were demolished, except one...located south of Tucson this site has been preserved as a National Historic Landmark. Public tours are now available.
We visited the site, starting out with a video presentation about the Titan Missile Program. After that we walked into the yard and descended 55 steps to the control room doors...massive amounts of steel and cement protected the control room. Walls at least 4 feet thick and 3-ton, 2 feet thick blast doors sealed various areas of the site from the surface. Huge springs and shock absorbers were built into the underground structures to help them withstand explosions from above ground. Along the way were three stations where persons entering the site would have stopped to call from a wall mounted phone and give their security information in order to proceed further into the tunnels.
Once in the control room we watched as our guide took us through the steps involved for a missile launch: Two-person teams worked together if the call to launch was received. It
came in secret code; both persons took their key and opened the double
locked file cabinet to remove the secret files used to interpret the
code. The code told which of three pre-programed sites was the intended
target. Once the target was chosen, again two keys were turned in
separate areas of the control room and a red button flashed...at this
point there was no turning back!
From the control room we walked through one cableway, or tunnel, to the silo where a Titan II Missile stands; no fuel remains in the rockets and the warhead is absent, allowing it to be safely displayed to visitors. Huge concrete doors above the silo are partially open, so from outside you can look down into the 150 foot deep silo. Also outside were various antenna towers for communication and motion detecting devices used for security.
During the tour one was reminded of how much technology changes...secret codes, double turn keys, locked file cabinets, computer programs on reels of tape, data hard drives the size of refrigerators...what a different time it was!
We visited the site, starting out with a video presentation about the Titan Missile Program. After that we walked into the yard and descended 55 steps to the control room doors...massive amounts of steel and cement protected the control room. Walls at least 4 feet thick and 3-ton, 2 feet thick blast doors sealed various areas of the site from the surface. Huge springs and shock absorbers were built into the underground structures to help them withstand explosions from above ground. Along the way were three stations where persons entering the site would have stopped to call from a wall mounted phone and give their security information in order to proceed further into the tunnels.
During the tour one was reminded of how much technology changes...secret codes, double turn keys, locked file cabinets, computer programs on reels of tape, data hard drives the size of refrigerators...what a different time it was!
Saturday, March 22, 2014
Gallery in the Sun
Likely most well known of DeGrazia's paintings is "Los Ninos", which was chosen in 1960 as the artwork for a UNICEF greeting card.
Sabino Canyon
We recently visited Sabino Canyon, located in the Coronado National Forest northeast of Tucson. The park features shuttle buses that provide narrated tours through the canyon. The buses follow about 4 miles of dirt road and cross 9 bridges on the way up into the Santa Catalina Mountains. The road and bridges were built by CCC workers during the 1930's. Along the way are 9 stops where one can depart the bus and enjoy hiking trails, picnic areas, and even swimming holes (but the water is pretty cold!).
Original inhabitants of this canyon area included the Hohokam Indians, who lived near the creek about 1200 AD and used the water to irrigate crops. Rocks along the creek still have indentations and holes worn in them, formed by grinding stones as grains were prepared for food. The swimming holes are known to have been used back in the 1870's by soldiers from nearby Fort Lowell. And today the canyon is popular with hikers of all abilities, as the trails are graded according to ease of climb and distance.
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