Agua Caliente Park

As one enters Agua Caliente Park, evidence of a recent fire is visible.

After the outstanding views from Mt. Lemmon, then the discovery and birds at Gordon Hirabayashi Camp, we next went… well, we went to EAT! But then after that, we went to Tucson’s Agua Caliente Park.

Lightning struck inside the park September 28, 2022 and burned 265 trees in this 100 acre wood I mean, park. Most of the trees burned were palm trees. Just two seasons later, and look at how well they are recovering. Forty palms were cut down, and you can still see their stumps.

You can see the flat stumps of palm trees removed after the fire.

The spring is not robust here, and yet valuable due to its history and the location in the desert. After the fire, efforts were made to clear the source and build up the banks with rocks, to preserve the tiny spring, for which the place received its name.

The charred bark is disconcerting, but the green fronds are encouraging.

As you may have guessed, this place originally became famous for it’s hot springs (agua caliente = hot water in Spanish). The land was homesteaded in 1873, and then turned into and farm and a health spa in 1878 when the flow was measured at 500 gallons per minute. Today, the spring is only a trickle assisted by park pumps.

Though the palm trees are wonderful, this majestic Velvet Mesquite tree is the most remarkable.
Its enormous branches that have spread unsustainably wide, are supported by wooden beams, metal poles, and brick pylons.
The mesquite tree is estimated to be over 200 years old.

Adjacent to the parking area is the original farmhouse that has now been turned into a Visitor’s Center and museum, showing the way the rooms may have been used when it was a home…

The main living area inside the house.
A well-lit dining room.

…and pottery from an excavated archaeological site on the homestead…

The docent pulled us over to see this bowl especially, “It was found intact!” she said.
More pottery from the Whiptail archaeological site.

…and in a long narrow room to the side, we found a traditional-type gallery.

Botanical sketches in the gallery.

Back outside, we began our exploration of the park grounds. It was lovely and we constantly had our eyes on the horizon, looking for wildlife. We found it!

I appreciated the wide variety of desert plant types – so fascinating because they are unlike what grows in my area.
The pond is especially appealing.
The water, the palms, and the mountains behind made beautiful landscape views.
A common Mallard with an uncommon blue head.
Male Mallard hybrid with an American Black Duck. That’s pretty cool.
There were dozens of baby Painted Turtles, but this is the only photo where you can tell how small and cute they were.
We liked the look of this palm in the water.
Wowza! What a gorgeous bird.
A Great Egret
All views of the pond were beautiful
Even views through the burned palms (photo by David Vincent)

All around the pond and the farmhouse museum are manicured lawns with domestic flower gardens and picnic tables. We left that area and headed into the adjacent grounds that brought more stereotypical desert scenes.

Oooh, it’s a bummer about that power line cutting through my photo.
Turn to the left 45 degrees, and the power line is gone!
Why?

Out in the desert, we found another pond! When this property was a farm, there were three ponds, fed by the spring and assisting in irrigation. The ponds are kept today, but not the irrigation, though there is still evidence of the old rows of farmland. Today, the comparably wet land provides a thriving bushy forest.

Former farmland, now a gila monster park bench.
Another blurry House Finch. I can’t count this one because I showed one at Bill & Mikki’s house a couple days before.

At the pond we saw ducks that felt more comfortable in this setting vs. the pond with all the palm trees and people and dogs.

This gorgeous male Ring Necked Duck has deep purple head feathers. ❤
A Redhead Duck. This is the first time I’ve ever seen this one in the wild, though they are somewhat common.

We will finish with a rather seductive pose. I took this one from the Redhead’s Tinder page:

Oh baby. ❤

Bird Count: We saw some pretty new birds, five in all. That brings my Arizona bird total up to fifteen birds on the afternoon of day four.

8 thoughts on “Agua Caliente Park

  1. Another great place Crystal. The Painted Turtles always seem permanently grumpy. The Great Egret photos are awesome. So love the number of ducks, some I’ve not seen before. The Tinder profile photo made me laugh 😍

    1. Thanks Brian! I do love ducks and I’m fortunate to live around so much water and get the chance to see them often. I’m glad to see you like them as well. I think I have photos of more ducks the next day, when we made our way down south to the Mexico border. I think if that sexy Redhead put that photo up on Tinder, it would totally attract the ladies. It worked on me. 😉

    1. Thank you Derrick. I believe humans have amazing recovery skills, but sadly, as you point out, not the regenerative abilities. I am simply fascinated with the studies being done right now on starfish and lobster and such, trying to discover how they regrow limbs, with fantastical hopes that someday the knowledge can be used to help humans.

    1. It feels a little less impressive to find birds in a park, like this one, but they were such wonderful birds I’m still so pleased. That redheaded duck is just sumptuous. ❤ And the turtles were great. The two I got most of the shots of were following me as we walked around the shore of the pond, hoping we would feed them treats. Seeing a bunch of baby turtles was pretty fun, too.

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