This really is my favorite time of year. Warm days. SUV windows down. Wind through my hair. Mother Nature sitting right next to me. Ahhh. I just returned from Sonora, Mexico, neighboring state to the south of us. The Sonoran Desert, which knows no borders, is alive with color on both sides. I believe it's the best wildflower season in the 20+ years I've visited. In Arizona, the highway from Gila Bend to the border town of Lukeville is a good way to see Arizona spring in all its glory. And, the last time I witnessed the desert floor blanketed in color like this was back in the mid 1980s. The Organ Pipe National Monument, located between Arizona's Ajo Mountains and the Mexico border, has a number of back roads for touring, and is the only place in the United States that you'll find the organ pipe cactus. Right now, you can enjoy both milder temperatures and incredible desert color of golden poppies, blue lupines, pink owl clover and so much more. These carmel colored sunsets the past week make my heart sing.
Life is good and vibrant.
In The Beginning
You see, I was raised in a small Iowa town 50 years ago by two incredible parents. But then, I up and moved to Arizona to become a photographer. This profession has been exceptionally good to me. Depending on the workload and the season, I reside in a number of spots: Nowhere, Tempe or Flagstaff, Arizona or Goldfield, Iowa or Puerto PeƱasco, Mexico. As a part-time resident of the tiny village of Nowhere, I have a unique perspective on the folks who live and work in a place which time has passed by. And, I'd like to share this fascinating place with you. When I'm somewhere other than Nowhere, I'm likely on assignment either for a corporate client or Arizona Highways magazine. And, as this blog matures, I'll be presenting the photography and the stories behind the photography I've shot for the magazine since 1985. And with any technological luck, I'll be providing dispatches to this blog while I'm actually on current assignments. All along, you'll come to know Nowhere and its common people with uncommon problems and personal achievements. Early dispatches offer some background into the town itself while newer dispatches will reveal the character of the townsfolk. Enjoy.
Monday, March 10, 2008
March Into The Color
Posted by
Don B. Stevenson
at
9:35 AM
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)

0 comments:
Post a Comment