June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

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Celebrating the Art of Living in Southern Arizona June/Ju ly 2009 Vol. IIII No. 8

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June - July 2009 Tubac Villager. A monthly journal celebrating the art of living in Southern Arizona. Circulation: 11,000 printed copies.

Transcript of June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

Page 1: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

C e l e b r a t i n g t h e A r t o f L i v i n g i n S o u t h e r n A r i z o n a

June/Ju l y 2009Vol . I I I I No. 8

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CAMINO KENNEDY – FORTY ACRES at the north end of Tubac Foothills Ranch. Several great building sites. Views all around. Adjoins state land on the north. Can be split into three parcels. Electric at the lot line. Investment Potential! OFFERED AT $159,000.

AMADO - 5 ACRES, Mountain Views - $125,000.

CHARLIE MEAKER [email protected]

NOTE: Each month, we will report on Home Sales, using MLS DATA. Questions or Comments? Call or e•mail!

TUBAC HOME SALES - Resale home sales as reported by MLS - 3/23/09 – 6/2/09

Celebrating 30 Years in Tubac!

520- 237-2414

If you’re thinking of listing your property, please give me a call. I will give you a free market analysis, work for you on open houses, if desired, and “spread the word” with advertising in all media and the internet.

FEATURED HOMES This Month

OTHER FINE HOMES! -

Call for a showing!

2270 EMBARCADERO WAY

3BR, Deluxe Townhome - foreclosure

$ Call*

6 TROCITO CT.

3BR, Pool, Privacy, Palo Pardo Est.

$459,000

38 PIEDRA DR.

3BR, ON 3Ac - A Total Remodel

$499,000

508 POST WAY

1 BR, Townhome in Embarcadero*

$ Call*

501 POST WAY

3BR, Townhome in Embarcadero*

$ Call*

*Foreclosure, bank-owned properties.

Call for the latest price!

On the other hand...

ADDRESS AREA DESCRIPTION SALES PRICE $ PER SQ. FT DAYS ON MARKET

57 CHAVEZ SIDING256 MARKET CIRCLE104 POWELL CT.4 E. CT. DE ANZA97 AVENIDA GOYA604 POST WAY

VISTAS BARRIO DE TUBAC BARRIO DE TUBAC COUNTRY CLUBBARRIO DE TUBAC BARRIO DE TUBAC

3BR, AN AC RAY, BUILT 19723BR, PATIO HOME, FORECLOSURE3BR, PATIO HOME, SHORT SALE3BR, A GORGEOUS HOME ON 1.3 AC.2 BR, TOWNHOME IN “THE BOSQUE”1BR, IN EMBARCADERO, FORECLOSURE

$148,000$230,000$295,000 $735,000$240,000$120,750

$110.20$110.26 $130.13 $229.69 $140.68 $112.85

301426305134152103

IT’S A BUYER’S MARKET! There are over 100 resale homes listed for sale in Tubac, at prices ranging from $126,900 to a cool $8 Million! The Owners are waiting anxiously for your offer! Give me a call, and I’ll help you find the home that’s just right for you!

FORECLOSURE – ON THE 7TH FAIRWAY AT TUBAC GOLF RESORT.Upgraded Dorn home – Sabino model – with great room plan, huge kitchen, lots of light. 2BR, 2-1/4 BA in the main house, plus a 1BR-1BA casita. Entertain on the patio or in the courtyard with outdoor fireplace and “stairway to the stars” on the roof walk. A perfect second home. Sold AS-IS, but the Bank will pay up to 2% of the purchase price toward buyer’s closing costs. JUST REDUCED TO $475,000 – A BARGAIN!

FOUR BEDROOMS – FOUR ACRES – WHAT VIEWS!High on a ridge with mountain views in all directions. Privacy and quiet, yet only 2.7 miles from I-19 on paved roads. This home features 4BR, two full baths, beautiful Saltillo Tile floors (except BR’s). Kitchen has all appliances and Breakfast area. Covered east-facing patio with mountain views. All 4 acres fenced – horses OK. THIS HOME HAS IT ALL! Offered at $575,000.

156 ALISO SPRINGS RD.

2251 PALO PARADO RD.

FOUR BEDROOMS – BIG BACK YARD – MOUNTAIN VIEWS.On 1.29 acres in Palo Parado Estates, this Pierce home has a living/dining room, Family room with fireplace just off the kitchen, breakfast area with mountain view. The fourth bedroom is a “mother-in-law suite” at the other End of the house. Flagstone patio, walled yard with lots of room for a pool. Large work/storage room off the garage. Offered at $325,000 but ALL OFFERS CONSIDERED!

59 KEATING CIRCLE

WESTERN RANCH-STYLE HOME WITH EVERYTHING – AND MORE!Three-bedroom, 3-bath main house PLUS two-room hilltop studio/workshop. Shady porches on three sides, room to entertain, amazing mountain views AND a master bedroom suite that would make a queen envious! The list of wonderful things in this beautiful home goes on and on. Mere words cannot describe all this house has to offer – you have to go Look! Give me a call and you can see for yourself! REDUCED TO $499,000.

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This monthly journal is made possible through the support of local advertisers, artists and writers... please visit their unique businesses and let them know where you saw their ad, art or article.

The Tubac Villager is a locally owned and independently operated journal, based in Tubac and published monthly to celebrate the art of living in Southern Arizona.

Letters are welcome.

Opinions expressed do not necessarily refl ect those of the advertisers or the publishers. Advertiser and contributor statements and qualifi cations are the responsibility of the advertiser or contributor named.

All articles and images are the property of the Tubac Villager, and/or writer or artist named, and may not be reproduced without permission.

June/July Circulation: 10,000. The Villager is made available at 180 Tucson locations, 400 Phoenix locations, and off ered free of charge at locations in Tubac, Tumacacori, Carmen, Green Valley, Nogales, Rio Rico, Amado and Arivaca, Arizona.

June/July 2009 Tubac Villager

by Joseph Birkett

Pg 4 Santa Cruz County Update by Kathleen Vandervoet

Pg 6 Event Calendar

Southern AZ HistoryPg 8 Tubac Ten Establish School by Mary Bingham

Pg 10 Artist’s Palate by Kathleen Vandervoet

Diceroprocta semicincta

Pg 12 Summer Musicians by Carl Olson

Arizona Night Blooming CereusPg 14 Queen of the Night by Byrd Baylor

Pg 16 Fireworks Spectacular by Kathleen Vandervoet

The Borderlands PhotographerPPg 1 188 SSummer CCanyons && Secret Waters by Murray Bolesta

Pg 21 LLetttter ffrom AAffriica by Tim Vandervoet

Pg 22 Sparrow Musing bybyC CararololS Stt.J Johohnn

Pg 23 Remnants from Ruth

PPg 2 244 TTubbac TTown MMap

Byrd Baylor

Mary Bingham

Joseph Birkett

Murray Bolesta

DeDe Isaacson

Shaw Kinsley

Jared Newton

Carl Olson

Ruthie

Carol St. John

Kathleen Vandervoet

Tim Vandervoet

We each have our own, special affi nity for a particular place and season - when the air simply feels right and the environment becomes more conducive to the atmosphere of self - or something like that. For me, it is the desert summer of southern Arizona.

Perhaps it is because I spent my summers growing up here, hiking the canyons off Ruby Road by day and marveling in the biodiversity of the night, that nostalgia teases the senses. Others probably select their childhood summer settings for their favorite, too. It seems reasonable. Summer has a way of leaving an indelible impression, as vacation from work or school allows more of that all-important time for the books, projects, or travel we enjoy most. It is invigorating to take up and accomplish goals which simultaneously hone some skill, however recondite the application.

Which is why apathy on the face of a kid in summer is such a powerfully motivating force, as parents and grandparents try and reshape the world in order to prolong the eventual boredom of summertime that so many young minds suff er from. We’re all terrifi ed of the kids getting bored, and rightly so, because fi rstly, their faces could get stuck like that and, secondly,

they don’t know any better.

I’ve been immune to boredom since I can remember and its absence has been as benefi cial to me and annoying to others as it would seem, but it has also aff orded me a perspective on the situation which, while not founded in science, at least sounds convincing.

Summer is made for art.

Summer is made for taking the family to dig for crayfi sh on the shores of a mountain lake, too, but when you come home, there will still be time, which for the uninspired can carry the constant threat of doldrums. In that case, the trick is to bring the lake back with you, which can be achieved in fi lm, notebook, paint, or a mosaic of material, whichever feels most comfortable. Collect your universe and create something more than just a slideshow in an expression of the experience.

As adults this is an empowering exercise as the careful refi nement of technique in any medium leads to clearer forms of expression. For young minds, these are the years where those skills they accumulate help defi ne and ultimately guide their participation in the world. Everyone is capable of creating art, it’s true, and it’s especially true of the ones with training. Kids will use art for the rest of their lives no matter what they decide

to become. From measurement and perspective to composition and color theory, pragmatic crafts to dramatic interpretation, the artistic conversation has simple but essential concepts which become powerful tools in the creation of anything they set their minds to.

Th e Tubac Center of the Arts has been helping kids experience quality art classes each summer since 1985, and continues this year in a four week program for kids 6-13, exploring the art of the self portrait through a variety of media: drawing, painting, sculpture, masks, mosaics, leather, music, playwriting, set design, and drama.

Th is year the Center will be keeping the gift shop open and there will also be a Summer Gallery, showcasing the work of Tubac artists, Michael Jayme and DeDe Isaacson. Dede is the creator of this month's beautiful cover, and Michael is producing paintings that display such an energy in his palette knife that I had to return to his gallery and ask questions. Stop by the Center and take a look.

I have taught at the Center for a number of summers and am happy to be teaching again this summer. I am particularly inspired by the theme this year of the portrait, as drawing the

human face is a formula that’s easy to teach and the impact that the skill has on a young artist is priceless.

While vacations can’t last a whole life, the ability to express oneself can help prolong the magic and memory of it.

Call the Tubac Center of the Arts to learn more about the Summer Arts Program at 520-398-2371.

Th is year there are weekly and daily projects and rates available, so stop in and bring the kids.

CONTENTS

DeDe Isaacson has a BA from DePauw University and did graduate work in environmental biology at the University of Dayton. She studied painting and sculpture at the School of the Dayton Art Institute in the 1970s and owned Gallery 333 in Dayton, Ohio in the 1980s. For more than twenty years she's been a television producer and with her husband, Gary Isaacson, owns World Clips TV, a video stock footage company. Traveling throughout the would shooting video and still photographs she fi nds endless inspiration for her photography, prints and paintings. Her work is in private collections in New York, Ohio, Georgia, Missouri, Florida, the Caribbean and now Arizona.

Isaacson's work is on display this summer at the Tubac Center of the Arts. View her work online at www.dedeisaacsonart.com

June/July 2009 Cover Art, "Hunting Crayfi sh" acrylic, 36" x 36" by Tubac Artist DeDe Isaacson.

THE ART OF SUMMER

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[email protected]

R e c o n n e c t . R e l a x . R e j u v e n a t e

Come see your favorite stylists from Josef’s oof Tubac who hhavve joineeed our ssalon.

Schedule a hair service at our Salon ($50 or greater value) and receive

$10 off your same day spa serviceor vice versa –

schedule a spa service and receive $10 off a same day hair service!

Valid 6/1 – 9/1/09

Director’s Summer Special

- $10 OFF !

$11 MILLION FIRE DISTRICT BUDGET DISCUSSED

Th e Tubac Fire District, which includes Tubac, Tumacácori, parts of Amado, and the north half of Rio Rico, will cost about $5.3 million to operate in the upcoming fi scal year that starts July 1, according to the proposed budget.

Th ere will also be an additional $6 million from bond proceeds for costs related to the construction of Fire Stations No. 3 and No. 4 in northeast Rio Rico.

Th e fi ve-member governing board will hold a public hearing, tentatively planned for Wednesday, July, 8 at 9 a.m., before the proposed budget of $11,308,095 is adopted.

Fire Chief Kevin Keeley said the property tax rate is anticipated to remain the same, although the assessed valuation of the district will rise signifi cantly, due to residential construction completed two years ago.

Board members were given a brief summary of the budget at the May 27 meeting. Another monthly meeting, open to the public, is planned for Wednesday, June 24, at 9 a.m.

Th e board members, who are elected, are Chairman Dick Lockwood, Dottie Bergmann, Mike Burns, Denny Scanlan and Herb Wisdom.

Both meetings are scheduled to be held at Station No. 1 on the East Frontage Road, just north of the shopping village. Anyone who would like to comment on the budget can get more details by calling Keeley at (520) 398-2255.

BP CHECKPOINT UPDATE IS JULY 15

At the request of the Tubac Chamber of Commerce board of directors, the U.S. Border Patrol will provide an update on the Interstate 19 immigration checkpoint and the proposed improvements at the next

regular Tubac Chamber of Commerce meeting. Th is is an open meeting. Th e Tubac community is encouraged to attend.

Th e speaker is John Fitzpatrick, division chief of operations for the Tucson sector. Th e meeting is Wednesday, July 15, at 8 a.m. at the Tubac Community Center, 50 Bridge Road.

Although the Border Patrol had hoped to complete by now some improvements at the immigration checkpoint on northbound Interstate 19 between Tubac and Amado, things are moving slowly.

As of June 1, the agency hadn’t submitted all the necessary plans to the Arizona Department of Transportation for review, prior to having permits issued.

Th e Border Patrol has said at numerous public sessions that the plans include paving the east shoulder on the northbound side to allow for a third

traffi c lane, erecting a shade canopy that will span all three lanes, and installing some non-permanent buildings.

TUBAC PARK IMPROVEMENTS SOUGHT

Two women with young children are hoping to improve the playground area at Ronald R. Morriss Park in Tubac, which is owned and maintained by Santa Cruz County.

Katie Munger and Paula Beemer have started a group called For Moms By Moms and one of the goals is to add a shaded play area and updated play equipment.

Th ey spoke at the May 18 meeting of the Santa Cruz Valley Citizens Council and asked if the members were interested in the project. Several people said they don’t have any place to take their grandchildren when they visit and they liked the idea.

Th e women said they’ve spoken with

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Mary Dahl, the county’s director of community development. Th ey said they will investigate joining with another, or starting their own, non-profi t organization.

Th e Ronald R. Morriss Park, which has a fenced ball fi eld, bleachers, a restroom and three covered picnic tables, is reached by taking Calle Iglesia east from the village toward the Santa Cruz River. Th e park’s entrance is south of the bridge that crosses the river.

Anyone who would like to join the group, support it, or who wants information is invited to call Munger at (520) 403-7347 or Beemer at (520) 398-2841.

CONSTRUCTION STARTS ON FIRE STATION

Th e Tubac Fire District started construction on its third fi re station which is located in northeast Rio Rico. Th e entire north half of Rio Rico is

inside the Tubac Fire District.

A groundbreaking ceremony attended by nearly 100 people was held May 19 and work started that day, said Louis Chaboya, special projects director. Th e station will cost $2.4 million and encompass 9,200 square feet.

Set 3.3. miles east of Pendleton Drive on Camino Josefi na, it’s on three acres donated by Avatar Properties, Chaboya said.

Th e general contractor is Lang Wyatt of Tucson and 40 percent of the subcontractors are Santa Cruz County companies. Completion is scheduled for mid-April 2010.

TUMACÁCORI WILDERNESS AREA

Mike Quigley of the Sky Island Alliance spoke in Tubac on May 18 about the status of the proposed 84,000-acre Tumacácori Highlands Wilderness Area.

He said Congressman Raul Grijalva plans to reintroduce his bill to establish the wilderness area, which would be south of Tubac and west of Tumacácori, Rio Rico and Nogales. He fi rst introduced the bill in July 2007 but it was not successful.

Th e region has more wildlife and plants than inhabit some entire states, including many endemic species that occur nowhere else on earth, according to the web site.

Quigley said during the monthly meeting of the Santa Cruz Valley Citizens Council that the wilderness designation allows hiking and horseback riding but would prohibit motorized and mechanical transport. However, about 90 percent of the current Forest Service roads will remain open, he said.

Th e Border Patrol will be able to patrol the area as well, he said. Arizona Game and Fish will regulate hunting in the area.

Lee Blackwell, a Tubac businessman, said he’s opposed to the restriction that will mean mountain bikes cannot use the trails. He said he’s tried for several years to have modifi cations made to the proposal.

SCVCC president Rich Bohman asked for a vote of the members regarding the Wilderness proposal. Th e vote was 31 in favor, 10 opposed, and two abstaining.

Natalie Luna, press secretary for Grijalva, said in a June 2 telephone interview that Grijalva expects to reintroduce the bill “possibly in mid to late summer. Th ere are still some fi nal issues to be tweaked.” She said she might have more details in early July.

Quigley said more information is available on the web site at http://www.tumacacoriwild.org.

(Contact Kathleen Vandervoet [email protected] or at (520) 398-2089.)

Serving Lunch& Dinner Thursday -Sunday 11am~8pm

Authentic Regional Mexican Cuisine with a blend of New World Ingredients.

Stables Ranch Grille evokes Tubac’s Spanish past in its cuisine and atmosphere. The restaurant, formerly stables for Spanish

Ranchers in the New World, is nestled Below the Santa Rita Mountains and amongLush cottonwoods on the Santa Cruz River.

Both Restaurants located at the Tubac Golf Resort 1 Otero Rd. Tubac, AZ www.TubacGolfResort.com

Tubac Golf ResortSomethin’s Happenin’ every night of the week “All Summer Long” at Stables Ranch Grille & Dos Silos Comida Mexicana!

b lf

! !Comida Mexicana

All You Can Eat Mexican Buffet For

$14.95, &2 For 1 Margaritas

Every Sunday4-7 PM

Stables Ranch Grille evokes Tubac’s

Tasty BBQ & Great MusicAll served with our Special Recipe BBQ Sauce,

Creamy Cole Slaw, Baked Pit Beans & Corn BreadSmoked Free Range Chicken, Slow Cooked Beef Brisket, Pork Baby Back Ribs, Combo: Chicken Beef & Ribs and House Made Root Beer Floats

Summer Music SeriesSummer Music Seriesere.

Fridays:Soft Rock, Country,Dance or Bluegrass

Thursdays:Sassy Jazz Night

Saturdays:Classic Songs with

Becky Reyes

~

~

Music begins each nightat 6 PM. BBQ Specials from 4 PM until close.

5

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 $7 parking fee or

VIP package $35 adults/$15 kids: 

to include a Ranch Style BBQ Buff et with

Baby Back Ribs, Steaks, Chicken, Salads & Desserts

Contact: Kim at 398-3513

to reserve your

VIP reservations or e-mail:

[email protected]

–– HHuurrrrryyyy ssssppppaaaacceee isss limmmmiitteeeddd!!

Fun & family activities, food vendors, kids face

painting, DJ, huge desert sky fi reworks display

& special VIP package.

Starts at 4pm, dinner at 6pm, fi reworks at 8:45pm.

4th of July

Celebration at the Tubac Golf Resort

THURSDAYS IN JUNE AND JULY – Live Music at Café Presidio. – Sassy Jazz Nights at Stables Ranch Grille at the Tubac Golf Resort at 6pm.

FRIDAYS – Soft Rock, Country, Dance or Bluegrass playing at Stables Ranch Grille at the Tubac Golf Resort at 6pm.

SATURDAYS – Classic Songs with Becky Reyes at Stables Ranch Grille at the Tubac Golf Resort at 6pm.– Open Mic Comedy Nights at Artist’s Palate in Plaza de Anza from 9-10pm.

SUN, JUNE 1ST THRU 26TH - GREEN VALLEY OLLI

JUNE PROGRAM. How do you use blogs, wikis and podcasts to expand your information horizon? Want to learn to “tweet?” Are snow and ice character elements in movies such as Fargo and Transsiberian? How can seniors communicate more eff ectively with their children and grandchildren? Titles of the 13 classes are: From Showboat to Spelling Bee: The American Musical Comedy; Formation of the Modern Middle East; Passages: Support and Education in End of Life Issues; Current Events – Advanced Civics; Non-Fiction Addiction: The World Without Us; Health Care Reform: A Snap Shot; The Life and Lines of Dorothy Parker; Shakespeare from Page to Stage: The Tempest; UnSpun:

Finding Facts in the World of Disinformation; Dinosaurs: Do Your Grandkids Know More Than You Do?; Web 2.0: The Brave New World of Blogs, Wikis and “Tweets”; Films to Cool You Off ; Reaching Across the Generations. Study groups will meet weekly for 1½ hours, either from 1:30 to 3 p.m. or from 3:30 until 5 p.m Part of a nationwide, university-affi liated program for adults over 50 who love learning, OLLI/GV membership is open to residents of Green Valley, Sahuarita, Tubac and neighboring communities. For current OLLI/GV members there is no additional cost to enroll in the June study groups. For new members, the fee for the June program is $40. Class sizes are limited, registration deadline is May 22. Call (520) 626-9039 or [email protected]

6

Above, left: Eduardo Valencia performs at Wisdom’s Cafe in Tumacacori. Wisdom’s has live music and other special events through the summer. Above, center: roving Minstrels Ascendia and Kazarian serenade people on the Tubac Plaza. The Plaza’s main stage continues to feature many live shows. Above, right: congratulations to Shelby’s Bistro

in being chosen as one of the Best 25 Restaurants in Arizona by Arizona Highways Magazine, Shelby’s is across the footbridge in Mercado de Baca,19 Tubac Road.

Photograph by Jared Newton

Photograph by Jared Newton

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TUES, JUNE 16TH THRU JULY 9TH -

TUBAC CENTER OF THE ARTS SUMMER

ARTS PROGRAM. Students ages 6 through 15 will be able to take classes in drawing, painting, mask-masking, collage, printmaking, music, drama and more!  Cost is $195 for 4 weeks or $110 for 2 weeks. Call 520-398-2371 for registration materials or more information.

TUES, JUNE 9TH – POETRY READING

IN TUBAC from 5 to 8pm. The fi rst part is happy hour, you are welcome to bring or share the refreshment of the evening. We will spend the remaining part of the time having an open forum to read, recite, and receive feedback from our fellow artists that attend. It is open forum which means, you are encouraged to participate with an original piece of your work, or another piece from another Artist that you are inspired by…we then will take turns discussing our work amongst the group. New Location – email or call Martita at [email protected] or 520.398.3113.

WED, JUNE 10TH – ‘DANCING IN THE

SEAT’ an evening with the Motown Sound featuring Soul Grove. At the Community Performing Arts Center, 1250 W Continental Rd, Green Valley, 7pm. 520-399-1750. Tickets $10.

THURS, JUNE 11TH – SUSTAINABLE

SANTA CRUZ - Attend and help establish the partnerships that will be the basis for this critical eff ort, to bring a unifi ed and comprehensive transition to our communities. Be part of the planning of educational events to support sustainable living practices, and to hear from environmental groups that study the I-19 corridor and Santa Cruz watershed. The mission will be to ensure the county’s use of best practices for our energy, water, food, transportation, and housing sectors.  Working groups will be formed to develop participation in citizen-based advocacy for regional planning by our local government. Tubac Com. Center, 50 Bridge Rd. 5:30-7:30pm.

SUN, JUNE 14TH – BBQ NIGHT AT THE

TUBAC (RON MORRIS) PARK at 5pm to benefi t by For Moms by Moms eff orts to improve the Tubac Park.

TUES, JUNE 16TH – WINE TASTING at the Anza Market from 5 to 6pm.

WED, JUNE 17TH – U.S./ BORDER

PATROL CHIEF OF OPERATIONS

IN TUCSON, JOHN FITZPATRICK,

WILL GIVE AN UPDATE ON I-19

CHECKPOINT at the request of the Tubac Chamber of Commerce Board of Directors. At the Tubac Community Center, 50 Bridge Rd. at the next regular Chamber of Commerce meeting at 8am. This is an open meeting. The Tubac community is encouraged to attend.

WED, JUNE 17TH - BBQ NIGHT AT

WISDOM'S CAFÉ with Live Music by Eduardo Valencia (reservations recommended). 398-2397.

FRI, JUNE 19TH - LIVE MUSIC BY

KANELA - a husband/wife duo who plays your old-time favorites in English & Spanish at Wisdom's Café, Tumacacori.

FRI & SAT, JUNE 19TH & 20TH - 2ND

ANNUAL GARLIC AND ONION

FESTIVAL AT AGUA LINDA FARMS I-19, exit 42. Admission for this event is free!  So are the hayrides and visits to the animals in the petting zoo.  Live music, roasted garlic, food samples, recipes and more! Dragoon Market & Cafe, among others, (www.DragoonMarketplace.Mysite.Com), will be providing freshly prepared foods, desserts & drinks featuring garlic & onions. They will be off ering local sausages called “count draculas” due to their garlic content! Bring the whole family out to the farm for a fun, relaxing evening! From 5 to 9pm.

FRIDAY THRU SUNDAY, JUNE 19TH

THRU 21ST - 1ST ANNUAL TUBAC/

TUMACACORI MUSIC FESTIVAL

WEEKEND, all day every day! FREE

continued on page 26...

The 5 Deadly Venoms perform at Tubac Plaza’s Center Stage Saturday, July 11th, from 6 to 9pm.

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It was America’s centennial year. As of July 4th, 1876 the southern half of Arizona had been a territory of the United States for 22 years. Th e fi rst ten years Arizona was a part of

the New Mexico Territory (NMT), but gained separate territorial status in 1863.

Perhaps it was the centennial that inspired the Tubac Ten to sign a petition for the establishment of Tubac School District No. 4 on December 1, 1876. Heading the list of signers was Henry Glassman, followed by Sebastián Vicinz, I. Goldberg, Doloras Pachecko, [next name illegible], José María Figeroa, Nicolás Ereras, John T. Smith, Jos King and James Peters. Two men, Figeroa and Ereras signed with their mark. Th e fi fth signature is a mystery. It was obviously a bold hand, but neither Doris Bents nor Dr. Elizabeth R. Brownell, two historians who studied the document and knew the names associated with Tubac could decipher it and neither can I. A check of the 1870 and 1880 census records for Tubac hasn’t helped either. Th e name Vicinz does not appear on census records nor does the given name Sebastián appear on federal or territorial census for Tubac for those years.

A month or so before the petition was presented, Brownell noted in Th ey Lived in Tubac: “Interest in a Tubac townsite was expressed as early as 1876. On October 24 of that year Albert Steinfeld, Isaac Goldberg, Edward N. Fish, S. Silverberg, and Charles Poppe (none of them Tubac residents except Goldberg) fi led notice that they had that day located the claimed land for the use and purpose of a townsite to be known as ‘Tubac.’” It would be eight years before the townsite would be established, however the Tubac School District petition had more success.

Th anks to Th omas Lillie Mercer the fi rst offi cial school class, held in Tubac during the Arizona territorial period, took place in a little adobe store owned by Mercer. Mercer came to Tubac by way of Prescott in 1876. Soon after arriving, he purchased the Miner’s Hotel and a store belonging to Sabino Otero. Both were located in the vicinity of the Tubac Presidio State Historic Park’s (TPSHP) maintenance offi ce on Presidio Dr. Today it is hard to believe Presidio Dr. was once the main road between Tucson and Sonora,

Mexico on the west side of the Santa Cruz River.

Mercer quickly became active in civic matters, and began teaching his fi rst class in February of 1877. He taught students at one end of his store while selling merchandise and liquor at the other. By 1884, Mercer had several businesses and many civic duties. He needed help. Mrs. Sarah M. Black, a schoolteacher at the Oro Blanco Mine southwest of Tubac, heard of the Tubac teaching position and rode over for an interview. She must have impressed Mercer as she was hired and became Tubac’s second teacher.

Mercer provided a room in his hotel for Mrs. Black to teach class and quickly set about building her a proper schoolhouse. Brownell credits Mercer with nearly single handedly seeing to it that the new schoolhouse was built. It was ready for Mrs. Black and her students in 1885. Built of adobe with a dirt fl oor, the old schoolhouse is now a main feature of the TPSHP. Th e walls have been plastered and a wood fl oor added, however the original structure still stands.

But who were the Tubac Ten who signed the petition? Th ere were a couple of local Tubac citizens with roots going back to the Spanish colonial period. A few more came to the Arizona Territory (AT) as part of the California Column of volunteers during the Civil War. And at least fours were European immigrants. Th eir diversity refl ected the character of Tubac in 1876, a town of many nationalities and many ups and downs. 1876 was obviously a time of progress for tiny Tubac.

DESCENDANTS OF EARLY TUBAC SETTLERS

Th e following signers are all believed to have been members of old Tubac families. Th eir families can be found in the Tumacacori Mission 2000 database for the census year 1831 and more.

Doloras Pachecko - most like this name would be spelled Dolores Pacheco in today’s world. Th e Pacheco family has roots going back to the Tubac presidio days. Don Garate’s Mission 2000 shows a Juan Pacheco served as a soldier at Tubac. He died in 1817 and was buried at “Tubac-in the cemetery.” Presumably the cemetery was the one originally surrounding the military chapel built by

TUBAC TEN ESTABLISH SCHOOL IN 1876by Mary Bingham

OPEN 7 DAYS 11am - 4pm

20 Tubac Rd Tubac AZ 520-398-9186

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Page 9: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

Captain Juan Bautista de Anza and known as Santa Gertrudis. St. Ann’s now stands on the foundation of the old chapel and is located on Calle Igelsia next to the TPSHP. Mission 2000 also reveals that a woman named Dolores Pacheco appeared on the 1831 Tubac census. It is unlikely she was the signer, but further research is needed. By the way, the 1831 census is a new addition to the Mission 2000 database.

José María Figeroa, is another signer who is yet to be found. Th e Figeroa or Figueroa family appears in the 1831 Tubac census, so the chances are excellent that José María was a direct descendant of José Antonio Figueroa and his wife Agustina Ortega or Nicolás Figueroa and his wife Juana Garcia.

Nicolás Ereras, is most likely the Nicolas Herrera age 27 shown on the 1870 Federal Census for Tubac along with wife Altagarcia and one-year-old son, Jesus. Th e surname has been spelled many ways over the years including: Herreras/Herreros/Herreas/Herrera, but the family has been tied to the Tubac and Sonoita areas since Spanish colonial days. León Herreros was the owner of the Mexican land grant known as San José de Sonoita and had at least three sons: José, Pedro and Nicolás as recorded in the 1831 Tubac census.

Th e house north of the Hugh Cabot Studios-Gallery has been designated as the Pedro Herreras House dating to 1857. Herreras and his family lived there during the Civil War years, but in 1867 he rented the house to the U.S. Army for use as barracks.

Nicolás Herreras was also among eleven signers of a petition on January 11, 1882 that successfully established the Tubac townsite.

TUBAC BUSINESSMEN

Henry Glassman, born in Germany in 1828 immigrated to the United States in 1845, and became an American citizen on March 29, 1853 in New Orleans. Information of his early years in the U.S. is sketchy, but Civil War military records show that he enlisted as a private in Captain William Ffrench’s Company D, 5th California Infantry, on November 12, 1862. He was listed as a butcher, an occupation that served him well prior to enlistment and later in Tubac and Tucson. Over the course of the next three years, he was stationed at Mission Camp on the Gila River near Yuma, Point of Mountain near Tucson and Las Cruces, NMT. He was honorably discharged at Fort Selden, NMT on November 30, 1865.

Glassman is recorded on the Tubac 1866 and 1867 Arizona Territorial census records and John Spring writes about him in 1868. After discharge from the Army Spring arrived in Tubac with merchandise to open a store in partnership with Leslie B. Wooster, who owned a farm south of Tubac and had contracts with the military to supply the local forts. Spring notes there were three other stores operating at the time belonging to Th omas Yerkes, Goldtree & Tapie [Tapia] and Henry Glassman. Glassman’s store was directly opposite Spring’s, and “he kept a barroom, did some butchering, and traded principally in fl our and beans, of which two articles he generally kept a good stock on hand.”

In December 1868, Spring learned Glassman was in love with a local widow named Jesusa Raney/Rainy/Reney who lived with her two small children. Unfortunately she did not speak English and Glassman did not speak Spanish. Spring was studying Spanish at the time so Glassman enlisted his help in courting Mrs. Raney.

Spring wrote a letter for Glassman “proposing matrimony, in the old, recognized only proper Mexican style.” Mrs. Raney advised that she was interested but she needed proof that her husband was legally dead before she could remarry. Spring assisted Glassman in obtaining proof and when the widow sent her fi nal reply, he quickly ran over to Spring’s to have the letter translated. Just as Spring was reading her acceptance of marriage a loud explosion

was heard from across the street. A batch of cider Glassman was brewing exploded doing extensive damage to his store. It didn’t matter. Glassman was elated and exclaimed as he ran back across the street, “Dat ish mine cider — poot de py widow ism mine!” Glassman and Mrs. Raney were married May 23, 1869, their marriage being delayed until his store could be rebuilt. Glassman also became the stepfather to her two children, William and Mariane.

By 1870, Indian depredations in Tubac forced Glassman to move to Tucson and three years later to Florence where he ran an eating-house on the stage line between Tucson and Phoenix. However, it appears that he returned to Tubac and was back in business by 1876. Glassman died in January 1884. Prior to his death, he deeded “a lot of land on the east side of the Plaza in the town of Tubac being known as the Glassman property or Saloon” to Jesusa Glassman, the former Mrs. Raney.

Isaac Goldberg, a native of Russia was born in 1836. Immigrating to California in 1854, he became a naturalized citizen in Los Angeles on September 5, 1859. He moved to La Paz, AT in 1864 with the latest gold rush and went into business selling dry goods and whiskey. He later moved to Prescott and fi nally to Tucson in 1865 forming a business partnership with Philip Drachman. By 1869 he was doing so well, he acquired the nickname “Lomo de Oro” meaning “hill of gold,” a Spanish play on words for his German surname.

1870 was quite a year for Goldberg. He returned to San Berdardino, California and married Amelia Lazarus. Th ey would have four children: Arthur, Aaron, Emma and Ann. Either on his way to California or on the way back, he purchased the Sweetwater station on the Gila. He also “put a buggy upon the mail route from Tucson to Florence.” And fi nally, Goldberg and Drachman contracted to provide hay to the U.S. Army posts. Th e partners hired and sent out 80 men to cut hay for delivery to Camp Grant. Disaster struck when the partners lost four wagonloads of goods destined for the hay camp in an Apache attack. Th e wagon master Angel Ortiz was killed and losses claimed by the partners amounted to $7,850 for the goods. An additional $5000 was lost, but not claimed, due to the loss of revenue from the haying operation. Th eir partnership dissolved in 1872.

In May of 1876, Goldberg probably noted Glassman’s plans to return to Tubac and announced his intention to “ship a large lot of merchandise and start a store [in Tubac].” Goldberg’s time in Tubac must have been very brief as he returned to Tucson within a short time. Goldberg retired to San Bernardino, California after suff ering an accident in the 1890s and passed away in San Francisco, June 20, 1901 at age 69.

RANCHERS & FARMERS

Th e following three were ranchers and farmers south of Tubac and close friends.

Joseph King, born in the Azores Islands (Portuguese owned) in the late 1820s was probably the fi rst of the three to arrive in the Tubac area. William Wrightson hired King in Sacramento, California in 1864 as a member of his survey team. Th e purpose of the survey was to reestablish the boundaries of Baca Float No. 3. Decades later the survey would cause great loss of land to the King family and other pioneers along the Santa Cruz River.

When Wrightson acquired the ranch in Tumacácori including the Tumacácori Mission is not known. He had very little time to enjoy it as he was killed February 17, 1865 near old Fort Buchanan along with Gilbert Hopkins. It is not clear how King came to claim to the ranch, but he was well established as the owner as noted in the 1870 census. King is listed as a farmer and his household included: Camil Quijada, House Keeper and John Rogers, Farm Laborer. It is possible that Camil was King’s fi rst wife. No marriage record has been found to date.

However, we do know King married Trinidad Ramirez on June 3, 1879. T. Lillie Mercer, Tubac’s

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Page 10: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

What do customers like about Th e Artist’s Palate restaurant? Th e pizza and the pasta, judging from several dining experiences by this writer.

Th e restaurant in Plaza de Anza, which opened in September 2005, incorporates attractive framed art work, and the dining tables display art work under glass. Th e name is a clever choice - “palate” signifi es the sense of taste or roof of the mouth, while “palette” is the board on which dabs of paint are held as an artist works.

Truly, the restaurant tempts the palate of both artists and curious customers.

Owners Dean and Vicky Fey present a wide range of food and beverage choices. Fey said some people think the restaurant is geared to “fi ne dining” and may shy away, but he prefers to see it as “an upscale casual restaurant.” Th e menu includes hamburgers, salads and sophisticated entrees, along with the perennially popular pizzas.

Most nights there are one or two daily specials and on a recent evening my guest and I enjoyed those. I had shrimp scampi, with six large and succulent shrimp cascading over a plate of pasta tossed with sautéed garlic, olive oil and bits of minced vegetables. Lorraine ordered the pasta

Bolognese, which was an ample portion of a satisfying marinara and meat sauce ladled over carefully cooked spaghetti.

“Th e pizzas have really taken off this year,” Fey said. Th e 14-inch pizzas are crafted with home-made dough, cooked in a pizza oven, and are also available for pick-up. Prices range from $13.99 for a cheese and tomato sauce pie to $26.99 for “Th e Glance,” a white pizza with seafood including lobster, shrimp, crab meat and mussels.

Th e made-from-scratch lasagna entrée, priced at $14.99, is a thick, layered slab that features ricotta and cream Parmesan fondue. On the casual side, hamburgers are $8.99 and include a choice of French fries or coleslaw. Salads can be a starter, or a satisfying lunch. Th e spinach salad for $8.99 has candied walnuts, red onion, bacon and crumbled Roquefort cheese.

For a more traditional dinner, courses include blackened salmon served Cajun style, a 12-ounce pub steak, chicken Parmesan and chicken Marsala. Th ere’s a children’s menu priced at $5.99 with a choice of hamburger, lasagna, pizza, spaghetti, or Fettuccini Alfredo.

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10

Page 11: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

to squeeze in dessert. On a recent visit I enjoyed the apple tartin, a generous serving of warm, baked apple slices in a light pastry crust and a scoop of vanilla ice cream on the side, for $6.75. Other choices include carrot cake, chocolate cake, tiramisu and an old fashioned ice cream sundae.

Th e restaurant includes a full bar, and there are some special events this summer. Fey said they’re “promoting happy hour,” both from 3 to 6 p.m. and 8 to 10 p.m. with 2-for-1 drinks and complimentary hors d’oeuvres. Th ursdays are Ladies’ Nights and ladies’ drinks are free from 8 to 9 p.m. Karaoke is also an entertainment option.

An open-mic for comedy nights on Saturdays from 9 to 10 p.m. is an exciting experiment, and Fey promises prizes for winners at the end of summer.

A native of St. Louis, Fey worked for years in the restaurant business in Las Vegas. Th ere, employed by some of the major resorts, he said he opened restaurants such as Th e Riva in Th e Mirage, Circo at Bellagio and Aureole at Mandalay Bay.

He came to Tubac in December 2004 when he visited his friend, Roy Purcell, a gallery owner. “Th at’s when I thought it would be a good place to open a restaurant. I’ve always worked in restaurants, ever since I was a kid, going to school. I’ve done everything in restaurants, but never owned one,” he said.

Th e display of art has played a key role in the restaurant. When they opened, “We put a call out (to artists.) We had several of the galleries involved. We were bringing in art work and displaying it.”

A “little makeover” was accomplished earlier this year. “We took everything down and painted, and then we came back and instead of having a lot of little pieces, we tried to put up larger pieces.” On display are paintings from Frey’s personal collection. As well, an avant-garde piece in a silvery blue tone by artist Fred Collins, done for the restaurant, is eye-catching in its placement above the opening to the kitchen.

Customers walking into Artist’s Palate are greeted with a smile and a warm welcome. Starched white napkins top each place setting and the blond wood furniture is comfortable for lingering at following a meal. Frey said it’s important to him that the dining room is always neat and clean. Th e patios on three sides generally draw a full crowd on sunny and mild winter afternoons.

Th e Artist’s Palate, located at 40 Avenida Goya, is open daily except Mondays for lunch and dinner.

Th e phone number is (520) 398-3333.

A n d Fe a t u r i n g t h e Pa i n t i n g s a n d P o r t r a i t s o f

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Tubac Ar t Exchange2243 East Frontage RoadTubac, AZ 85646-4281(520)237-5439www.TubacArtExchange.comwww.WalterWilsonStudio.com

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11

Page 12: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

MICHAELARTHURJAYMENew Works

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As summer takes hold, temperatures soar, but if you think the desert is going to shrivel up and die, start

listening. Walk outside around noontime or a little later, if you can tolerate the hundred degree temperatures, and the mesquites will be alive with music. What possibly can want to be singing at this time of day, you wonder?

Th at amazing insect world presents its joy in song by male cicadas Diceroprocta semicincta. Each tree crackles with loud, shrill buzzing, created by single males, one per tree. Who are the musical connoisseurs that appreciate these songs, but female cicadas looking for love. Why do they select such a harsh time for these activities? Well few predators are crazy enough to risk their health at this

time of day, so the cicada takes advantage of this lull in danger.

Where have these strange insects been hiding for the last 6-8 months, because the music stopped in September last year? Th e immature stage has been living underground drinking juices from plant roots. You may recognize this strange beast from its empty shell (exoskeleton) that most of us as children discovered and treasured. Th is odd humpback creature has been underground for 3-5 years growing up. Th is may seem extreme to most people, but it can’t approach the 17 years spent as a juvenile by those famous cicadas back east. When fi nally the juvenile cicada has fi nished growing, it crawls out of the earth in dark, cooler times, climbs upwards on some rough surface, splits its skeleton and pulls itself out. Over the next few hours this new animal hardens and colorizes, and becomes the sound creator seldom seen but always heard by people.

by Carl A. Olson, Entomologist

Above, Diceroprocta semicincta, our southwest Cicada with shell. Below, the Cicada Killers - Sphecius grandis.

Photos courtesy Carl Olson.

Our southwest cicadas have an even better tale to add to their mystique. Sitting in trees singing their hearts out in the hottest time of the day is stressful, and the need for cooling is important. Th ese cicadas have evolved a cooling system whereby they put water vapor around themselves - sweating like us humans. Th is is, so far, the only known insect with this ability. Th ey have a series of tubules inside specifi cally designed to take water and release it into their environs, creating the insect version of swamp cooling. Now how can they replenish this lost moisture? Th e mouth of the cicada is a beak, so they can tap into the xylem of the plant and get a cool, refreshing drink without having to move.

This idyllic world still has its dangers, because birds abound and are always picking and pecking about in

search of a meal. Listen for a new sound of screaming and you may have heard a bird/cicada encounter. If the cicada is lucky, that scream will startle the bird enough to open its beak and release the cicada. If not, well... lunch. Certainly lizards will also have their way with these sumptuous beasts.

I would be remiss to not tell about the giant wasps called Cicada Killers (Sphecius grandis) that hunt and capture cicadas, paralyze them and fl y them to a burrow where they lay eggs on this resource for their off spring to feed upon. Almost the size of the better-known tarantula hawks, these wasps may create a panic when a dozen or so emerge in a yard. Th ey are big but gentle giants, now seeking mates and then a food for off spring. Th ese wasps also have the ability to thermoregulate, or manage temperatures in their bodies, so are able to hunt cicadas in the heat of the day.

Page 13: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

When people talk about Tubac as an art colony, they’re usually referring to the graphic arts, but we have had our share of writers here, too. Th ere was Georges Simenon on Santa Gertrudis Lane in the 1940s, John Duncklee in the village in the 1970s, and Dominic Dunne a little further south in Nogales in the 1980s, just to name a few. John Houghton Allen was another writer in Tubac, and he had a lifelong fascination with books.

John Houghton Allen moved to Tubac in 1964 because he was looking for a quiet place to concentrate on his writing. He and his wife Anne moved here from California and they lived in the old Ysidro Otero house on Calle Iglesia. John was born in 1909 in Austin, Texas, part of the family that owned the 60,000 acre Jesus Maria Ranch near Randado, between Corpus Christi and Laredo. His book Southwest was published in 1952 and describes the agricultural life on his family’s ranch when Allen was young and what happened to it when oil was discovered and the whole environment changed. Southwest attracted high praise when it came out, and people still enjoy reading it today. John also wrote two books of poetry, three articles for Holiday magazine, a story about bullfi ghting for True, and a number of pieces for the New Mexico Quarterly and Southwest Review. Rather sadly, he believed that the best way to observe life was “through the bottom of a glass,” and this seems to have limited the size and quality of his literary oeuvre, but not his enthusiasm and love for books.

John attended a number of schools and universities including Texas A&M College, St. Edward’s College (Austin), the University of Texas, the University of New Mexico, and summer schools at Michigan and Columbia. He collected books throughout his life, and they refl ect his wide learning and enthusiasms. Many of his books are fi nely bound, some are signed by their authors or illustrators, and each one is beautiful in its own way. John liked illustrated books and had two by the great French artist Gustave Doré:

Fontaine’s Fables and Cervantes’ Don Quixote. He had two books on polo, one signed by Paul Brown, as well as a handsome copy of George duMaurier’s Trilby, along with a wonderful edition of Laurence Sterne’s A Sentimental Journey.

Th e Limited Editions Club was founded in 1929 by George H. Macy and produced a number of fi nely made and illustrated books. John was Subscriber #631 and avidly awaited the annual off erings of this organization which included The Way of All Flesh, Old Creole Days, Th e Life of Benvenuto Cellini, Poe’s Tales of Mystery and

Imagination, and Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales. Among these are books signed by such names as George Grosz, Miguel Covarrubias, Fritz Kredel, Edward A. Wilson, and Paul Landacre.

John also studied art in Paris as a young man, but no sketches, watercolors, or paintings from his years there survive. What does survive is a collection of French books, which span the years from 1830 to 1931 and demonstrate his interest in

romantic poetry, drama, medicine and literature. His love of illustrated books shows in a handsome 2 volume set of Les trois mousquetaires illustrated by Maurice Leloir. Other highlights of Allen’s French books include Le monde ou l'on s'ennui, Le mariage de Loti, and Gautier’s Emaux et Camées.

John died in the 1980s and his books remained in the house, shelved in glass-fronted cases that kept out the dust and controlled their environment. Th e bright gilding on the spines, the handsome colored leathers, and the brilliantly gilded textblocks that delighted John still attract attention today. When Anne died in 2006, the heirs decided to sell the collection and pass them on to people who would continue to treasure them. Th ey now occupy a set of glass-fronted shelves in TJ’s Tortuga Books and Coff ee Beans, and it’s wonderful to see how nicely John Allen’s old books look with the fantastic selection of new books available there, and you can enjoy a delicious hot or iced coff ee while you’re browsing.

by Shaw Kinsley

Page 14: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

One summer evening we were walking through an old residential area on South 9th Avenue in

Tucson not far from the railroad tracks, the pleasant kind of neighborhood where people sit outside at dusk and nod to you as you pass by on the sidewalk.

At one house we could see a cluster of people back in the side yard, chairs drawn up in a circle around a tree. Someone, just going through the front gate, noticed us and turned and said, "Th ey say the nightbloomer back there has thirty-one fl owers tonight."

Of course we followed him and no one seemed surprised that three strangers had joined those who already sat there watching a cactus bloom. Its thin, dry, dead-looking stems twisted perhaps fi ve or six feet up the trunk of the tree around which people were seated. Everyone seemed comfortable and at ease, enveloped in the heavy perfume of the mysteriously beautiful desert nightblooming cereus.

Another fl ower you could admire awhile and then go on about your business. But for the Queen of the Night you must give yourself up, forget where you were going, gaze hypnotized as the luminous white petals open wider and wider.

On this particular night, people told their own Reina de la Noche stories, stories of desert people fi nding

the bloom at night by knowing that scent, so unlike any other. Th ey say one blossom may scent the air 100 feet away.

Th e Tohono O'odham have an ancient story which explains why the nightblooming cereus is diff erent from any other desert fl owers.

Th ey say that many generations ago, a young T ohono O'odham girl fell in love with aYaqui warrior who had come north in a hunting party. She left her tribe and went with him to his home far south on the Rio Yaqui.

In those days people had many skills that are now lost, and this girl's mother had no diffi culty in contacting her daughter through the strength of her own mind. At sunset every day, she would walk out to a certain rocky place and call the girl, and the spirit of the girl would come to her. In that way, she knew that her daughter was safe and happy and had a small son beside her.

She also knew when fi nally her daughter was alone and dying from an illness. She could hear her daughter call to her for help.

Th e old woman was very tiny and bent, with arms and legs as skinny and brown as sticks. Her hair was white and she did not tie it up or cover her head as other

women in her tribe did. She let her white hair fl ow and it blew any which way in the wind, wild and untidy. People called her Old Mother White Head.

Old Mother White Head went off alone at dawn. All she knew was that she must go southward across many deserts and mountains. In those days people had not yet forgotten how to talk to animals and birds, so she could ask directions from blackbirds and coyotes along the way. Th e Little People fed her wild honey to keep her alive.

No one is sure how long that journey took.

When she fi nally reached Yaqui country, she could not understand the language of the people, but a jackrabbit and a blackbird showed her the place where her daughter was lying on a mat on the ground.

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Queen of the Night

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Page 15: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

The daughter was near death. Her only wish was that her son not grow up to be a warrior. She wanted him to grow up in the gentle life of

her own tribe. She told her mother to hide the boy in her burden basket and to leave

that night. Otherwise, it would be too late because as soon as she died, the child would be taken to a camp in the mountains by her husband's people.

Old Mother White Head was already exhausted and did not see how she could make another long journey so soon, but she hid her grandson in the

burden basket and went around the village pretending to pick up a little

fi rewood here and there. When it was dark, she started north, but this time

she had a child to carry and she moved more slowly than before. An old coyote

led her through the foothills by night and let her sleep by day, but she was

constantly afraid because she knew that people from the village were following her

tracks, searching for the child.

Finally, she felt her strength fading and knew her only hope was to give a long, loud call to I'itoi, Elder Brother. I'itoi answered in his own voice, telling her she must not stop to rest, that she must walk in the daytime along the arroyos and washes.

His words seemed odd to her because the land where she walked was fl at and hard and there was no arroyo in sight. Even so, an arroyo appeared and the old coyote ran along the top of the bank, keeping watch. Whenever anyone came near, the old woman hid close to the bank under any little bush until the birds gave her a sign that it was safe to walk again. Sometimes I'itoi himself walked along beside her, encouraging her. At these times, he liked to make himself very small and old.

After many days of walking, Old Mother White Head let her wild white hair be seen above the arroyo bank, and she heard a cry as a group of searchers ran toward her. She called for I'itoi, and he came singing a powerful earth song. As he sang, the banks of the arroyo moved toward her and closed around her as she held the child above her head. I'itoi suddenly appeared very large and young, and he took the boy in his arms and disappeared.

When the Yaquis reached the place where they had glimpsed the old woman, all they could fi nd were two dry, brown sticks and one or two white hairs.

Old Mother White Head felt the touch of the cool, safe earth and was at peace. She did not want to move again. I'itoi came back at sunset and reported that the child was now at home with his own people and that his life would be peaceful and good. So the grandmother's work was done, and she asked I'itoi to let her stay in the earth, exactly where she was, forever. He touched her thin arms, those withered

brown sticks. A tender white bud formed from that touch and opened into the most beautiful fl ower that has ever been seen in the desert night.

Th is is why, once a year at dusk in May or June (or whenever it feels like blooming) a pale, glowing fl ower opens on its thin, twisting stalks and fi lls the darkness with its own fragrance.

Th at is why the desert nightblooming cereus is almost impossible to fi nd when it is not blooming. It has to look like a dusty stick or a dead creosote branch - except during its one night of beauty.

And of course that is why its power calls you to stop whatever you are doing and sit with the Queen of the Night.

Note: Th is version of the origin of the desert nightblooming cereus is based on a story collected by Harold Bell Wright when he was living in Tucson in the early 1920s. He fi rst heard it from his friend, Mrs. Will Kitt, who took him to the reservation and introduced him to many of the elders of the Tohono O'odham tribe. Tribal members Richard Hendricks and Hugh Norris became his guides and interpreters, and they spent months together visiting remote villages and hearing the oldest stories anyone could remember. After he wrote their stories, Wright went back to the original storytellers time after time until they were satisfi ed with his eff orts. Th e collection, Long Ago Told, (new long out of print), was published in 1929 by D. Appleton.

(1 /2 Mile North of the Tumacácori Mission) Tumacácori , AZ 85640 (3 Miles South of Tubac)

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ATTENTION DIEHARD WISDOM’S CUSTOMERS ~ sign up for our e-mail newsletter by contacting [email protected] and receive advance notice of special events plus specials offered only to you folks willing to let us invade your inbox every now and again!

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Wednesday~ Pollo Asado ~

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Thursday ~ Santa Cruz Chicken ~

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riend

ly atmosph

ere.

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TUES 2-FOR-1 MARGARITAS

June/July EventsWednesday, June

17 - BBQ NIGHT w/Chef Arturo and his

SCRUMPTIOUS slow-smoked RIBS, PULLED PORK &

BRISKET. Customers have compared his bbq

sauce to the best they’ve had in the South!!  LIVE MUSIC by EDUARDO

VALENCIA (reservations recommended)

Friday, June 19 - LIVE MUSIC by KANELA - husband/wife duo plays your old-time favorites

in English & Spanish 

Sunday, June 21 - 2nd ANNUAL WHO’S YOUR

DADDY softball tournament at the BALLPARK next to the TUBAC COMMUNITY

CENTER.  EVERYONE is invited to play.  Bring your food/

drink/chair and join us for lots of fun. Starts late morning.

Friday, June 26 - CUSTOMER

APPRECIATION NIGHT 4:30-8pmish - WINE TASTING 

2-FOR-1 MARGS, LIVE MUSIC by BILL

MANZANEDO!Help the Wisdoms choose

their new wine! (Wine tasting from 4:30-5:30 only or until the wine runs out!)

Friday, July 3 - FIRST FRIDAY! 

5pm-8ish  2-FOR-1 MARGARITAS, FISH & CHIPS & LIVE MUSIC

Friday, July 10 - BAJA

LOBSTERFEST! - join us for MOUTH-

WATERING  LOBSTER and LIVE MUSIC!

(Reservations required only if having lobster)

Monday, June 15 - Wisdom’s will RE-OPEN with our regular, FULL-TIME hours!

New to our menu:  Strawberry Lemonade Margarita and T E Q U I L A F L I G H T S

Page 16: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

If you’re looking for a way to cap Independence Day, the fi reworks show at the Tubac Golf Resort is a sure bet. You’ll enjoy a respite from the day’s heat while lounging on the thick, sloping grass and be entertained by the boisterous excitement of running youngsters.

Th e Tubac Golf Resort invites the community to its annual Fourth of July fi reworks show on Saturday, July 4. Th e pyrotechnics begin at 8:45 p.m., and people can arrive starting after 4 p.m. Th e show is high-quality and long lasting, and ranks

among some of the best fi reworks displays in the state.

Th e golf resort is celebrating its 50th anniversary this year, said Linda Cormier, director of sales and marketing. “Th e Car Nuts will be here with some cars from the late 1950s, and there will be a special display during the fi reworks show to commemorate” the anniversary, she said.

Jim Stevens, retired manager of the golf resort, said he started holding the fi reworks show in 1980 or 1981. Long-time Tubac

Fireworks Spectacular

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photograph by Joseph Birkett

photograph by Jared Newton

While living in Green Valley, AZ from 2004-2007,

author R. Joe King put the fi nishing touches on his fi rst historical novel, Shadows in the Rain: A Tale of Old Klamath, California. Although labeled as fi ction, the book is based on King’s life in Klamath and the “1,000-Year Flood” that washed Klamath out to sea during Christmas week 1964.

King, now a resident of Shelton, WA will recall these terrible events during his talk on September 20, 2009 at the Del Norte County Historical Society (DNCHS) in Crescent City, CA. If you are from California you may also remember the devastating tsunami that wiped out several blocks of Crescent City earlier that same year. Crescent City and the DNCHS are marking the 45th anniversary of the twin events.

Crescent City was able to rebuild their downtown area, but for Klamath, the town had to move to higher ground. “Old Klamath” is now the haunt of ghosts and barely noticeable among the weeds and trees. King will be meeting with the editor of Th e Daily Triplicate newspaper, Matt Durkee, to help locate the ruins of the places that still live in his mind.

In 2008, King received an award from the prestigious Western Writers of America, as one of three Spur Award Finalists in the “Best First Novel” category.

www.bluetravelerpress.comMary Bingham520-780-0160

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Page 17: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

Thank you for your generous spirit and

kind heart. You’ll be missed!

Josef’s of Tubac Team: Donna · Andrea · Joseph · Ben · Cammy

The Artist’s Palate: Dean · Vicky · Jorge · Tony · Hedie · Brandy Windsor

Anza Market Place: Stan · Sue · Nancy · Betty

Tubac Ranch: Louise · Dara · Gary · Janice · Kim · Cindy · Karen

Tubac Embarcadero: Candace · Kathleen · Pablo · Tony Diana · Mariano · Carol

Emmy’s Pilates Studio: Margaret

Anza de Tubac: Lisa · Nicole · Harold

Cafe Presidio: Matt · Melli · Katie · Dave · Victor · Elisa · Nora

Chef’s Table: Paul · Gina

Love and Respect,

Josef and Suann,

residents Mary Lou and Corky Meyer remember taking their sons, Jeff and Chris, to the celebration in those earlier years. “It wasn’t a big show, as it is now,” Mary Lou said. Th ere was no charge, and no more than 200 people would turn out.

Th e festivities are scheduled to include a DJ playing music, games for children and face painting. David Krzyzanowski of the resort said he’ll have games such as relay races, food eating contests and other activities, that will to appeal to youngsters ages 5 to 12.

Th e resort’s two restaurants will be serving the regular menus. Also, people can buy hamburgers, hot dogs, tacos and snacks from booths outside the restaurants.

Th e resort is off ering a VIP package for $35 each or $15 per child which includes a ranch-style buff et dinner, a premier viewing location and free parking. To reserve the VIP tickets, call Kim at (520) 398-3513.

Th e entry fee for the fi reworks show is $7 per car and people are asked to use

Bridge Road, south of the Tubac Golf Resort. From there, they’ll be directed to the parking area. Cormier said only resort guests can use the golf resort’s main entrance the evening of July 4.

It’s recommended to bring blankets to sit on, or beach chairs with short legs. A fl ashlight for the walk back to the car at the end of the show is helpful.

Earlier in the day on July 4, the Tubac Presidio State Historic Park will be the site of free games for children from 10 a.m. to noon. Children will enjoy

a variety of old-fashioned games like cake-walks, sack races, rubber duck ring toss, hula hoops, face painting and more. Th e children’s games are being organized by the Tubac Chamber of Commerce with help from a variety of local non-profi t organizations. Games, prizes and hot dogs will be provided free of charge to the children. Park admission will be free during game hours.

Dear Friends and Valued Clients, Effective June 1st Josef & Suann will say Good-bye.  We ask that you will join  OUR TEAM  at the Tubac Golf Resort  and take advantage  of their many  ADDITIONAL  services.  We  THANK YOU  for your Past, Present, and Future support.  There is only GOODWILL. 

All Good Things, Josef and Suann 

Please call the Tubac Golf Resort Salon

@ 398-3543 

photograph by Jared Newton

Page 18: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

S U M M E R C A N Y O N S AND SECRET WATERS

Text and Photos by Murray Bolesta

Th e Borderlands Photographer

18

Top, left: Madera Canyon on the Santa Ritas’ west side is not the only one game in town. Th e eastern slopes have their spots too.

Top, right: Flooding erosion makes some shapes in the Tumacacori Highlands.

Middle, left: A hoodoo and summer foliage are both refl ected in the brilliant morning sun near the border.

Bottom, left: Saguaro can grow very near the water in this secret canyon.

Bottom, middle: You know there’s perpetual water when you see cattails.

Bottom, right: Not only the sight, but the sound of a desert water can delight a visitor in a borderland canyon.

Page 19: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

19

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Shade and water. Where in the borderland wilderness can you

fi nd both at the same time?

My friends Sam and Cass have just moved to this area, intent on becoming true desert rats and nature photographers. Further, they stubbornly insist on achieving success with minimalist frugality: “I wonder how far we can go in photography with cell phone cameras? Let’s stretch the technical limits.”

Yes, that may be a stretch for Sam and Cass, but with some input from me, they eagerly seek momentum. “Murray, where should we go fi rst?”

Th e borderland’s secret canyons can provide plenty of shade and water for the adventurous nature photographer. Both can mitigate the ferocity of a fi rst trek in summer.

Vertical walls shelter a hiker from the intense sun, but provide a challenge to the photographer. Th at challenge, high contrast between shade and sunny areas, is almost insurmountable, even with cell phone technology, I tell Sam and Cass. “Try photographing in either shade or sun fi rst, but not both.”

Further, not all canyons have the soothing eff ects of water, and not all canyons with water have fl owing water. Any water, however, is capable of multiplying the opportunities for good pictures, I explain. “Th e fl ora, fauna, and refl ections are where the action is.”

Some popular canyons in this area are Sabino and Madera. “Why not there?” I ask Sam and Cass.

“We don’t want crowds” they answer. “Show us some special, secret spots.”

Well, you won’t necessarily fi nd traffi c jams in Sabino and Madera Canyons in summer, I tell them, but if you seek a wilderness canyon experience that’s nearby, I know a few spots.

“Like where?”

I think for a moment. “You want special, secret spots. If I told you where they were, they wouldn’t be secret any more. I may have to blindfold you.”

Secret watery canyons are nearly a dime a dozen in the borderlands. Th e Tumacacori Mountains; the Pajarita Wilderness on the border, the east side of the Santa Rita Mountains; farther east by the San Pedro River and the Galiuros; back west at the Baboquivari Mountains.

Th ese canyons are where the intrepid summer photographer will fi nd water and life and drama. But few trails will greet him or her. Sam and Cass have it both tough, and easy. Th e tough part is learning how to hop rocks for hours on end. Th is requires supple ankles and knees, and stout boots with rigid soles. Th e easy part, for them, is the light load of carrying cell phone cameras, as contrasted with the two clunky bricks strapped around my neck.

Water is perpetual in some of these places. Summertime, starting late June, is when the monsoon begins in the borderlands, so that’s when water may be plentiful in all of them, fl owing rapidly or trapped in pools.

June is really hot – the hottest month of the year. Sam can’t believe this, and asserts that July and August must be hotter. He hasn’t seen the cooling eff ect of monsoon clouds and rains, which are brutally absent in June.

Sam and Cass are fearless, and that troubles me. Apart from falling and spraining a vital body part, a canyon trekker can have close encounters with rattlesnakes in the summer. I warn them that the only treatment for snake bite is back in the emergency room, quite a distance.

Showing my friends the lower-leg chaps, or gaiters, that I wear, Cass thinks these are overkill. I respond that “kill” is the operative word.

Did Sam and Cass charge up their cell phone cameras? Off we go to begin the journey of two new desert rats.

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Page 20: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

Justice of the Peace, performed the ceremony for the couple. Th ey would have three sons, Manuel, Joseph II and Jesus who attended school in Tubac.

While researching his book “King” of Tumacacori,” King’s great-grandson Joe King IV found the following notation made by William J. Osborne, Superintendent of Schools on the back of the petition: “Upon inquiry from reliable sources I learn that there are about 30 children within the limits of the proposed district and that there are suffi cient numbers living adjacent to Tubac to insure a good daily attendance at school.” It was the seal of approval for the new school district.

King and his sons would prosper on their ranch until

the fi nal Baca Float No. 3 decision and appeal. Th e U.S. Government and unscrupulous lawyers did what the Apache Indians could not — force them off their land.

John Truman Smith, born in Ohio in 1834 according to military records, served with the 5th Regiment, California Infantry, Company D. As a member of the California Volunteers, he enlisted September 23, 1861 at Sacramento, CA and was mustered out on November 27, 1864 at Las Cruces, NMT. For most of that time he was stationed in Tucson.

Smith appears on the 1866 Arizona territorial census living at El Monte, near Tubac. Brownell,

in her book John T. Smith of Tubac, relates this sad bit of Smith’s life during this time: “It was probably during this period that John visited Sonora. Th ere he met a very beautiful Spanish maiden, of an old and aristocratic family, and married her. After one happy year, his wife returned to Sonora to visit her family, and there she and her baby died in childbirth. Th is was John’s fi rst and last love aff air.”

After spending a little over a year working for Alfonso Rickman at the Vulture Mine in Wickenburg, Smith returned to Tubac in 1869. He found that Apache raiding was a constant hazard. Despite the danger, Brownell notes, “Smith purchased a half interest in a ranch 1 1/2 miles south of Tubac. His partner was a man named Megory.”

Smith’s Ohio farm background was probably the reason for his success in the Santa Cruz Valley. Local newspaper articles often reported on Smith’s great success growing crops and experimenting with new ways of improving production. A further sign of Smith’s success came in December of 1871. He purchased Solomon W. Chambers property described as being located “on the east side of the Santa Cruz River about eight miles south of the town of Tubac. . . containing 320 acres of land and known as the Bosque Ranch; bounded on the north by the land of L. B. Wooster and public lands; on the east by public lands; on the south-by-east by the Agua Fria Ranch; on the west by the Santa Cruz River.”

Earlier that same year, Smith along with Joseph King and other neighboring ranchers discovered the bodies of Leslie B. Wooster and his wife Trinidad Eguerre [Aguirre] brutally attacked and murdered in an Apache raid. Th e event would ignite Anglos, Mexicans and Pimas to unite and attack innocent Yavapai Apaches at Camp Grant on April 30, 1871; a sad event in Arizona history that remains a hot topic to this day.

About this same time, Smith participated in the rescue of a young Mexican woman named Rosaria. Apache Indians had attacked her home, killing her entire family except her. Smith would later marry her, however Brownell found a letter from Smith’s friend John Magee to Smith’s brother indicating that is was not a happy marriage.

Less than a year after signing the Tubac school petition, Smith became seriously ill and died on May 9, 1877.

James A. Peters, was more into mining than ranching. However, as a close friend of Smith’s he was appointed administrator of Smith’s estate soon after his death. Brownell notes, “Th e Arizona Star of June 6, 1878, reported that James Peters had bought the John T. Smith ranch at auction for $1,000, and added ‘it was well worth $4,000.’” Peters appears to have had second thoughts about ranching. He sold El Bosque to W. L. Campbell that same year, but

bought it back from Campbell in 1892. Five years later he sold it to David John Cummings for $500.

Peters was murdered on January 13 or 14, 1899 along with an unidentifi ed German tourist at the Walker ranch fi ve miles north of Calabasas.

Th e Petition:

Tubac Dec. 1 - 1876.

To the Superintendent of Schools Pima County. A. T.

Sir.

... Th e undersigned citizens and heads of families residing at and near Tubac, respectfully petition for the establishment and organization of a school district to be known and designated as Tubac School District No 4. with boundaries as follows to wit: all the valley of the Sta Cruz river lying South of Cañoa.

And as in duty bound your petitioners will ever pray.

Henry GlassmanSebastian VicinzI. GoldbergDoloras Pachecko ????????? Jose Maria X Figeroa Nicolas X Ereras John T. SmithJos King James PetersNote: Two men signed with their mark X.

Sources:

- Bents, Doris W., The History of Tubac, 1752-1948. University of Arizona, History

Department, Master’s Thesis, 1949.

- Brownell, Elizabeth R., John T. Smith of Tubac. Nogales, AZ: Ambos-Nogales (Arizona-

Sonora) Corral of the Westerners, 1981.

- Brownell, Elizabeth R., They Lived in Tubac. Tucson: Westernlore Press, 1986.

- King, R. Joe, “King of Tumacacori: A Sketch of the Life and Times of Joseph King, 1828-

1912: A true Pioneer of Early Arizona. Poulsbo, WA: Willo Tree Publishing.

- Spring, John, John Spring’s Arizona. Tucson: The University of Arizona Press, 1966.

-Officer, James E., Hispanic Arizona, 1536-1856. Tucson: University of Arizona Press, 1987.

- Utley, Robert M., Frontiersman in Blue: The United States Army and the Indian, 1848-

1865. Lincoln: University of Nebraska Press, 1981.

- Wagoner, Jay J., Early Arizona: Prehistory to Civil War. Tucson; University of Arizona Press,

1975.

- Hayden Files: Glassman, Goldberg. http://www.asu.edu/lib/archives/azbio/azbio.htm

- “History of Old Tubac Schoolhouse and Tubac.” http://tubacschool.atspace.com/History.

html

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...continued from page 9

20

Page 21: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

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Letter from AfricaFear of magic a big business

in MalawiA few days ago I witnessed some people running away from an owl – a

‘kadzitsi.’ We were far out in the district, close to the Mozambique border where the high fl at lands give way to mountainous granite outcroppings, working at one of the frontier's fi nal health centers.

It seems, as it would be in most parts of the world, that the farther we get from the city, the more superstitions and beliefs infl uence people's lives. So it made sense to me to see people afraid of an owl - here it's bad luck. We were renovating the ceiling and roof and chased out a resident fowl, simultaneously releasing a terror. However, just because it’s diff erent didn't mean it wasn't hilarious. Let’s face it; it's pretty funny to watch a group of adults running away from a bird.

Witchcraft, and add magic to that, is ubiquitous in Malawi. Th ough most Malawians would make you believe it's more common in Nigeria (for its Nollywood movies) or Mozambique (purely for its proximity and the confusion left over from a decade-long civil war), listening to stories would make you think every other person is a witch, and that they all mean you harm.

Some people bring crocodiles to town in their pockets which they will then send after you if you bathe in the river. Others use mice to break into your house and steal your money. Other times there might be a story in the newspaper describing how a prisoner in some town's jail turned himself into a leopard or snake (or sometimes a goat) to break out.

It's a big business here, magic. You can pay to save yourself or make bad things befall others. Or pay to block others' evil intent, or even pay your way around that, I suppose. A positive growth sector, really.

I don't know why fear is such a big business here, but I guess it's pretty big back home, as well. If Michael Moore got one thing right it was that America has developed a culture of fear. President Bush played upon it, using it to rope us all in as accomplices to war, and President Obama nudged us away, emphasizing hope. Of course in America we're afraid of minorities and immigrants – things we don't understand. Or at times bigger things, like Islam. Whatever we think will hurt us, whatever we try to shift our diffi culties and blame onto.

Yet in Malawi, even on the border, it's not the same. Here the unknown is diff erent, it's more inwardly directed – onto neighbours and family even. I don't know why that is, and I really wish I did. It's terrifying that most often fear and blame is put upon the weakest members of society – young children and old women. I suppose that makes sense, though. Th ose least able to defend themselves are the best targets.

But it's not all bad. My friend was helping a community group build a fi sh pond a few months ago to do some fi sh-farming. Th ey dug the pond and stocked it well, only to fi nd a few weeks later that the fi sh had been stolen one night.

Yet rather than be upset, they were triumphant: they had found the culprit’s clothes. Th ey went to the villages around and announced they would take them to a sorcerer and have him cast a spell on the owner of the clothes. Two hours later there was a confession and money returned for the fi sh the thief had already sold. Sometimes those scare tactics really work.

(Editor’s Note: Tim Vandervoet grew up in Tubac. He moved to Malawi, Africa, in 2006 as a Peace Corps volunteer. He has been working in Malawi with the Clinton Foundation for the past nine months.)

Always do right. This will gratify some people

and astonish the rest. Mark Twain

by Tim Vandervoet

Page 22: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

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Time is a trickster. No doubt about it. Time, timing, on

time, in time, time out, outta time. Whew! Are they loaded with diff erent meanings or what? Just like the amount of time it takes to eat an ice cream versus getting a fl u shot. One doesn’t take long enough the other takes too long. I wonder about time as I look back versus looking forward. Deep into our lives time seems beautifully synchronized, blended like a watercolor, looking like it was meant to fl ow. Each pattern becomes one with another, one day built on the next. How could what happened so awkwardly in retrospect seem logical and connected and even beautiful?

I like losing time when I am ensconced in my right brain and it upsets me if a day slips by without an obvious meaning. I want life to be purposeful and justifi able. So I resist the lethargy that sets in during the summer months and turns time wishy-washy.

Betty Edwards (Drawing From the Right Side of the Brain) talks about incubation periods. Time outs for the creative spirit. She thinks we all need them and should embrace their signifi cance. Not me. I feel anxious waiting out the emptying process. Give me space fi lled with anything other than quiet. I still can’t quite follow the pathes of the sages who generally espoused getting away from it all every now and then.

Jesus chose the desert and the Bible pronounced a time for everything. A time to be born and a time to die. A time to sow and a time to reap. How come it never mentioned a time to produce and a time to think about it?

Some of course prefer the sky or the sea to go inward. I remember the fi rst time I read Ann Lindberg’s, A Gift From the Sea. Having lived by the ocean most of my life, I knew how much comfort it gives to those at its skirts. For some it’s the predictable sounds and repetitive motion, for others it is its vastness.

Th e great Hindu master, Mahatma Gandhi , used to spend one full day a week in utter silence. Th at’s more than a tenth of his life and look at what he produced! He put spiritual meaning into every facet of his existence. I am sure he never complained about a sense of emptiness.

He added meaning to the clothes he wore, the vegetables he ate, and the natural ways of the world.

Man has always wanted to understand time and how it works in order to get some control over the order of things. Stone Age man carved time into bone and sticks. Using the sun, the moon and the stars, the Egyptians came up with the fi rst 365 day calendar approximately 5500 years ago. Later, in Mexico, the Mayans concurred. It was only in the last century that the United States Congress offi cially accepted universal timelines. Th en came Einstein, a diff erent type of mind altogether. He wanted to harness time and defi ne it for the milleniums. After he drew upon every culture’s earliest

perceptions, he imagined himself traveling on a beam of light. Th us we have now the law of relativity. But we aren’t done asking questions yet. Now we want time broken down into nano seconds while the research goes on.

For me, understanding the law of relativity is more about attitude than physics. Give me something I love to do and I will show you a three hour day. Give me something I hate to do and I will show you a 72 hour day. Th at’s my idea of everything being relative.

Time has a lot to do with freedom, too. Freedon to choose. Freedom to say yea or nay. A child in Tanzania does not count the minutes as he takes his sheep to pasture or angst until the shadows grow long. He functions on simple expectations. I do not imagine him complaining about a task that every male in his family and community have performed throughout the generations. It is a given.

For us, spoiled, torn and easily distracted by choice, resistance and time issues are more challenging. A day without adventure is rare. A day without a gold star is a waste. We use words like bored and listless; depressed and lethargic instead of divinely quiet and luxuriously empty.

Writing about this I have convinced myself that I should take this time on my hands as a gift. An unwrappable present to toy with as I choose. It may lead to some wonderful idea or it may go around and greet itself at the end of the stretch. I needn’t worry. It will all blend in in the end.

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Sparr ow MusingIdol, ideals, ideation, idling, I dole out time, wasting it On worrying about the Meanings of words,

their sources.

Time slips, virtually disappears Into nothingness as I exercise or exorcise My intentions to carve awayFat with energy.

I wile, awhile, wishing

To do more-- what moreI can’t say. I might likeA surge of must, an urgeTo fly and rise, tiny and gray

to the highest branch

by Carol St. John

Page 23: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

23

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new customers - Pay for the FIRST month& the SECOND month is FREE!

May left us at the maypole with some lovely memories and one sad memory.Granddaughter Gia married dear Matt in New York in a very simple, beautiful ceremony,

granddaughter Wesley, graduated from Concordia University in Austin, Texas, now a new life, grandson Joshua celebrated a great birthday. Granddaughter Amber sent her fi rst-graders home in Brooklyn Heights in a happy mood after a successful study of the beauty of sound, dear friend Dick Majerus left for his Heavenly Home after a wonderful 102 years here, what a pleasure he was, we whiled away the evenings playing Black Jack, hundreds of games over the years, he was a whiz!Now June is very ready to take us on a new excursion, full of happy birthdays, lovely anniversaries, pampered fathers, beginning of summer, fl ags fl ying all over, birds coming and going, nights of gorgeous star fi lled skies, monsoons on our door step, the desert unfolding her secrets, what more do we need, the beauty of it all --- it’s free! Oh, the wonder, all is right with the world! Me too, since the orioles in their spectacular attire are still here all day, every day!

SUMMERTIME, WHEN THE COOKING IS EASY

Boil Potatoes and eggs together, remove eggs

after 10 minutes. When potatoes are done,

cool and cut into bite-size pieces. Mix with cut

up eggs, onion and mayo, salt and pepper.

Refrigerate till serving time.

6 potatoes

4 eggs

1 onion chopped

1 c. mayo S&P

This potato salad and the beans are the answer - Enjoy this potato salad with just the basics.

Mix all ingredients together

except bacon, place in 9 X 13

baking dish. Top with strips of

bacon. Bake uncovered in 325°

oven for 1 hour.

2 cans pork and beans, drained

¾ c. K.C. Masterpiece barbeque sauce

½ c. Brown sugar

½ small onion, chopped

1 tart apple peeled and

chopped (optional)

8 strips bacon, cut in half

BAKED BEANS WITH BARBEQUE

Make crumbs of vanilla wafers, put half in bottom of greased 9 X 13

baking dish. Cream the sugar and butter, add beaten yolks and fold in

stiffl y beaten whites. Drain pineapple and fold in beaten egg whites,

place this on sugar and egg mixture. Put remaining crumbs on top.

This is best made a day ahead, cut into squares when serving.

Positively delightful!

1 pkg. vanilla wafers

1 ½ c. xxxx sugar

1/1 c. butter

2 eggs, separated

1 pint whipping cream

1 large can crushed

pineapple

For a great summer desert please try

PINEAPPLE DELIGHT

CREME DE MENTHE BROWNIESWhat a great change from all the desserts we’ve had

lately, do try, these may be frozen too.

CAKE LAYER

1 c. sugar

½ c. butter

4 eggs, beaten

1 c. fl our

½ tsp. salt

2 c. choc. syrup

1 tsp. vanilla

MINT LAYER

2 c. xxxx sugar

3 tbl. green

crème de

menthe

½ c. butter

GLAZE

1 c. choc. chips,

semi sweet

6 tbl. butter

Mix cake ingredients, pour into greased 9 X 13 baking

dish, bake at 350° for 30 minutes. Let cake cool, spread

mint layer on cake. After choc. chip and butter mixture

has cooled, pour glaze over top and chill.

This desert is a departure from my quick, easy recipes – it’s

worth it believe me!

Daughter Claire still speaks Haiku, her latest:

Colors everywhereNothing in nature clashes

Flowers are my joy

ONCE IN EVERY 10 YEARS UNCLE SAM COMES TO HIS CENSUS

Since the revelation about us eating so much sugar, I’ve been using “scant” measures when cooking, no diff erence in taste at all.

Willie Armijo, site manager at the Tubac Community Center reports swallows are back and babies are thriving! Check it out when you go to the library.

With humble thanks to

Carol Shelton of Tubac, for her nice letter to the editor about my column, I am your faithful servant. Ruthie.

POTATO SALAD

Senior Support Services

“Enhancing lives with Care in the Comfort of Home”

Stephanie GarrettNurse Case Manager

5 2 0 . 3 3 1 . 2 4 7 0

Page 24: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

#15

CASA FINA DE TUBAC

B104 & B105 La Entrada de Tubac(520) 398-8620

www.tubacvillager.com/casafi na.htmlAt Casa Fina you will fi nd Full Window Treatment options, Design Services, Fantastic Furnishings, New & Exciting Accessories, Custom Bedding, Lamps & Lighting.  We even  off er  luxurious candles.  Anything you desire for your  beautifully appointed,  personality fi lled home, Casa Fina is your source!  Come see us for a fun-fi lled & relaxing shopping experience.

CROPPER’S AUTO CENTER

1831 North Grand Ave., Nogales(520) 281-2438

www.croppercars.com www.tubacvillager.com/

croppers.htmlDrive a little to save a lot. Less than 20 minutes from Tubac!

Just exit off I-19at Exit 8 onto Grand Ave. 2 miles, on right.

DOS SILOS MEXICAN CUISINE

65 Avenida de OteroOpen Thurs - Sun 11am - 8pm

(520) 398-3787

www.tubacgolfresort.com www.tubacvillager.com/dossilos.html

Authentic Regional Mexican Cuisine with a blend of New

World Ingredients.

#40

HEIR LOOMS OLD WORLD IMPORTS

7 Plaza RdOpen 7 days,

Tues - Sat 10-5, Sun - Mon 11-4(520) 398-2369

www.tubacrugs.comwww.tubacvillager.com/heirlooms.htmlFor over 40 years, our family has hand selected the fi nest art and textiles from around the world. Visit our Tubac Gallery or call for our available services.

#51

JANE’S ATTIC

8 Will Rogers Lane, Tubac PlazaOpen Daily 11-4(520) 398-9301

www.tubacvillager.com/janes.htmlSummertime is the best time to shop at Jane’s Attic. New items are arriving daily. We specialize in “gently used” items including clothing, jewelry, small furniture & decorator items. June, July & August:  Open Daily from 11am to 4pm. September:  Open Thursday through Sunday 11am to 4pm.

#99

LA PALOMA DE TUBAC

1 Presidio Dr., Old TownOpen Daily 10am - 5pm

(520) 398-9231

www.tubacvillager.com/lapaloma.htmlWe have imported the fi nest quality Latin American folk art for over 30 years. At this point we have one of the best collections anywhere. Special thanks to our loyal customers for supporting us during good times and bad. This summer we are off ering exceptional savings as your pay back.

#64

LONG REALTY TUBAC

12 T ubac Rd.(520) 398-2962

www.tubacvillager.com/longtubac.htmlLong Realty Tubac, established in 1989, is Tubac’s oldest full service real estate agency.  Our experienced agents  provide exceptional customer service to our  clients in the buying, selling and leasing of homes and land in the Santa Cruz River

Valley from Sahuarita to Nogales.

#67

METALMORPHOSIS

20 Tubac Rd.

(520) 398-9188

www.metalmorphosis.bizwww.tubacvillager.com/

metalmorphosis.htmlMetalMorphosis off ers a variety of many unique and distinctive southwestern and contemporary designs.  The work is cut out of steel with a waterjet, bent to give dimensions, fi nished with a unique airbrush technique and clear coated with UV protective polyurethane. The artwork is

suitable for indoors or outdoors. Shop today and save!

MICHAEL JAYME STUDIO & GALLERY

I-19 Exit 48, Amado Territory RanchOpen Sun - Wed 11-5

(520) 398-2709

www.michaelajayme.comwww.tubacvillager.com/

michaeljayme.htmlSee Michael Jayme’s NEW WORKS at the Tubac Center of the Arts. Opening Champagne Gala August 1st featuring

entertainment by Allan Riding Jazz Trio from 5 to 7pm.

NEED A HAND? HOME SERVICE

(520) 404-1183 OR 440-1068

www.tubacvillager.com/needahand.html

Need a Hand Home Service and Casa Care has been operating in Tubac since 2006.  We provide basic and personalized yard maintenance services, vacation home check-ups, and vacant home cleaning.  We have built our reputation on reliability and customer service.  Give us a call today.

#52

OUT OF THE WAY GALLERIA

Will Rogers Lane, Tubac Plaza(520) 398-9409

www.futurestudios.orgwww.tubacvillager.com/gcca.html

Enjoy music from around the world, delicious vegetarian cuisine, and candlelight under the stars with our Tubac Twilight Summer Concert Series and Global Change Music events.  June 19th-21st and October 23rd-25th come to our annual Tubac/Tumacacori Music Festival Weekends featuring Gabriel of Urantia’s eleven-piece Bright & Morning Star

Band!

#1 - #7

PLAZA DE ANZA

(520) 398-8700

www.barriodetubac.com/plaza-de-anzawww.tubacvillager.com/

plazadeanza.htmlPlaza de Anza North of Exit 34 in Tubac AZ, with mountain views and great places to cool off such as the Artist’s Palate Restaurant(#5), Café Presidio Restaurant(#3), Anza Marketplace Grocery(#1), Chef’s Table Restaurant(#2), Tubac Ranch Furniture(#4), Anza de Tubac property Management(#6), maintenance and cleaning services and Emmy’s Pilates Studio(#7).  For more information call our

offi ces at 398-8700.

REALTY EXECUTIVES,

BILL MACK & SALLY ROBLING

2251 E Frontage Rd.(520) 398-2770 OR 398-2222

www.tubac.comwww.tubacvillager.com/

tubacteam.html#1 Agents in Tubac since 2005. Nobody Knows Tubac Real Estate better than the Tubac Real Estate Team. Virtual tours available at www.tubac.com.

REALTY EXECUTIVES,

CHARLIE MEAKER

2251 E Frontage Rd.(520) 237-2414

www.tubacvillager.com/charliemeaker.html

It’s a buyer’s market! There are over 100 resale homes listed for sale in Tubac, at prices ranging from $126,000 to a cool $8 Million! The Owners are waiting anxiously for your off er! Give

me a call, and I’ll help you fi nd the home that’s just right for you!

#78

SHELBY’S BISTRO

19 Tubac Rd., Mercado de Baca(520) 398-8075

www.tubacvillager.com/shelbys.htmlLocated just over the footbridge in the Mercado de Baca shopping plaza, Shelby’s Bistro is celebrating its 12th year in Tubac. Our bistro was recently chosen as one of Arizona’s 25 best restaurants by Arizona Highways Magazine (April 09, vol 85, #4).

STABLES RANCH GRILLE

65 Avenida de OteroOpen Daily 6:30am - 10pm

(520) 398-2678

www.tubacgolfresort.comwww.tubacvillager.com/stables.html

Stables Ranch Grille evokes Tubac’s Spanish past in its cuisine and atmosphere. The restaurant, formerly stables for Spanish ranchers in the New World, is nestled below the Santa Rita Mountains and among lush cottonwoods on the Santa Cruz River.

STOCKMAN’S GRILL

I-19 Exit 48, Amado Territory RanchOpen Tues - Sat 11-2 & 5-8

(520) 398-2651

www.tubacvillager.com/stockmans.htmlConveniently located next to the Inn at Amado Territory Ranch, serving a full lunch and dinner menu, featuring: savory steaks, seafood, specialty entrées, Angus burgers, sandwiches, salads, and decadent desserts. Prime Rib on Friday and Saturday nights. Sunday Brunch served from 10:30am – 2pm. We’d love to cater your special event and the restaurant is available for private functions.

#75

TJ’S TORTUGA BOOKS

& COFFEE BEANS

19 Tubac Rd., Mercado de BacaOpen Mon - Sat 10-5, Sun 1-5

(520) 398-8109

www.tubacvillager.com/tjs.htmlWe have great new books for your summer reading. Starting in July: Childrens reading hour Wednesdays at 10am.

TUBAC ART EXCHANGE

2243 East Frontage Rd.(520) 237-5439

www.tubacartexchange.comwww.walterwilson.comwww.tubacvillager.com/

walterwilson.htmlWalter Wilson Studio and Gallery started in 1950 in New York.  The artist, born in 1929, has paintings in major museums, corporate and private collections throughout the country. The Tubac Art Exchange  off ers  consignment, consultant,  and appraisal services, and features prominent 19th and 20th century artists along with the paintings of Michael Gibbons and Walter Blakelock Wilson.

More BUSINESS LISTINGS

Tubac Villager Advertiser Map drawing by Roberta Rogers. Provided as a courtesy by the Tubac Villager. Information edited by the Tubac Villager. This map is an artistic rendering of the Village of Tubac and Tubac Villager

supporting advertisers of June/July ‘09. Unlisted map structures may be active businesses. Work in progress. For questions or comments call: 520-398-3980

held at

Avalon OrganicGardens, Farm,

and Ranch

FRI-SUN June 19-21

/

• GABRIEL OF URANTIA

& THE ELEVEN - PIECEBRIGHT & MORNING STAR BAND

FREE! Reciprocation by Contribution Appreciated

FESTIVAL SCHEDULE

Friday, June 19th3:00pm: Camping check in at Avalon Gardens. Call to reserve.

7:00pm Live Music: Van’sGuard at Tubac Plaza Main Stage

7:45pm Live Skits: Global Change Theater Co. at Tubac Plaza Main Stage

Saturday, June 20th10:00am Film: The Future of Food at Village Shops at 26 Tubac Plaza

2:30pm Talk: Organic Gardening by Master Gardeners Kamon & Tarenta (26 Tubac Plaza)

7:00pm Live Music: The Change Agents Band at Tubac Plaza Main Stage

8:00pm Live Music: Starseed Acoustic Ensemble at Tubac Plaza Main Stage

Sunday, June 21st10:00am Film: Blue Gold: World Water Wars at Village Shops at 26 Tubac Plaza

2:00pm Film: The End of Suburbia at Village Shops at 26 Tubac Plaza

6:30pm Sacred CosmoPop Concert GABRIEL OF URANTIA & THE BRIGHT & MORNING STAR BAND at Avalon Gardens

Monday, June 22nd10:00am Talk: Divine Administration by Gabriel of Urantia and Niánn Emerson Chase at Avalon Gardens

2:00pm Tour: of Avalon Organic Gardens, Farm & Ranch

featuring COSMOPOP®

Tubac Villager Supporting Business Listingsin alphabetical order

Page 25: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

AMADO RV & SELF STORAGE

(520) 398-8003

#50

BEADS OF TUBAC

398-2070

#48 & #65

CASA MAYA DE MEXICO

(520) 398-9373 & (520) 398-3933

FIESTA TOURS

(520) 398-9705

JACOBSON CUSTOM HOMES

(520) 975-8469

KEN MICHAEL, ART FRAMING

(520) 398-2214

KRISTOFER’S BISTRO

520-625-0331

#46

LA VIÑA

(520) 398-8142#37

LONG REALTY, CHA CHA DONAU

(520) 591-4982

#82

OLD PRESIDIO TRADERS

(520) 398-9333

#36

ROBERTA ROGERS STUDIO

(520) 979-4122

SANTA CRUZ CHILI CO

(520) 398-2591

#97

ST. ANN’S CHURCH

SUSTAINABLE ARIZONA

(520) 240-1018

#21

TUBAC DENTAL

(520) 398-8408

TUBAC ONLINE SALES

(520) 398-2437

#98

TUBAC VILLAGER

(520) 398-3980

VENTANA MORTGAGE

(520) 885-9594

VILLAGE COUNSELING

(520) 820-1678

#41

TUBAC CENTER OF THE ARTS

9 Plaza Rd.(520) 398-2371

www.tubacarts.orgwww.tubacvillager.com/tca.html

The Tubac Center of the Arts will open Summer Gallery during August to support area artists and all the businesses and galleries which remain open during the summer. TCA hopes to bring more visitors to enjoy Tubac’s great year round amenities and provide area

residents with summertime fun.

TUBAC GOLF RESORT AND SPA

65 Avenida de Otero(520) 398-2211

www.tubacgolfresort.com www.tubacvillager.com/tubacgolf.html

Tubac Golf Resort & Spa nestled on the 500 acre historic Otero Ranch and ¼ mile from the village.  The perfect place to stay while in the area with 98 luxurious rooms and suites, a world-class spa & salon, a wedding chapel, 27-holes of

championship golf, 2 restaurants, meeting space, and shops. 

#23

TUMACOOKERY

N102 & N103 La Entrada de TubacOpen daily 10 -5(520) 398-9497

www.tumacookery.comwww.tubacvillager.com/tumacookery.html

TUMACOOKERY, Our Mission is Your Kitchen. Off ering Gadgets, Cookware, Appliances, Spices, Gourmet Food, Coff ee, Tea, Bar Tools, Knives, Sharpening and More. In the Shops at La Entrada de Tubac.

Open 10-5 Daily, Throughout Summer.

WISDOM’S CAFÉ

1931 E Frontage Rd., Tumacacori Open Mon - Sat 11-3 & 5-8

(520) 398-2397

www.wisdomscafe.comwww.tubacvillager.com/wisdoms

Delectable Mexican Food served by 3 generations of the Wisdom family using the freshest ingredients and locally grown produce whenever possible. Come see why we’ve been a local favorite and top tourist destination for 65 years. Home of the World Famous Fruit Burro!

Page 26: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

26continued from page 7...

Dick Majerus passed away peacefully in the early morning hours of May 13th, 2009.  He was 102 years old.  He is survived by daughters, Marilynn Lowder and Sherry Hull, fi ve grandchildren, and 6 great-grandchildren.

Dick spent his last 8 years in Tubac surrounded by his daughters, son-in-law Ken Lowder, grand-daughter Jane Lowder, grandsons Brian Lowder and Don Hull, nephew Bayard Brick and many friends, including  Ruth Papini, a very special friend.

His annual birthday parties at Wisdom's were attended by many friends who made his last years very happy. 

We especially want to thank Valor Hospicecare in Green Valley and Soulistic Hospice in Tubac for their wonderful caring support and help the last three years.  Hospice workers are very special people and I don't know how we could have managed without them.  Th ey are so kind and Dick loved them all.  We will miss Dick, but he lived a long, healthy and happy life. submitted by: Marilynn Lowder

ICE CREAM* Come in and cool off with Ice Cream at the Café Presidio and the Anza Market.  Over 30 diff erent options to choose from  RIBS* Come in to the Café for the best ribs in Southern Arizona, slow cooked and seasoned to perfection COMING SOON* Free delivery to local Tubac Businesses, call for details 398-8501 Dinner with the Chef at the Chef’s Table* MENTION THIS AD and receive a free glass of house wine with a purchase of an Entree WINE TASTING* Th ank you for making our fi rst wine tasting on the Anza Market patio a great success, please join

us on JUNE 16TH TUESDAY FROM 5PM TO 6PM for our next tasting.  Enjoy free food samples from the Café, hor’ doeuvres from the Chef’s Table and selected cheeses from the Anza Market.

ARE YOU LOOKING FOR...

• A PRIVATE HOME WITH A DEN FOR HIM & A HOBBY ROOM FOR HER? --Newer home in Las Campanas! $267,000.00

• A RENTAL PROPERTY IN CANOA RANCH? --Has been used as a vacation rental just bring your toothbrush! $275,000.00

• GREAT VIEWS! 3 BEDRM, DEN AND 3 CAR GARAGE? --Corner lot, huge kitchen and lots of space! $448,900.00

• A REALTOR WORKING ALL SUMMER?--ME!

“To get information about the above properties or discover new properties - contact me:”

520-591-4982

ADMISSION: Reciprocation by contribution appreciated. Make a pilgrimage to Avalon Organic Gardens, Farm, and Ranch for this 3-day festival weekend with camping, fresh organic food, live music and entertainment, independent fi lms, activist theater, eco-conscious speakers, and a Sacred Global CosmoPop Concert with Gabriel of Urantia & The Bright & Morning Star Band! All ages. No drugs, no alcohol. For full festival schedule & directions visit: http://www.globalchangemusic.org or call (520) 398-2542.

SUN, JUNE 21ST - 2ND ANNUAL

WHO'S YOUR DADDY SOFTBALL

TOURNAMENT at the ballpark next to the Tubac Community Center. Everyone is invited to play. Bring your food/drink/chair and join us for lots of fun. Starts late morning.

TUES, JUNE 23RD - JACK LASSETER

SPEAKS ABOUT "SOLDIERS IN THE

WEST" at the Community Performing Arts Center, 1250 W Continental Rd, Green Valley, 7pm. For more info call 520-399-1750. Tickets $10 at the door.

WED, JUNE 24TH - TUBAC FIRE

DISTRICT'S MONTHLY MEETING open to the public at 9am at Station #1 on the E Frontage Rd, Tubac. For more information call 398-2255.

FRI, JUNE 26TH - CUSTOMER

APPRECIATION NIGHT WINE TASTING at Wisdom's Café, Tumacacori. 4:30 -5:30. Help Wisdom's choose their next wine! Food & drink specials and Live Music by Bill Manzanedo.

SAT, JUNE 27TH - INFORMATIONAL/

SPEAKER SERIES PROMOTING A

SUSTAINABLE SANTA CRUZ at the Tubac Community Center, 50 Bridge Rd. from 4:00 to 7:30pm.

FRI, JULY 3RD - FIRST FRIDAY! at Wisdom's Café, Tumacacori. 5-8pm featuring Live Music.

Sat, July 4th - Old Fashioned Fourth of July in Tubac. Join us for old-fashioned family fun. The Tubac Presidio State

Historic Park will be the site of free games for the kids from 10 am to noon. Children will enjoy a variety of old-fashioned games like cake-walks, sack races, rubber duck ring toss, hula hoops, face painting and more. The children’s games are being organized by the Tubac Chamber of Commerce with help from a variety of local non-profi t organizations. Games, prizes and hot dogs will be provided free of charge to the children. Park admission will be free during game hours. Many of Tubac’s fi ne art galleries, artist studios and shops will be open all day, 10am-5pm. The Tubac Golf Resort will host a fi reworks display in the evening. Gates open at 4 pm and fi reworks begin at 8:45 pm. Parking fee is $7 per car. Featuring food vendors, kids face painting, DJ music and a huge desert sky fi reworks display. Bring a blanket or chair; no coolers please. The Resort is off ering a VIP package: $35 adults/$15 kids to include a Ranch Style BBQ buff et, special seating to view fi reworks and parking. For VIP reservations, call 520-398-3545. The Tubac Presidio State Historic Park is located at 1 Burruel Street. The

Tubac Golf Resort is located on the East Frontage Road between Exits 40 and 34. For more information, please call the Chamber of Commerce, 520-398-2704 or visit www.tubacaz.com.

FRI, JULY 10TH - BAJA LOBSTERFEST at Wisdom's Café, plus Live Music.

STARTING FRIDAY JULY 10TH –

CINEMA UNDER THE STARS INDIE

FILM SERIES at 7:30pm, at the Tubac Plaza Main Stage (29 Tubac Rd). All fi lms $5. Premiere Film – Crop Circles: Quest for Truth. Proceeds to benefi t teen and & young adult rehabilitation programs and Avalon Gardens internships of Global Community Communications Alliance. For more info call 520-398-2542.

SAT, JULY 11TH - THE FIVE DEADLY

VENOMS PERFORM. Free: Reciprocation by contribution appreciated. Get your dancin’ shoes on and get ready for fi ve fi ne gentlemen to bring you the baddest bluegrass around that can only be described as “killer”! The Five Deadly Venoms have quickly and rightfully

Dick with Ruth Papini

Page 27: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

27

12 TUBAC ROAD

Santa Fe Style Horse Property2 Bdrm/2 Bth; Stunning 9.41 acre horse property in NE Rio Rico!  Beautiful patios with views of the Tumacacori and the Santa Rita mountains; Custom fl oor plan; high wood-beamed ceilings and a fi replace in the living room.  Priced at $248,000. MLS:  41571/107587/20911444; Please call Gina or Natalie Jarman for more information.

Understated Elegance

Unique hilltop 40 acre estate w/great views

of the Patagonia Mountains & night lights of Nogales. Spacious greatroom w/high beamed ceiling, fi replace, & sealed brick fl ooring. Burnt adobe construction. Numerous amenities. Please call Gina Jarman (520) 841-1843. Priced at $1,800,000. MLS #: 38794, 105067.

Exceptional Location

2Bdrm/2Bth Townhouse in an exceptional location between 2nd & 3rd fairway of the Tubac Golf Resort on

Otero Court. Call Meg (520) 603-8752 for info. Priced at $390,000; MLS# 20914859

18 Calle de Hoy                        

520-398-2962

Best Views in Santa Cruz County7.73 acres in the Tumacacori Mountains. Prime acreage for your dream home. Call Meg. Priced at $210,000. MLS#: 107610/41607

TBD Guadalupe Lane                

520-281-2438 • 1-800-582-9167

must bring coupon Disclosure: Plus tax & hazardous waste removal Off er expires July 31, 2009

1831 N. Grand Avenue Nogales, Arizona 85621www.croppercars.com

Ask about our tune up specials!

NOGALES AUTO CENTER

earned a reputation at the top of New York City’s vibrant bluegrass scene. This quintessential quintet’s top-notch musicianship complemented by smooth-as-butter vocal harmonies will take you right to the roots of bluegrass music. Come and get bit by The Five Deadly Venoms, their sound is pure poison for the blues! Named after the classic Kung-Fu fi lm by Chang Cheh, The Five Deadly Venoms truly are dangerous! Tubac Plaza Main Stage, 29 Tubac Plaza, Tubac, AZ. 85646. For info & directions - http://www.futurestudios.org  (520) 398-2542. From 6-9pm.

STARTING WEDNESDAY JULY 15TH

- CHILDREN'S READING HOUR at TJ's Tortuga Books and Coff ee Beans in Mercado de Baca from 10am to 11:30.

SAT, JULY 18TH - COME PICK A PECK

OF PICKLES! (Cucumbers, actually).  Then, watch as we demonstrate how to can them and share a sample!  We will have some recipes to share and would love to hear about yours!  It’s hot in July, so an early start is important. We will meet in the garden at 9 am. Pick a peck (or more/less) if you like (while supplies last). You-pick cucumbers cost $1 pound, we-pick $1.75 pound. Ice tea will be provided. Wear sun hats and shoes that can get dirty! (Fields can even be muddy in July). No admission charge. Picnics welcome. RSVP preferred. At the Auga Linda Farms, I-19 exit 42. 398-3218.

SAT, JULY 18TH – CINEMA UNDER

THE STARS INDIE FILM SERIES features Washington, You’re Fired – a crash course in both American history and political science at 7:30pm. At the Tubac Plaza Main Stage (29 Tubac Rd). $5. Proceeds to benefi t teen and & young adult rehabilitation programs and Avalon Gardens internships of Global Community Communications Alliance. For more info call 520-398-2542.

TUES, JULY 21ST - JACK LASSETER

SPEAKS ABOUT "OUTLAWS

AND LAWMEN IN THE ARIZONA

FRONTIER" at the Community Performing Arts Center, 1250 W Continental Rd, Green Valley, 7pm. For more info call 520-399-1750. Tickets $10 at the door.

WED, JULY 22ND - WINE TASTING at the Anza Market from 5 to 6pm.

THURS, JULY 23RD - SUSTAINABLE

SANTA CRUZ MEETING at the Tubac Community Center, 50 Bridge Rd. from 5:30 to 7:30pm.

FRI, JULY 24TH - CINEMA UNDER

THE STARS INDIE FILM SERIES

features One Nation Under Siege – Big Brother is doing more than watching… at 7:30pm. At the Tubac Plaza Main Stage. $5. Proceeds to benefi t teen and & young adult rehabilitation programs and Avalon Gardens internships of Global Community Communications Alliance. For more info call 398-2542.

SAT, JULY 25TH - TUBAC COSTUME

GALA DAYS from 4 to 8pm. Free; Reciprocation by contribution appreciated. Dress up as your favorite movie star, sports hero, or historic era character and enjoy the street of Tubac alive with colorful sights and delightful sounds of roving minstrels. Special events including a Costume Contest with grand prize of a Spirt Steps tours package will be taking place at the Tubac Plaza Main Stage next to the Out Of The Way Galleria at 29 Tubac Plaza. For more info & directions - http://www.futurestudios.org or call (520) 398-2542.

SAT, JULY 25TH - CINEMA UNDER

THE STARS INDIE FILM SERIES features Future By Design – Imagine a future where war is outdated, there is no shortage of any necessary resource, and our focus as a species is sustainability at 7:30pm. At the Tubac Plaza Main Stage (29 Tubac Rd). $5. Proceeds to benefi t teen and & young adult rehabilitation programs and Avalon Gardens internships of Global Community Communications Alliance. For more info call 520-398-2542.

SAT, JULY 25TH - INFORMATIONAL/

SPEAKER SERIES PROMOTING A

SUSTAINABLE SANTA CRUZ at the Tubac Community Center, 50 Bridge Rd. from 4:00 to 7:30pm.

TUES, JULY 28TH - AMBER

NORGAARD'S BAND. Expect a fabulous performance from powerful singer-songwriter, Amber Norgaard and her band. At the Community Performing Arts Center, 1250 W Continental Rd, Green Valley, 7pm. For more info call 520-399-1750. Tickets $10 at the door.

SAT, AUG 1ST – CHAMPAGNE

OPENING GALA FOR THE MICHAEL

ARTHUR JAYME EXHIBIT at the Tubac Center of the Arts from 5-7pm. Featuring entertainment by Allan Riding Jazz Trio.

THURS, AUG 6TH – ALLAN RIDING

JAZZTET FEATURING VOCALIST

KARI SHAFF at the Community Performing Arts Center, 1250 W Continental Rd, Green Valley, 7pm. For more info call 520-399-1750. Tickets $10 at the door.

Send in your August and September events to the Tubac Villager via email:[email protected]

Page 28: June - July 2009 Tubac Villager

www.Tubac.com

Virtual Tours Available At:

©2008 Realty Executives. Realty Executives® is a registered trademark. An Equal Opportunity Company. Equal Housing Opportunity.

(520) 398-2945(520) 398-2222(520) [email protected] [email protected]

2251 E Frontage Rd., Suite #2(just south of the Post Office)

Bill Mack:Sally Robling:

Offi ce:Email:Email:

Tubac Real Estate TeamSally

Robling

2316 Balderrain Offered at $595,000

– we have other lots/land for sale –call us!

8 Avenida Diaz - with a pool! Offered at $980,000

2304 de Anza – Totally updated! Offered at $599,000

1 Calle Tubatama – with a pool! Offered at $450,000

2217 Paseo Tumacacori – Motivated Seller - new price $359,000

2340 Camino Esplendido – Offered at $310,000

#1 agents in Tubac since 2005

NEWLISTING

SOLD

10 Keating Circle – with a pool! Offered at $365,000

38 Avenida de Otero - Offered at $575,000

51 Tirso Lane

PRICE

REDUCTION