Basking

A female common side-blotched lizard closes her eyes while basking in the sun on the Latigo Trail in McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale, Arizona on May 29, 2023. Original: _RAC6608.ARW

Common side-blotched lizards are one of my favorite desert residents and one of the rare reptiles you might glimpse during the cooler months, though only on the warmest days. I met this basking female in the late spring when warmth is not hard to come by, she was basking in the sun but could easily retreat into the shadows if necessary. She decided I was alright and even closed her eyes for a while.

πŸ“·: Sony A6600 | Sony 100-400mm | Sony 1.4X
πŸ—“οΈ: May 29, 2023

A female common side-blotched lizard basks in the sun beneath a rock overhang on the Latigo Trail in McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale, Arizona on May 29, 2023. Original: _RAC6565.ARW

Shriveled

We had a dry summer so the desert flora is looking pretty parched, some saguaros are pretty gaunt but visually I notice it most in chain fruit cholla. They are also known as jumping cholla due to the ease with which they attack passers by, but I like the chain fruit name since it highlights their most distinctive feature: their fruit grows in chains. Pretty shriveled up here but I like photographing nature in all its states, not just the pretty ones.

πŸ“·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
πŸ—“οΈ: October 30, 2023

The Ascetic Aesthetic

Part of a dead saguaro’s skeleton is visible behind dried white flesh with black specks on the Chuckwagon Trail in McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale, Arizona on December 12, 2023. Originals: _ZFC8752.NEF to _ZFC8881.NEF

High on a snow-covered mountain I came across this secluded retreat, only the wooden door hinting at the dwelling behind, carved into the sheer cliff face. I wondered who would answer if I approached and knocked. Perhaps a desert ascetic meditating in the highest places. Perhaps a mystic who removed themselves from the world to better understand it, waiting to answer all my questions. Perhaps this is where all the rattlesnakes go to wait out the winter.

I decided not to knock.

πŸ“·: Nikon Z fc | Nikon 105mm macro
πŸ—“οΈ: December 12, 2023

Sidelight

A female phainopepla perches on an ocotillo branch in Scottsdale, Arizona on December 13, 2023. Original: _A672013.ARW

Two of my favorite things, a phainopepla and an ocotillo, side lit by the rising sun. Ocotillos have been a revelation since we moved to the desert though I struggle with how to capture that love in pictures. The past couple of nights I’ve sat out in the dark watching the meteor showers, positioning myself behind one of our ocotillos so that in the darkness its inky fingers reached out to Orion as shooting stars flew past.

πŸ“·: Sony A6700 | Sony 100-400mm | Sony 1.4X
πŸ—“οΈ: December 13, 2023

Not Latourell Falls

Yellow lichen covers part of a dead tree near the Latigo Trail in McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale, Arizona on November 29, 2023. Originals: _Z726904.NEF to _Z726998.NEF

I was thinking of Latourell Falls in Oregon when I took this picture, there’s a rock face beside the waterfall completely coated in yellow lichen. The gray wood stood in for the high cliff face, and while the lichen here is but sparse compared to its Oregon counterpart, it is a little more moist beside a waterfall than on a dead tree in the desert.

πŸ“·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
πŸ—“οΈ: November 29, 2023

Little Big Bangs

A close-up view of an old hole drilled by a woodpecker that is surrounded by the hardened and cracked skin of an old saguaro on the Tarantula Trail in McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale, Arizona on December 3, 2023. Originals: _Z728138.NEF to _Z728173.NEF

As I stared down the borehole of one of my favorite pieces of art, it felt more like I was photographing The Big Bang rather than the aftermath of a bunch of small ones. The hole was only 4 or 5 feet off the ground and the old saguaro’s skin hardened around it. I’d photograph these more but sadly I have not yet gotten my wish to be 50 feet tall and/or to have wings, but fingers crossed for 2024!

πŸ“·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
πŸ—“οΈ: December 3, 2023

The Desert Rain

A close-up view of raindrops on saguaro spines in Scottsdale, Arizona on November 18, 2023. Originals: _Z722632.NEF to _Z722740.NEF

As someone who loved even the ubiquitous rain in Portland, rain in the desert is quite special to me. When I woke to rain last month I waited for it to slow then hurried into the backyard for some macro shots of one of our saguaros. I had to work fast, the spines dry quickly and lose the wonderful colors, a couple have already dried here. The water drops on the skin evaporate quickly and gravity is constantly tugging at the drops dripping from the spines. One day I’ll play around with a watering can to get just the right droplets on my favorite areole, perhaps a fun project for a day when my mobility is limited, but that’s not what I wanted here. I didn’t want a picture of water drops on a saguaro, I wanted a picture of the rain.

πŸ“·: Nikon Z 7II | Nikon 105mm macro
πŸ—“οΈ: November 18, 2023

Green Valleys

A close-up of a saguaro with mostly hardened skin but green skin deep in the pleats, taken on the Latigo Trail in McDowell Sonoran Preserve in Scottsdale, Arizona on December 3, 2023. Originals: _Z728308.NEF to Z728338.NEF

I have this romantic notion of photographing every saguaro I can see from the trails, however there are a lot more of them than there are of me so until that changes I’ll have to settle for my favorites. I’ve had my eye on this saguaro for a while, in this little area the skin has hardened around the areoles but deep in the pleats the skin remains supple. While the Valley of the Sun isn’t known for being green, Portland certainly was, and for me the hardened skin looming over the soft flesh is an homage to the lush Willamette Valley nestled beneath the Cascades, the few areoles with spikes sticking out standing in for the occasionally irritable volcanoes.