What we did!

This is the blog of our 12th Trip to the U.S.A.
On this trip we arrived in March and spent a week with our friends Connie NA Jim at their Bluegrass Party, in Florida.
We then flew to Phoenix, where we collected our rig and then explored Southern Arizona, from the cowboy city of Tombstone in the East, to the desert City of Yuma in the West.
Travelling north along the course of the Colorado river we visited the London Bridge at Lake Havasu before exploring the Mojave Desert, including some more of Rout 66 and Calico Ghost Town.
Moving North West through California we shared in the CBA Bluegrass Campout in Turlock, before visiting Bodega Bay to follow The Birds. After sampling the delights of the Napa Valley we joined in The Fiddle Convention at Cloverdale before storing our rig and returning home after seeing some friends in San Leandro, near San Francisco.
This blog gives a day to day record of many of the things we did on this trip.

Monday, March 18, 2013

March 16th - Bisbee

Now there is a name for a town - Bisbee!
It was named after a judge in the 1880's, though he never set foot in the town!
What an amazing place, possibly one of the most fascinating places we have visited (and we have visited a few). We drove the short 26 miles from Tombstone on Saturday, not quite knowing what to expect.
This was a real frontier town, it is built at the confluence of a couple of narrow canyons. Houses were crowded into the narrow gulches and built right up the sides of the mountains, the only access was, and still is, by steps, hundreds of them). It's origins are based in the discovery of copper, huge amounts of it, both high grade ore, which was dug out using mines, 2000 miles of mining tunnels are beneath Bisbee and low grade ore which was removed with huge open cast quarries, one of them is deep enough that you could invert Roseberry Topping and place it in there and it still would not fill it. The Copper Queen Mine being the most famous and though it is now quiet though by no means a ghost, town it once had a population of 100,000. Because of the many fires they have had the main streets are now mostly brick built and show Edwardian, but western, architecture.
 The gulches are dry except in the rainy season (July August), when the main streets used to become rivers (now have slightly better drainage, though locals do not park their cars on the street in the wet season as they tend to float off down the road during storms).
Its wealth was based on Copper, Wooden houses were tightly packed on terraces where they clung to the mountain sides. Town burning was almost as regular as town flooding! The flooding was a mixed blessing as there was no drainage system, so waste (yes I mean all waste) would be just chucked and allowed to dissipate. The local hotels and bars, of which there were many as much of the population were single miners, used a system whereby they would dump all waste under the building in like a basement. When the rain came they removed the lowest side wall and allowed nature to remove the years sewage. Worked OK with a really good flood, but not so good in drier years. Another problem was the cemetery  which was up the canyon affectionately known as Brewery Gulch, nothing wrong with a cemetery  problem came with the storms as not only did the water wash away the dirt it also washed away the bodies down the main street.
Once the copper gave out in the 1970's the town nearly died and became almost empty, but was taken over by hippies, many from California, who claimed squatters rights and renovated the buildings and sold them. The hippy atmosphere still remains and is now a arty crafty/antiquey with nice coffee shops and organic food. It is the southern most mile high town in USA and when they talk about being high, they really mean it.
We learned a lot of this history by taking the trolley bus tour, which was excellent value at $6.00 and gave us a real insight into the town.
I must say that I loved this town and would perhaps vote it as one of my favourites, even more so than perhaps Santa Fe in NM.


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