The town of Superior is located in a
mountainous, desert region of Arizona and the town itself sits in a pocket with
tall peaks - thereby delaying the manifestation of a beautiful sunrise or
expediting a panoramic sunset. Slicing through the mountains and the town
itself is a seasonal creek which after a respectable rainstorm, provides the
local populace with at least 3 free swimming pools. Getting to these swimming
holes was a danger in itself. Walking on an old road as far as it would take us
before we had to decide when to leave the comfort of weathered asphalt and
maneuver our built in guidance system towards the watery target was a choice my
friends and I had to make.
The desert tends to welcome the most
ominous creatures nature can provide. Walking in the desert is not synonymous
with walking around a sports track. Walking in the desert requires the utmost
alertness to the surroundings. Rattlesnakes seem to enjoy the comfort of
lounging next to a prickly pear cactus and tend to get in a coiled stance when
threatened by the sound of footsteps. In this coiled stance, a rattlesnake will
not start shuddering it’s rattler until a subject is within viewing distance
and that could be a simultaneous split-second event. A rattlesnake will decide whether it feels endangered
enough when a subject is within striking distance, whether to spring into
action and inject poisonous venom or let the subject walk on by. Objectively, a
subject will not just “walk on by”, but rather jump out of his/her shoes and run.
Less frequently encountered - but
nevertheless as frightening as a rattlesnake - were Black Widow spiders and
scorpions. Curious souls spreading the branches of bushes may stumble upon a
Black Widow spider web with the host placidly looking on. Scorpions tend to hide
under loose rocks and would be exposed upon a hapless individual stepping on a
rock the wrong way causing it to move from its place. Airborne threats were in
the form of bumblebees and wasps who loved to be where the water was. Even less
frequently encountered “Devils of the Desert” were the Mountain Lion, Coyote,
Javelina and Bobcat. These animals were keen in their ability to avoid human
contact.
The age range of these brave individuals were
between twelve and twenty-one. I wouldn’t call the legal adults in this age
group responsible enough to carry the title of Chaperone, Lifeguard, Medic or
any other profession that was needed to ensure that every living human being wading
in these treacherous waters stayed that way. Yet, through it all, it’s safe to
say that through the one rattlesnake bite and the one injured shoulder from a
falling rock, everyone did survive without one loss of life or limb.
Ironically, I credit this to our parents willingness to trust our survival
skills enough to allow us to experience the good and bad of nature and mold us
into what we’ve become today.
My daughter taught me how to blog...it's alot easier than creating web pages with HTML.
ReplyDeleteThank you Edward for such a wonderfully descriptive and exciting glimpse into the lifestyle of a Superiorite. I myself never lived there but both of my parents did and the stories that they tell about life in Superior makes me wish that I did. Please keep these stories coming as your writing paints a great picture.
ReplyDeleteSincerely,
Cindy Fraijo-Miranda
Great story and brought back so many memories! I have run into a handful of rattlers and more myself and it's true! Jump and run! Much stronger for having grown up in Superior! Thanks brother, for the memories!
ReplyDelete