Oh, heck yeah. I’ve mentioned Richard Evans Schultes before – here (via email from the HMNH) is a lecture on his travels in the Amazon.
(embedding the video ^above^ but in case of rot, I’m hoping the link will still lead somewhere useful)
Oh, heck yeah. I’ve mentioned Richard Evans Schultes before – here (via email from the HMNH) is a lecture on his travels in the Amazon.
(embedding the video ^above^ but in case of rot, I’m hoping the link will still lead somewhere useful)
I’m using iNaturalist both to document interesting living things and to help ID stuff, especially wildflowers. Here’s a map of my observations; the Michigan dots are from a trip a few years ago to see the Hippie Modernism show at Cranbrook.
The live map is here – you can make it go fullscreen.
Hippie Moderism 4evah.
I wanted to say a little more about the Chiricahua Mountains; when I met Drew in El Paso he told the that the Chiricahuas were an absolute must-experience and he was right. They’re an ecological Four Corners: Rockies from the north, Sierra Madre from the south, Chihuahuan desert from the east and Sonoran desert from the west. Add in the effects of altitude – a change in vegetation, etc. every thousand feet – and you have one of those meeting places in the landscape with incredible diversity. The part of the ride that took me through Cave Creek Canyon was my favorite – I’m a sucker for bosque dells.
I’d mentioned that hummingbirds woke me up in Portal; “In fact, thirteen species of hummingbirds are know to occur in the Chiricahua Mountains, and many of these are Mexican species that are rarely seen in the United States.”*

One of the big draws is the Elegant Trogon* – I was told I was a week too early to see one, but B’s feed on Strava indicates it was more like 4 days. Ah, well – a good excuse to return with birding as a focus. I did see a Gould’s turkey, so that’s 2 new wild turkey subspecies this trip (the other is the Rio Grande turkey). Merriam’s wild turkey is a possibility in a week; I’ll keep my fingers crossed.
One last reason to dig the area – Portal has very dark skies. The stars at night are amazing!
*pronunciation note – I’ve always said ‘trogon’ with a hard G, but I heard someone say trojawn in Portal. Google search says hard G is correct; maybe the J person was from Philly – or maybe Google is wrong?
Goog maps has a 10 layer limit /and/ a 5mb per .gpx file limit. Bah. So I combined 3-5 tracks at a whack using GOTOES and then layered ’em in. Voila: