Well, folks, while you're all slaving away, I'm one of those overpaid teachers who gets a spring vacation. Actually, since I teach at a Christian school, it's EASTER vacation. And in Arizona, you can't beat the weather. Wait -- out-of-staters, I'm exaggerating. Rattlesnakes attack you when you're eating lunch, and Gila monsters meet you at the airport when you start to get off the plane. Oh, and scorpions are everywhere. You don't wanna come here.
Now that's settled -- Katie and I have had a lot of fun messing around this week. She went out looking for snakes with me one morning, and we went out to a big mountain preserve to scout out an area where I'm taking the whole junior high population on a field trip next week. Spotted a few lizards (whiptails, sideblotched lizards), a snake (desert patchnose), and Katie got a refresher course on what plants not to touch in the desert. There are quite a few of those, actually. Once upon a time, Ann Woodin, author of the old book Home is the Desert, noted that a friend of hers stated: Everything in the desert stings, stinks, or sticks. I suppose her friend wasn't far off.

That cactus is well over 100 years old. I believe they don't even get their first arm before they're about 50. I was thinking about the maximum age estimated for saguaros, and noted to my students that there are more than a few of them in this state that were growing when Thomas Jefferson was president. And you thought that only big redwood trees were old!
Then we have my favorites: any of a variety of plants called cholla:

Chollas have a unique way of reproducing themselves. All the spines on the one in the picture are barbed. One type of cholla (pronounced CHOY-a), called the teddy bear or jumping cholla, is REALLY spiny. Almost furry in appearance, that's where the "teddy bear" moniker came from. As for the "jumping" part: cholla have sort of segmented branches, and the barbed spines catch on animals walking by and pull segments of the plant off to hitch a ride on the poor animal until it scrubs them off on a rock a few miles away. When you brush by these plants, no matter how lightly you do it, the spines will hook on you, thus giving people the impression that the cholla segments "jump" at you. Where the plant segment is dropped, a new cholla begins growing. Unique way of plant propagation, but sort of hard on the animal. I should know. Once upon a time I wasn't looking where I put my feet (not smart in the desert) and kicked a fallen cholla segment with my cloth sneakers. It stuck like a growth, and the spines penetrated all the toes of one foot right through the cloth. Those things are so sharp they go into human skin like a needle into butter. Anyhow, I sat down to remove the thing from my foot and, once again, not looking, SAT on another cholla segment. So now I had a growth on my butt, too. By the time I got everything off, I had no pants on, and no shoes on, and was yanking the rest of the spines out of my clothes before I put them back on, when OF COURSE a group of hikers strolled by, snickering at me standing there in the middle of the desert barefoot and in my boxers.
It's been a fun week, though. Got a chance to reconnect with my daughter outside of the school community, and just to mess around. Tomorrow we're going to take her bike out to the park, and she'll ride while I do a little coinshooting in the park (metal detecting). And Saturday, I'll finalize my lesson plans for the upcoming week. Argh.
However -- end of May, I'm off for a couple of months. I think I can live until then!
