After exploring the DeGrazia Gallery, Ginger drove us back to her place, and we took the rental car and headed back north of Tucson.
First we stopped at St Philip in the Hills Episcopal Church (1936), which was designed by Josias Joesler in Spanish Colonial Mission style, on land donated by John Murphey. Originally the main entrance to the Catalina Foothills Estates was located nearby. This exclusive residential neighborhood was developed by Murphey and Joesler, starting in the 1930s.
St Philip in the Hills Episcopal Church at 4440 N Campbell Avenue |
St Philip in the Hills plaza fountain |
Our greeter: Sceloporus magister/Desert Spiny Lizard |
Ice Plant |
Adenium obesum/Desert Rose (KAH) |
Pachycereus marginatus/Mexican Fence Post Cactus |
Apartment house saguaro (KAH) |
Regal Horned Lizard (1995) by Dave Stone |
Grape arbor (KAH) |
Grapes |
Moorish Garden |
Karen with a large Opuntia sp |
Acacia greggii/Catclaw Acacia? with snapping pods |
Empty Nest (2004-2005) by Ira Wiesenfeld |
Rain Catcher (one of many) by Jeffrey Dacosta |
Native Bee Habitat (2013) by Tucson students |
Fountain with mosaic channel in the Children's Garden |
Arch to the Children's Garden |
Vulture by Kioko Mwitiki of Kenya |
Nolina sp |
Mexican Fence Post Cactus Water Sculpture by Dave Weinert |
Fouquieria splendens/Ocotillo with leaves |
More azurite (blue) and malachite (green) |
Adromischus cristatus |
Fenestraria rhopalophylla/Baby Toes |
Boot bird house |
Chile pepper wreath |
Next: Tucson Sights.
2 comments:
Beautiful! I am looking to identify a huge iguana looking lizard that lives in my yard in tucson. He has yellow around his eyes, beautiful green scales on his face, and a blue belly.
I am assuming that a huge lizard is over a foot-long. Less than a foot might make it a Granite Spiny Lizard (Sceloporus orcutti) and coloration is so individual. Can anybody help with this identification?
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