Picacho ("peak"), city of Las Cruces in foreground |
"They've made a lot of progress since then," I said.
"Yeah, 'progress,'" she said, picking up on my sarcastic tone and making air quotation marks around the word progress.
I told her the story about Linda Ronstadt's decade-old performance at the Pan Am Center in Las Cruces. Ronstadt was originally from Tucson, and after her last set she spoke to the people in the audience, telling them that Las Cruces reminded her of the Tucson of her youth, and if Las Crucens had any sense they'd try to keep the city the way it was rather than allow it to be ruined like her beloved hometown.
When I finished the brief story, I said to the woman in the green Subaru, "I guess nobody listened."
"Nobody ever does," she said.
She wished us a good hike and drove away.
The trail along the western foothills |
Looking out for critters |
A really late-blooming Ocotillo |
I've ID'd this plant in the past, but I can't find it now |
Waiting for the pokey Packrat |
6 comments:
"Progress" is a relative term. I wish people would realize how valuable the desert really is for these southwestern cities.
Beautiful sky. Development... dirtier than a four letter word.
I used to like to go back to northeast Ohio where I grew up and would visit my old haunts around Cuyahoga Valley National Park, but even in economically declining northeast Ohio, the development in the "hinterlands" rages on and the park gets more hemmed-in every year. It's not so enjoyable to go back there any more.
Dr. K: It seems a lot of people equate growth with "progress."
I feel the same about development, Jacqui.
Scott: I haven't been to that area since it was designated a national park, but I've thought about it; going there in the fall would be perfect.
Post a Comment