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Arizona Postmeeting
Trip
Safford, AZ.,
July 31 - August 3, 2007
Tuesday, July 31
There are two ways to get to Safford from Springerville. On the map the
most direct way is down Rte. 191 but that is 165 miles of slow, winding
road, a part of which is through the ruined landscape of a gigantic copper
mine. The other is to make a loop east into New Mexico. It's longer but
you can usually drive a little faster. Since Jerrell and I decided to
go to the San Francisco River in New Mexico, we would try the latter.
I would have liked
to have spent more time at the San Francisco. It is a small stream running
through a canyon. Kathy and Dave Biggs came with us and got to see Painted
Damsel and Arizona Snaketail. The snaketails were fairly common here but
I missed catching yet another female. Luckily Jerrell and others caught
some that I got to scan. I most regret not seeing the handful of Persephone's
Darners, Aeshna persephone that Jerrell saw upstream but couldn't
catch. I didn't go as far as he did and by time he came back and reported
his sightings, clouds had rolled in. We waited, but had to set ourselves
a time limit. The clouds did not part and we had to move on.
Missing Persephone's
Darner was by far my biggest disappointment of the trip. This was the
only known location we would visit for the species. If I had known that
earlier, I probably would have tried the day before. Not too many people
tried the San Francisco in the preceeding days and I'm sure we would have
done better if we only had more nets on the ground. I began harboring
the idea of driving up from Safford to try again. But the ride to Safford
was sobering. It took more than three hours and with the weather so unsettled,
an attempt could mean a waste of a whole day.
Those who had taken
the AZ route to Safford had a poor time of it. It rained. Dave Halstead
stopped at some ponds in New Mexico and caught three male Arroyo Darners,
Aeshna dugesi, which he let me scan. Dennis Paulson let me have a
male Dashed Ringtail, Erpetogomphus heterodon, which he also found
in New Mexico so going east, at least for some, was the right decision.
I dropped Jerrell
off then went to look for my motel. I made my reservations late for the
trip so I was not able to stay at the same place with everyone else. The
week before I had called every motel in town until I finally found a room.
It was a barracks-like complex at the edge of town catering mostly to
construction and mine workers. The fellow next door was entertaining female
company. My room was dingy and where pictures once hung, only dirty shadows
remained. The shower was busted and the air smelled like something was
deep frying in oil. I was really happy when a room at the Econolodge opened
up the next day.
Wednesday, Aug 1
The Pinaleno Mountains loom to the southwest of Safford and most of us
were drawn up to visit the streams that flowed down the slopes. Always
a bit behind again, Jerrell Daigle, Paul Bedell, Dave Halstead and I caught
up with main group just as they were leaving one of the streams. It was
still early and they had not seen much. They were going down to the valley
and would perhaps try the mountains again in the afternoon if the heat
below got to be too much.
We lingered for a
while at the stream but saw little. Then a Riffle Darner flew by, and
someone yelled out, "Apache Spiketail!" Dave got a swing but
it got away. We waited and of course, the clouds rolled in. Then it rained.
We got into the car and started to descend the mountain but when we looked
back, it looked like it might clear. The stream seemed right on the edge
of raincloud and blue sky. So we went back and waited but that edge could
never quite reach us. We headed back down feeling like we wasted the morning.
It was invitingly
sunny in the valley as we pulled into Roper Lake State Park. Dragonflies
were flying at Dankworth Lake and we were not used to the abundance. Western
Pondhawks, Erythemis collocata, Comanche Skimmers, Libellula
comanche and Roseate Skimmers, Orthemis ferruginea cruised
the edge of the parking lot. Tiny Desert Firetails, Telebasis salva
were down at a hot spring accompanied by a few Kiowa Dancers, Argia
immunda. Over the water flew pairs of Black and Red Saddlebags
Tramea lacerata and onusta, Checkered Setwings Dythemis
fugax, and Marl Pennants Macrodiplax balteata. Male Red-tailed
Pennants, Brachymesia furcata and Blue-eyed Darners joined the
swirls of dragonflies chasing each other. It was hot standing out in the
open but we enjoyed all the activity for a couple of hours.
Every once in a while,
someone would look up at the mountains to see if the clouds had moved
off. When it looked like they finally did, we headed back up to the mountain
and it was sunny when we got to the stream. We waited, but all we found
were more Riffle Darners. I never did clearly see a live Apache Spiketail
on the trip, only a couple of dried specimens that were collected elsewhere
before the meeting.
We decended once more,
stopping at Roper Lake in the late afternoon where we saw a large number
of Four-spotted Pennants, Brachymesia gravida but little else.
We sat a while and compared notes with Steve and Marcia Hummel and it
started to rain. A family of quail pecked at puddles in the parking lot.
Thursday, Aug 2
While we had spent the previous afternoon at Dankworth and Roper Lake,
almost everyone else had gone to Bonita Creek in the Gila Box Riparian
Area. They returned with quite a list, and raved about how wonderful it
was. I saw the photographs and I was sorely tempted by the Plateau Dragonlet,
Erythrodiplax basifusca, Filigree Skimmer, Pseudoleon superbus,
and a damselfly, the Desert Shadowdamsel, Palaemnema domina. Why
an interest in a damselfly when my book is just dragonflies? From pictures,
I knew the shadowdamsel was an elegantly proportioned species, delicately
marked in blues and browns. It retreats into the shadows when the sun
gets hot and reappears after a rain. It's the only member of the family
Platysictidae found north of Mexico. Rare and exotic, I wanted to
see it.
The only problem was
getting there and it looked like we would be the only car going. Our rented
PT Cruiser could make it, after all a couple of PT Cruisers were in the
party that made it there yesterday. The road had patches of rough gravel,
snaking up and down steep hills. Yesterday one vehicle turned back and
another with 4WD suffered a flat tire. That made me particularly nervous
after suffering our own flat just a couple days ago on another gravel
road. When George and Phoebe Harp agreed to accompany us in their car,
Jerrell and I felt a little better.
Going slow, the drive
wasn't too bad and it really was worth it. At Bonita Creek, Jerrell immediately
started beating the brush to look for Shadowdamsels, while the rest of
us headed up the stream for dragonflies. Pale-faced Clubskimmers, Brechmorhoga
mendax were abundant, patrolling every stretch of rapid and riffle.
I looked carefully along the shoreline vegetation for tiny Plateau Dragonlets
and found a few. Despite his size, one male Dragonlet was intent on challenging
the larger Flame Skimmers and Black Setwings that approached his perch.
I spent a lot of time
stalking a couple male Filigree Skimmers. There is a lot of reference
material available for this spectacularly ornate species but it's a dragonfly
I just had to see first hand. They were very flighty, and did not allow
close approach especially if perched on a rock in the open. When they
fly, they never seem to circle back. I could manage to get a little closer
when one would land amid vegetation. I finally got into net range but
I couldn't believe it wasn't in it after I swung. Eventually the two Filigrees
had enough of me and disappeared.
I was a bit frustrated
at this point but kept hoping I'd find some more. I kept rechecking the
slow marshy areas made by beavers damming the stream. Blue-eyed Darners
and Common Green Darners patrolled constantly. I saw a couple of large
dragonflies marked in yellow fly by. I thought at first they might be
spiketails but they were some species of River Cruiser (Macromia)
that we never could catch and identify. Then I saw an unmistakable, incredibly
proportioned male Giant Darner, Anax walshinghami. This is another
well-known, but you-have-to-see-it-for-yourself species. In flight it
holds is long, long abdomen distinctively arched. I watched it fly down
along the edge of the beaver pond before it turned around heading back
toward me. Excitedly I waded out, readying my grip on the net.
I rejoined the others
around lunchtime, and got to see the specimens of the Shadowdamsel that
Jerrell had worked so hard to find. They were beautiful in the hand although
I did regret not seeing them in the field. But now it was midday and hot,
and they would be hard to find down deep in the shadows of brush and thorns.
We stayed a few hours
longer, hoping for another Filigree, or some other wonder. A Fiery-eyed
Dancer on a rock flashes a bronze thorax and bright red eyes. Serpent
Ringtails, blue-eyed, green-bodied and orange-tailed staking claim to
another stone and another portion of stream. Black and White Damsels lurking
in the shade. Flame and Neon Skimmers both brilliant red but different
shades. Another spectacular Giant Darner flies by. I hated to leave.
But the road back
was just as long and rough. Creeping along slowly, I saw a dark dragonfly
flush from the ground in front of the car. It was a Filigree! We quickly
stopped and Jerrell and I jumped out. Jerrell had been so much better
at catching dragonflies this trip so I let him pursue it. But the Filigree
would flush repeatedly, fly a short distance then land. Jerrell followed
it up a small hill and I feared the dragonfly would hop over some trees
and disappear. Remarkably it decided to flutter back down to the road
where Jerrell would eventually net it.
Friday, Aug 3
We made a couple of stops on the road back to Phoenix. The only place
we lingered was at the Boyce Thompson Arboretum where we didn't see too
many dragonflies but it was during the heat of the day. Another Giant
Darner patrolled the remains of a drying stream. We left a note for Kathy
Biggs who was leading a walk there the next morning that we found a Plateau
Dragonlet in the herb garden, a new record for the park. I got to take
a few pictures of it and some butterflies with my old Nikon Coolpix 990
wrapped in duct tape. The camera had frustrated me most of the trip. This
old but formerly reliable camera was finally breaking down and I missed
a lot of shots of creatures and landscape that I wanted. I'll just have
to go back.
I'm grateful to
all the participants of the DSA meeting and post-meeting trip for their
encouragement and support. Special thanks to those who caught specimens
and allowed me to scan them.
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