Snowbirding 2020 Postcards: Arizona Airplane Flight

I get to ride in the back seat of a small plane behind two generations of pilots.

I spent the last day in January at Falcon Field airport in Mesa, AZ, hanging around with some friends who own a flight school. A highlight of the day was a trip up to Payson, AZ in a Cessna 182 for lunch with my friend Woody and his newly minted private pilot daughter Lindsay.

I’m not a big fan of small airplanes, partly because you can feel turbulence so much more in a plane than a helicopter and partly because I’d spent more time than I wanted to as a passenger in my wasband’s Grumman Tiger with him at the controls. He was a nervous pilot who constantly chased the RPM with the throttle in flight and didn’t let me talk if the air wasn’t perfectly calm. I often got the impression that he was overwhelmed with the task and, because of that, I was never really confident of his skills. Since I don’t fly airplanes, takeoffs (with a stall horn blaring) and landings (which were seldom on the runway centerline) terrified me. I may have screamed once on a particularly bad landing in Wickenburg.

Painted Tower
Back at Falcon Field, I managed to get a halfway decent shot of the artwork painted on the Falcon Field tower, which is visible from the runway.

Fortunately, I have a lot of pilot friends with a lot more experience and, therefore, skills and confidence. Woody is one of these friends. A retired airline pilot who loves to fly, Woody has flown a wide range of aircraft, from tiny Pipers and Cessnas to Boeing and Airbus airliners to Robinson and Schweizer helicopters. If you follow my FlyingMAir channel on YouTube, you may have seen him showing off the King Air he flew up to Washington with his dog and another pilot to spend a week with me. In the past 8 years or so, I’ve flown with plenty of experienced airplane pilots like Woody and I find it an enjoyable, worry-free experience — as long as the turbulence isn’t too bad.

So when Woody invited me to join him and his daughter for a flight up to Payson for lunch, I was all in. They were flying our friend Jan’s Cessna 182, which was a complex airplane. Lindsay had just gotten her private pilot certificate and was on a training path to become an airline pilot. She needed to build experience and get endorsements for a variety of airplane types and the complex Cessna was the first challenge. She sat on the left (the pilot seat in most planes) and Woody sat on the right. I sat in back, which was surprisingly roomy.

Jan's Cessna 182
Jan’s Cessna 182.

The flight was uneventful, although there was just enough turbulence to remind me that I was in a small plane. Woody let Lindsay do all the flying, providing firm instruction when needed but never touching the controls. Lindsay was focused and trying hard to do everything perfectly, but she had the air of someone who was knowledgeable and confident. Our landing in Payson was a bit bumpy, but she greased it back in Mesa. I didn’t hear a stall horn once. Along the way, I was reminded about how poor the visibility is our the front of an airplane with that big fat engine and propeller blocking the view.

Lindsay Takes Off
Lindsay and Woody, side by side on takeoff at Falcon Field. I think Woody was really proud of her — and he should be!

Bartlett Lake
I took pictures and shot video all the way up to Payson and back. I’m not sure, but I think this might be Bartlett Lake along the Verde River.

We parked and got out at Payson, which, because of its higher elevation, was a lot cooler than the Phoenix area. We went into the nearly deserted airport restaurant and had lunch. My patty melt was delicious and huge; I took half in a to-go box. We wanted to buy t-shirts, but they only had size Small left.

Payson Airport Restaurant
The restaurant at the airport was nearly empty when we arrived.

We headed back to Mesa right after lunch — there wasn’t anything else to do at the airport. I got a chance to admire Lindsay’s radio skills. I was a little envious. She was so young, with her whole life ahead of her and a dad to help guide her into an interesting and rewarding career. I complemented her on her flying skills and wished her the best of luck with her training and future.

Snowbirding 2020 Postcards: Lunch at Chompy’s

Pastrami, corned beef, and tongue on rye.

I won’t deny it: there are some things about New York that I really miss. One of them is having a good deli sandwich. A sandwich with more meat than bread, which is remarkably rare west of the Mississippi.

That’s why I was thrilled when my friend Cheryl suggested Chompy’s in Scottsdale for lunch the day I came to visit her. Finally! I could treat myself to a good deli sandwich.

Corned Beef, Pastrami, and Tongue Sandwich
This is HALF of a corned beef, pastrami, and tongue on rye sandwich. I ordered it with a cup of excellent matzo ball soup.

The last time I had a sandwich this good, I was in a kosher deli on Manhattan’s lower east side. Memories!

Added bonus: the hostess was from Brooklyn and I could clearly hear it in her voice. In fact, she looked and sounded just like the actress Constance Zimmer in her Boston Legal TV show role.

Snowbirding 2020 Postcards: El Dorado Hot Springs

An oddly pleasant hot spring an hour west of Phoenix.

Janet and I left Quartzsite on the Wednesday after Tyson Wells Sell-A-Rama show in Quartzsite ended. She was headed for a ranch near Wickenburg where she’s based with her significant other and their horses during the winter months. I was headed for a friend’s house in Laveen, AZ. But first, we’d make one overnight stop: El Dorado Hot Springs in Tonopah, AZ.

We’d heard about El Dorado from a mutual artist friend who really loved the place. I’d tried to research it on the Internet and found a website so messed up that I couldn’t get much information. But I wasn’t in a hurry to get where I was going and neither was she. We figured that it would be nice to soak off the dust of Quartzsite — well, at least I figured that — and this hot spring was on the way.

I’ll start by saying this: it’s a weird place. Located just south of I-10, it has several electric and water hookup sites, as well as some overflow sites, which is where we ended up. The place has peacocks and a very large pig roaming around. There are two kinds of tubs: the big public tub, which you can use as much as you like when you pay for a campsite, or a private tub, which you must reserve and can only use for an hour. The catch: clothing is not allowed in the public tub.

I’m shy and the idea of soaking in a hot tub, naked, with strangers, was not very appealing. So we opted for the private tub and got a 7 PM time slot.

It was dark when we made our way to the tub. It was in a little fenced in area with two lounge chairs and some mellow lights along the top of the fence. The tub itself was made of stone and concrete with lots of embedded agate slabs along the top. The water came out of a pipe and down a little rock waterfall. The tub itself was big enough for 6 or 8 people — certainly plenty large for the two of us.

I can’t begin to tell you how pleasant it was to soak in a hot tub under a star-studded Arizona sky. The water wasn’t hot; it was about body temperature. Very pleasant for long-term soaking. Indeed, we stayed in the water for nearly the full hour.

It was so good that we signed up and paid for another soak the next morning. That’s when I got this photo of our tub.

Hot Tub
One of the private hot tubs at El Dorado.

The place isn’t perfect. There are more than the average number of flies in the camping area and if the wind is blowing just wrong, you can smell the Hickman’s egg farm less than a mile to the west. But it’s mellow and laid back; a nice place for an overnight visit.

Snowbirding 2020 Postcards: Jet on a Truck Trailer

Well, okay.

Quartzsite used to have an airport that was on aeronautical charts. Trouble is, it had a bit of a dogleg in the runway and a road crossed it. The story I heard is that a landing (or departing?) airplane hit a car that was crossing the runway as the plane was landing (or taking off). No one was hurt but the plane was damaged and the airport closed down.

Nowadays, there’s a dirt runway across the freeway and slightly west of that old airport site. It’s not on any chart, but it does have a few hangars and at least one windsock. And some planes that aren’t going anywhere soon, including this one.

Plane on Trailer
Not something you see every day. (It’s a Lear jet.)

I have some video I’ll likely compile into something for YouTube when I get home. I’ll try to remember to link to it here.

Snowbirding 2020 Postcards: Q Mountain Hike

Hiking to the top of Quartzsite.

Q Mountain
Q Mountain, as seen from a point on our daily hike.

Janet and I did 2-1/2+ mile hikes almost every morning we were in Quartzsite. Our route took us past the foot of Q Mountain, a hill/butte in the southwest corner of town that was the highest point in the area. It looked pretty steep from the ground, but when the two of us finally got around to climbing it, we discovered that it really wasn’t so bad. Here are some of the views.

Q Shadow
Looking to the northwest, you can see the shadow of Q Mountain, an RV park, a truck stop, and the I-10 freeway interchange.

Q North
Here’s the view to the north. That’s Janet in the corner of the shot. Someone put an MIA flag on the same pole as an American flag up there and it bugged me. The American flag should always hang higher in the US, no?

QWest
Here’s the view to the southwest. This area is heaven for anyone who likes to follow dirt tracks through the desert (and doesn’t mind the ever-present dust).