Category Archives: Arizona

The “Southwest effect” in Des Moines – fares down but I still haven’t flown Southwest

A young man dancing, swiveling his hips. He has dark hair, short and slicked up a bit. He wears an unbuttoned band-collared jacket over a shirt with bold black-and-white horizontal stripes. Behind him, on either side, are a pair of barred frames, like prison doors.

So according to the DM Register there has indeed been a “Southwest effect” in Des Moines – i.e. fares have dropped about 6 percent since Southwest FINALLY decided to grace us with its presence. Southwest-effect-slashes-Des-Moines-prices. And that’s great! Oddly I’ve yet to fly Southwest. Up until yesterday Southwest only flew to Chicago from DSM  (twice daily). But  today it will begin flying to Las Vegas which should open up western routes to places like Tucson/Phoenix and L.A. where I need to fly. An Elvis impersonator and Vegas showgirls will be on board to kick off the new Vegas flight!

On the few occasions when someone from my family has opted to fly to Chicago (vs. drive or take the Megabus) they’ve opted for other airlines that have dropped their prices as a result of Southwest’s arrival – and as I recall they’re lower or more convenient times than Southwest. Still I would like to thank Southwest by flying the airline sometime – should it prove cost-efficient and convenient.

Leave a comment

Filed under airfare, Arizona, Des Moines

Thumb paintings “all thumbs” at the Phoenix Airport

Hancock Art

Yes, we also had some time to kill in the Phoenix Airport on our way back to Des Moines earlier this week and there were plenty of art exhibits to pass the time. One of the odder ones was tucked away in an out-of-the-way corner near the Starbucks on Level 2 of Terminal 3  – 2″ x 2″ Thumbnail portraits, quite literally, by Roberta Hancock. They are individual oil paintings of thumbs dressed in various garbs – a Rastafarian thumb, a nun thumb, a cowboy thumb, a bride thumb. They made me laugh. The Phoenix Airport Museum’s collection has 600 works and 35 exhibit spaces scattered across six buildings. How amazing.

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, Phoenix

Beyond bread, gabby giffords, Arizona shuttle — Tucson

After finding a long wait for lunch at Tohono Chul, a lovely garden spot in Tucson, we ended up at another favorite, albeit less scenic, lunch spot nearby, Beyond Bread ( where’re I must remember in the future to get the tuna melt). It is hard to go to Beyond Bread without thinking about the horrific shooting that left several people dead and gravely injured then-congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords a few years ago. The restaurant is right across from the Safeway market where the shooting occurred. As it turns out, several tv trucks were parked outside the Safeway as we were leaving the restaurant and we found out from this morning’s paper that Giffords yesterday returned for the first time to the site, where there is now a memorial outside the market. She and her husband Mark Kelly are working to drum up support for gun control measures. Here is hoping they succeed!

It is 8:25 am and we are waiting for the Arizona shuttle to take us to the Phoenix airport, the first leg of a daylong trek to get home to Iowa. Ridiculous to think we won’t be home until 7:30 pm Arizona time. And irritating that the shuttle folks insisted we be here by 8:15 so the shuttle can leave on the dot at 8:30. (which means of course that my dad got us here at 8:00). When we arrived, we were told the shuttle won’t even arrive until 8:30 – 8:40. So we have 40 minutes to enjoy the view and smell (not) …some sort of industrial site across the road. Grrrr…

20130307-083255.jpg

20130307-083308.jpg

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, Tucson

Scenes from the romero pools trail, Tucson

These are scenes from along the trail to Romero Pools at Catalina State Park in Oro Valley. The hike took us about four hours round trip, with some challenging spots where we had to navigate some uneven jagged rocks but overall it was fairly easy. And lots of classic dessert scenery. Dinner was at vivace, a reliably good Italian restaurant in st. Philips plaza. Good Veal Piccatta, seafood soup, yellow snapper with crabmeat special.

/>
20130306-130800.jpg

20130306-130823.jpg

20130306-130841.jpg

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, DINING, Tucson

Catalina State park, Rosa’s Mexican Restaurant — Tucson

006We have tried many Mexican restaurants in Tucson over the years and rarely remember them. Rosa’s (on East Fort Lowell at Campbell) we will remember. There’s a reason it’s been around since 1970 and why it was packed during lunch on a Monday. The food is really good and although I’m no expert, I’m told its quite authentic too. I rarely find carne seca – which I associate with the famous El Charro restaurant here – but Rosa’s made a darned good carne seca. It’s different than El Charro’s – with grilled onions and peppers that gives it a slightly different flavor and makes it a little less dry beef. The refried beans were different than others I’ve had too – starting with the color, a rose-colored red. Creamier. Good flavor. And the guacamole was also creamier, paler, more seasoning. The salsa was runny but packed a punch. Good limeade too. And tacos that have deep-fried shells. We’ll be back.

For years, we have hiked at Catalina State Park (the photo above with my son Noah and sister-in-law Heather is from around 2008, the one below with my husband is from around 2009) which has a very easy, very scenic loop through classic dessert terrain (I can still hear my mom’s voice telling us which plant is saguaro, agave, ocotillo, pale verde or cactus paddles). Sadly, a young guy from Minnesota was missing when we arrived – he hadn’t been seen since the previous morning when he set off on a solo hike. Television trucks were camped out in the parking lot and an occasional police van drove past us on the trail. A helicopter flew low above us. Last year, I hiked at the park on my own for the first time and remember being a bit nervous. I stuck to the main loop trail which has lots of hikers and ended up meeting a woman who I hiked half of the trail with. We woke up this morning to the welcome news that the hiker had surfaced north of the state park and was ok. Today returned to the park and took a four hour hike to Romano pools. Classic dessert scenery. 009

3 Comments

Filed under Arizona, Tucson

warm and sunny tucson – biking along “the wash” lunch at Choice Greens

We arrived late Saturday in Phoenix by plane and then drove 1.5 hours south to Tucson where we awoke the next morning to bright blue sky, mountains, warm sun –  a nice change from cold snowy Iowa. Eager to be outdoors, we rode along “the Wash” in north Tucson for about 14 miles, stopping at St. Philip’s Plaza on Campbell ave. to browse at the weekend farmers market (most interesting item: worm compost, a strange grey-colored bag of dirt) then lunch at what was first called “Chopped” but is now known as “Choice Greens” – a design-your-own salad place that remains good, whatever its name. On today to hike at Catalina State Park up the road in Oro Valley.

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, Tucson

Why is it so expensive to rent a car at the Phoenix airport? And is Fox rental ok?

Little did I know when I booked cheap plane tickets to fly to Phoenix (rather than to Tucson, our ultimate destination) that we’d have to spend an arm and a leg on a car rental but it’s starting to look that way. In Nashville, we rented a car for $22 a day – our bill for three days came to just under $70. In Phoenix, the mainstay companies like Thrifty were charging $290 for a week (we need the car for only 5 days) which wasn’t great but that turned out to be the “base rate” – with various fees the total comes to a whooping $430. (Which we didn’t find out until we actually reserved the car.)  So we are looking at smaller rental companies like Fox, Payless and Sixt. I reserved a car from Fox and was assured that the final rate is $262. Of course I’m a little suspicious – since I’ve never heard of this company. I’ve looked them up on various travel websites and they get mixed reviews but generally okay ones in Phoenix. The other issue is our flight gets in very late – close to midnight so some companies aren’t open at that hour (sadly that includes Enterprise, which gave us the good deal in Nashville.) We also get in too late (11:51 p.m.) to probably make the last shuttle van to Tucson at 12:15 a.m. NEWS FLASH: just heard from my dad and his wife – they’ve decided to pick us up at the airport, which is very kind, especially given the late hour. So no car rental!

All this reminds me of a trip many years ago – 25 or so – when we rented a car from “Sisters Rental Car” in Morocco. It turned out okay although we were a bit nervous, especially driving the car – which was a flimsy number that looked like an over-sized sardine can with a wire coat hanger in the dashboard, that served as the gear shift – way up into the Atlas Mountains south of Fez.


Toubkal Mountain in Toubkal National Park in the High Atlas

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, car rental

vivace pizza, biking along the rillito trail near St. Phillips square Plaza, chopped (now choice greens) and zin burger

It was cold last Wednesday so we braved a bike ride along the wash near St. Phillips Plaza at Campbell and River, riding west. Nice level ride but it was cold riding into the wind. For lunch we ate at the former Chopped, now Choice Greens, or some such. As good as ever. That night we ate at Zin Burger – big juicy rare burger but pricey. Tuesday night, we had a good meal – pizza and salad at Vivace Pizza (in st. Phillips Plaza) Best part of Tucson: Being with my dad!

2 Comments

Filed under Arizona, Tucson, Uncategorized

Hiking solo in Catalina State Park, Beyond Bread (in the shadow of a horrible shooting),

It was such a gorgeous morning – flawless blue sky, light breeze (that later became fierce wind), and bright sunshine (temps rising past 80) – that I just had to go hiking, which meant hiking solo since my dad wasn’t up for it. I’ve never hiked on my own but I’ve hiked many many times at Catalina State Park, about a mile north of my father’s house in Oro Valley. It turned out to be just fine – more than fine, actually fun. I walked on the very easy Canyon Loop Trail for about 2.5 miles on a mostly level dirt trail through a valley surrounded by jagged mountains and fields of cactus, saguaro, barrel, agave, scrub bushes and purple and yellow wildflowers. There were plenty of other hikers around, several of them solo, so I felt not at all out there all alone. I ended up backtracking to do short section of the Romero Canyon Trail  – the first flat mile to the lovely Montrose Pools and back. Sitting on a bench overlooking the pools – a small puddle of water at the bottom of a shallow ravine bordered by saguaros – I met a fellow hiker who I ended up walking back to the trailhead with. Nice woman, retired, used to live in Decatur, Illinois now lives in Mesa with her husband, who – it turns out, is a retired ag journalist. (My husband is a not-retired ag journalist – how small a world is that?) Anyway, my rule of thumb when hiking alone – beyond the obvious of bringing water and trail mix – is to not do anything too challenging (I like to have someone near by when I fall….) and to have my cellphone handy in case of emergency. I also made sure to text my dad to A few other hiking suggestions from my brother who was here recently:  At Catalina, the Sutherland trail is pretty nice and not very difficult. Romero is nice too – more difficult. the 50 year trail has some nice views but a little one note. Beyond Catalina, he also did the Magee trail – and if you go a bit further than he usually goes – about 45minutes out then back – it gets really beautiful.

We ate lunch at the new (or new since I was last here three years ago) Beyond Bread on Ina and Oracle which is as fantastic as the original one on Campbell (and much closer to my dad’s house.) Sadly, it’s in the shadow of the Safeway where Gabrielle Giffords and many others were shot a year ago.

 

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, Tucson

Indian food in Oro valley, u of arizona, carne seca not carne asada

We usually drag my dad to have Mexican food while we’re in Tucson – and that may happen yet – but last night we went to Flavors of India, a restaurant in one of the anonymous strip malls up here in Oro Valley that an Indian friend of my dad’s recommended. And it was excellent – started with complimentary papadums and chutneys (most Indian restaurants I’ve been to, especially in London, charge you for this kind of thing), then followed my dad’s friend’s recommendations and had Mulligatawny soup and crayfish malbar (which I’ve never heard of). Both were fab!

Today I met an old friend on the U of Arizona campus who is a professor there and we had a nice lunch at a middle eastern restaurant nearby. We met at Centennial Hall, which was festooned with a banner advertising the great dance performance series with several of my favorite companies including Bill T. Jones and Alvin Ailey. Unfortunately they’re not happening when I’m here. Dinner tonight at a Mexican restaurant in Oro Valley – good fajitas. I was hoping to have a dried beef that I love at El Charro, the famous mexican restaurant downtown but realized that I got the names of that dish mixed up. It’s carne seca …not the carne asada served at the Oro Valley restaurant. Must remember this next time.

I

Leave a comment

Filed under Arizona, Tucson