Friday, March 06, 2026

Warm Days at Hot Well Dunes

Wednesday, March 04

 I am not doing much of anything, not even doing a lot of soaking in the hot tubs for which this r inecreation area is known. 

I've never seen the area so full of campers.   

The skoolie/rainbow family group I mentioned in the previous post is still here, they somehow managed to talk their way into being allowed to stay I guess. Disappointing but not surprising.  More of their ilk have appeared as well, crowding more into the area near the hot tubs. 

Here's yesterday's sunrise:

I spent the day hanging out at the campsite, venturing out after 4:00 p.m. for a brief ride into the dunes with Yagi, for the golden hour lighting. 






Sunset was pretty good too:

Thursday, March 05

Another lazy day at the campsite. The good news is the rainbow family bunch are gone.

I rode out after 5PM to check on current population, still at least 3/4 full I think.  

Here's Yagi on the back side of the high dunes, with a view of Javeline Peak as the Golden Hour was in progress:

Returning past the campsite areas, I motored about trying to cate the small pond that forms due to the drainage of the hot tubs upstream.  Had some difficulty finding it and Yagi's front wheel was feeling "heavy".

Finally found the dried up pond, no water, just barely dry mud surface which of course I didn't ride anywhere near of!

Trying to find my way back, I got slightly mis-orientated, shall we say.  Ended up in some deep, sandy and curvy whoop-de-dos which weren't much fun on two wheels.  Deep sand is quite challenging and Yagi's heavy front wheel didn't help.

I ended up dropping her twice, the second time the repeated impacts on her right hand hand guard twisted it.  This meant the throttle grip didn't turn easily and of course didn't return to idle by itself.  It was pressure from the hand guard you see.

Still, my conscious twisting of the throttle back and forth, I got back to camp with no issues.  Once I was off the motorcycle, I noticed the flag pole was broken off, probably during the fall.  doh 

Friday, March 06

I spent some of the morning untwisting the right hand guard to allow the brake lever free movement along with the throttle grip.  

That squared away, I rode over to the scene of the fall and there was the rest of the flagpole and flag.  I stuck the fallen remnant onto the saddlebag, you'll note it's much shorter.


Got back to camp and reattached one of the two flagpole segments back onto the flag pole:

Not as tall as before to be sure.  To be clear it was probably too tall before, since it was a pole that I repurposed from the standby tent that I carry in the RV.  I think this current setup will work just fine. 

It's supposed to be cooling down today, and the breeze does bring a slight chill to one when in the shade, but out in the sun it feels just fine! 

Oh, and the heavy feel of the front wheel on Yagi, it turned out that there was no measurable air pressure in it!  I thought I had aired it down to 5 PSI to deal with the loose sand around here but I guess I went too low.  Aired it up to 5 PSI and all is good for now.


Tuesday, March 03, 2026

Back at Hot Well Dunes Rec Area

Here's yesterday's sunset in the BANWR, pretty good:




Today, I left at 8:20 a.m. and by 1:00 p.m. I had dumped tanks, filled up the freshwater tank in Willcox, AZ and set up a campsite in the Hot Well Dunes recreation area.




The place is almost full, I think there were only  two more designated camping sites remaining.  Not that designated sites are adhered to by some of the other rigs I saw close to the around the hot tubs about a half mile down the road.

As the golden hour developed, I rode Yagi to the overlook area at the edge of the dunes with Javelina Peak in the background:


3.5x digital zoom shot, can you spot Yagi?

Riding back to the campsite, I saw a BLM ranger truck coming my way so I parked on the side of the road to let him through. As I waved at the ranger as he passed me by, I was surprised to see two other ranger vehicles following close behind.  Interesting.

The rangers headed to the sketchy looking skoolie rig I had seen parked near the hot tub area on the way to taking the above pictures. I watched the rangers walk up to the people who owned the skoolie and they talked for a while. 



The rec area's site host came up to me as I was watching and we talked for a bit. It was him that had called in the rangers. About 3 hours prior, the site host had to talk to the people belonging to the skoolie.

They were apparently not behaving themselves, bringing their dogs into the hot tubs, and basically telling the site host they didn't have to listen to him and that they could do whatever they wanted to.  The site host ended up shutting down the pumps for the hot tubs way ahead of schedule, and he was there now to clean up each hot tub due to dogs having been in them. 

People like this is why we can't have nice things. Also, I would think it's not good to put an animal inside a hot tub?

Anyways, the host assured me that the skoolie people would be going in the morning, they were apparently part of the rainbow family of the light group.  I had to look them up, basically new age hippies the way I understood it. 

So besides that mild unpleasantness, all is well otherwise here. I'll be here a few days as I work my way back to Colorado. 

Altitude:3409 ft
High temperature: 89°F. 

Friday, February 27, 2026

Yagi is making me wary again

I went for a short ride after a day of doing nothing at the campsite but listening to a book and relaxing.

I had read my destination, a group campsite about 3 miles from my camp.  Yagi, my TW200 however chose that moment to have the engine die forcing me to coast the final few feet to the entrance.  Yogi would not start again, despite several attempts and some checking of the usual suspects. She was acting like the time when I had damaged wiring to the stator causing problems. 

Some deep sign and cursing later, I started pushing her back towards camp along Arivaca Road.  There was one steep hill, at Lisa was steeped to me, before I got to the entrance to Morris Road 227.  Huffing and puffing I pushed Yogi past the entrance and stuff for a rest.  I know where my decided to try the starter again, she cranked and cranked and I was about to give up when the engine caught! 

Of course she started working after the hill not before the hill, that would have been too easy. 

I rode back to camp with no further issues and spent the rest of the afternoon troubleshooting things. Found some wiring that needed repairing but that was not related to the problem. They're appears to be, though I can't replicate it reliably, a loose connection on one other wires leading to the stator. It would sometimes cut out the engine when jostled it and sometimes it didn't.

Anyways, button things up went on a couple of short test rides in case I had to push the motorcycle back and there were no issues. Did multiple stop starts, no issues. More testing to follow. But again, there's trust issues between me and Yagi.

More rigs have shown up for weekend but still at least .3 miles away 

High Temp: 85°F

Saturday, February 28

High Temp: 87°F

Spent the morning cleaning up the battery terminals and doing some rewiring because previous efforts had proven not long lasting, shall we say.  

Just before 3:00 in the afternoon, I went out for what turned out to be a 15.2 mi test ride that involve both dirt and pavement, and Yagi did fine.  I think for the short-term I will be riding only on roads that the VRRV can negotiate to recover Yagi in case she does another outage on me.

Sunday, March 01

Woke up this morning to the news of the US / Israel attacks on Iran. Spent the day basically looking at the news to see what was going on. I did get a couple more test rides in with Yagi, she seems to be back to her old self.

High Temp: 89°F






Thursday, February 26, 2026

T'dubing for binos shots of Baboquivari Peak.

Sometimes, I Have Too Much Lens!

Perhaps it's a strange statement but I shall demonstrate:

I rode out on Yagi, my TW200 dual sport to get long depth of field shots of Baboquivari, the Mountain peak that dominates the view here in the wildlife refuge and surrounding areas. 

I was hoping to use my binos with cameraphone adapter to accomplish this goal as in previous postings.  This day however, it became clear I was using "too much lens".  Meaning that the binoculars were too powerful at their 10x magnification factor to be useful for the shots I was trying for. 

The first attempt was at the junction of State Highway 286 and the road that leads onto the Baboquivari trailhead a few miles down range.  From where I stopped the motorcycle just before a bend in the road, I walked all the way back to the fence line where the angles suddenly became bad for capturing both the motorcycle and the peak itself. 

You can't see I barely captured Yagi within the shot

This is the spot from which I shot the first pic.

I then motored onwards a couple of miles or so to a wide parking spot where I have camped before with the peak in the background as you can see below: 

You can ride closer, all the way to the trailhead for the trail which you can hike to get closer to the top of the peak. It's not a really well marked trail and I had lost it during previous attempts to do it.  This time I decided to turn around and try for a different spot closer to the refuge's visitor center. 

No binos used...I tried the binos adapter but the shots
Didn't turn out.

Next I rode to the small village of Arivaca as the sun rose ever higher in the sky and the light got more and more difficult to work with.  

About 3 and 1/2 mi south of Arivaca on the way to Arivaca Lake there's a set of small ridges that I have used before for long depth of field shots.  Previous ride

I didn't quite align the camera and bino eyepiece and sadly this was the best of the several I tried.  The lighting from the bright sun forced much post-processing afterwards too.

Below shows you how far I was from Yagi when I tried for the shot above it:


I believe this was using 10x digital zoom, no binos

At this point, the light was so flat I gave up on further pictures and proceeded back to camp.  The next shot was done later on in the afternoon once the light became a little better. 


Then, the light got a little better:


Is it apparently happens during this time of year, the shadows start to form on the peak as the sun moves across the sky.  So I tried this bino shot before the shadows completely covered the peak and made it appear as a hazy silhouette in the late afternoon. 

1x zoom with binos
(Obviously)

2.9x zoom with binos