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Exploring Tuzigoot!

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Arizona has many beautiful parks and this one is found near Camp Verde AZ.   It is one of 380 parks in the National Park System.   Tuzigoot is an Apache word for crooked water.   This prehistoric community was built between 1125 and 1400 and sits on the summit of a long ridge 120 feet above the Verde Valley.   In some places the original buildings were 2 stories high and there were 77 ground floor rooms.   There were about 50 people settling here in the 1100’s and that apparently doubled in the 1200’s.   The Southern Sinagua people lived by farming corn, beans, squash and cotton using canal irrigation.   We don’t really know why the people left their homes – perhaps overpopulation, disease, conflicts or weather pattern changes.     What we do know is that they were fine artisans and made stone tools – knives, axes, and hammers.    Their pottery was generally undecorated and often coated with a red or black color that was highly polished.   They made bone awls and needles, woven cotto

The Beauty of the Kestrel

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Often on a Sunday Peter and I go birding.   Today we spotted a Kestrel sitting on a telephone wire.     .   Kestrels are the smallest falcon and they have very sharp eyesight.   We watched this bird sit quietly looking on the ground for food.   All of a sudden he swooped to the ground and then flew to the top of a telephone pole with an insect.   He stayed there and ate his snack   – probably a grasshopper.   I enjoyed his feather patterns of peach, reds, gray, brown, and yellow mixed with beige.   The Kestrel is the most colorful of all raptors.   He has a pair of vertical black stripes on each side of his face often called a moustache or sideburns.   He is most often seen in deserts and grasslands that extend to alpine meadows I was reminded of the Kestrel we saw in the desert near Picacho Peak AZ.   We noticed a bird making several trips to one of the trunks of a dead palm tree.   Kestrels use other bird’s nests for their homes and this Kestrel probably had babies in the nest.   Qui

Learning As We Go!

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Viking knit is the oldest method of chain making and I've become fascinated by it.  Once I conquered the single knit, I decided to add beads.  I could have googled or asked how it was done but it seemed like something I could just figure out.  And I've learned a lot as I proceeded first with tumbled turquoise beads and then with pearls.  I thought I'd share a few of the things I've learned.   Iif you want a great tutorial on viking knit technique, Trina Ann at http://blog.trinaann.com/  has written a clear concise easy to understand tutorial.  I highly recommend it.    Tumbled tuquoise beads in viking knit  I used tumbled turquoise beads in the first viking knit chain and I did not really know what I was doing.  But I went right ahead and as it turned out, I liked the end result.  Since the beads were irregular in shape there was a random quality to the finished product. During that process, I began to really understand the technique of viking knit.  Loo