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A
Desert Place
by
Geoffrey Platts
Editors
Note: The first “A Desert Place" column was
submitted in 1983 to the Black Mountain News by the CCIA (Cave Creek Improvement Association)
Conservation Committee, which is now the Desert Awareness Committee of the
Desert Foothills Land Trust. The
following initial article was penned by the late Geoffrey Platts and
printed under the original logo. Geoffrey Platts was strongly
devoted to the preservation of the Sonoran Desert and was a unique
individual. He lived without an automobile in a one room cabin with
no electricity or running water that was surrounded by the desert he
loved. Geoffrey wrote extensively to communicate and educate others
about the wonders of Nature and last year was named Poet Laureate for the
city of Scottsdale. He will be missed.

Sonoran Desert rich in flora, fauna
Botanically, the Great Sonoran Desert of Arizona is
the richest of all deserts on the face of this earth. It is truly magnificent in the diversity of its fauna and
flora; and the adaptability of each of its plants and creatures, great and
small, to the arid, often inhospitable climate is a miracle unto itself.
Mammals, reptiles, birds and insects of a great variety and number
have made this desert their home and in spite of its usually parched
dryness, they are supremely at one with it.
Some, indeed, would languish and die if removed to another more
“benign” environment.
Each
cactus, shrub and animal has a marvelous story of endurance and ingenuity
to tell…and the conservation committee’s column, “A Desert Place,”
is here to help tell it, proudly, with loving respect.
“The
desert has mothered many magical things,” wrote John Steinbeck, and
never was a truer word written. Each
week, courtesy of the News/View
we strive to bring you some of this magic in the telling of the Sonoran
Desert’s tale…for it is our sincere belief that, by doing so, we will
contribute to the greater awareness so critically needed to protect and
preserve the desert from unnecessary violation and rampant encroachments.
We
feel that ultimately the people of Arizona must accept responsibility for
the guardianship of our state’s biological diversity, geological marvels
and overall natural heritage. The
protection of Arizona’s natural endowments can be accomplished in
harmony with man’s other needs provided that planning accompanies
progress.
In
conclusion, a brief word on the origin of the committee’s logo and
column title, “A Desert Place.” It
has been taken from the New Testament (Mark 6:31) and the complete verse
reads as follows: “And he
said unto them, ‘come ye yourselves apart into a desert place and rest a
while;’ for there were many coming and going and they had no leisure so
much as to eat.” Jesus and
the newly-called 12 Apostles thereupon “departed into a desert place by
ship privately” (6:32) and it was there, at the end of the day, that the
miraculous feeding of the 5,000 took place.
And, thus, here in the Great Sonoran Desert, are
the multitudes of animals and insects (and indeed human beings) fed and
cared for, as if by a miracle of nature.
Come with us, then, to our “desert place.”
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