Cienega Creek

Date & Time: 
May 5, 2018 -
8:30am to 1:00pm
Meeting Place: 
Fry's at 8080 S Houghton Rd (NW corner of Houghton & Rita Roads)
Trip Leader: 
John Rhodes
Special Notes: 
Alternate Meeting Place: 9:00 AM at the Gabe Zimmerman Davidson Canyon Trailhead. Directions: Take I 10 East to the exit for Highway 83 South to Patagonia and Sonoita, turn left from the exit towards Tucson for 0.2 miles, then right (east) on Marsh Station Road for 3.3 miles to the Trailhead.

The Gabe Zimmerman Trailhead Parking Lot has room for only ten cars, so carpooling from Fry’s is a good idea.  There is one portable toilet in the lot.  We will walk north along Davidson Canyon for about 0.4 miles to Cienega Creek, then walk upstream, mostly east.  The walking is not too difficult and will crisscross the stream on some primitive trails, occasionally through bushes.  Long pants and good hiking shoes are recommended. We will spend the majority of our time walking in the canyon away from our vehicles, so be prepared to carry a lunch and enough water for about four hours.

 

We have a special permit from Pima County to explore this wild and beautiful stream!  The cool clear water is home for the water plant nitella and filamentous green algae and three species of native fishes as well as Sonoran Mud Turtles and leopard frogs.  You can dress up your sandwich with peppery watercress that grows in the shallow water.  The perfect star shaped purple-pink flowers on the dry banks of the stream are Buckley’s Centaury.  Bird songs echo through the high canopy of trees and the canyon walls, but it may be difficult to find their source.  The Southwest Willow Flycatcher, Bell’s Vireo and Yellow Cuckoo are hard to see, but the larger Gray Hawks stand out in the branches.  Butterflies are scarce after our dry winter and spring, but there might be some Viceroys, Mourning Cloaks, Red-spotted Purples, Dainty Sulfurs and Tailed Orange if we are lucky.  In Cienega Creek the water is above ground and shaded by huge cottonwood, willow, and ash trees, but as the water flows west the bedrock is deeper and the stream is mostly hidden under the sand as it becomes the Pantano Wash, the Rillito River, Santa Cruz River, Gila River, and through the Colorado River enters the Sea of Cortez.

 

Type of terrain: Walking will be along the stream bed and on some primitive trails. There will be some bushwhacking and stepping up and down sandy banks and rocks.

 

Photo: Marine Blue (Leptotes marina) puddle party

Trip Butterfly Reports: 

On a hot and windy day, the group hiked from the trailhead downstream to the railroad trestle and then upstream a little ways past the creekbed becoming dry. Although we didn't find many butterflies, we saw some great birds and enjoyed being out under the cottonwoods alongside running water. Butterflies seen:

  1. Pipevine Swallowtail      Battus philenor
  2. Southern Dogface         Colias eurtheme
  3. Mexican Yellow              Eurema mexicana
  4. Sleepy Orange              Eurema nicippe
  5. Marine Blue                   Leptotes marina
  6. Red-spotted Purple       Limenitis arthemis astyanax
  7. Viceroy                          Limentis archippus
  8. Empress Leilia              Asterocampa leilia
  9. Queen                           Danaus gilippus
Leader email: 
jrbutterflymagic@aol.com or 520-444-2724

General Information

Beginners are welcome on all field trips! Experienced members will share their butterfly knowledge and expertise with all field trip participants. Children accompanied by a responsible adult are welcome on SEABA field trips. A donation of $5 per person to benefit SEABA will be appreciated. Carpooling from the meeting place is encouraged and it is kind to share gas expenses. If high clearance vehicles are required for a trip, it will be noted in individual trip descriptions. Dress for the field with sturdy shoes, hat, sunscreen, and insect repellent. Bring your own water, snacks, and lunch. Close-focusing binoculars, cameras, and field guides will be helpful aids for butterfly observation and identification. Trips usually end by mid-afternoon unless noted differently in individual trip descriptions.

Please be aware that:

1. Collecting or netting is NOT allowed on SEABA field trips.

2. Pets, with the exception of service animals, are NOT allowed on SEABA field trips.

3. All field trip participants are required to sign SEABA's Release and Assumption of Risk form at the beginning of the trip. The form may be viewed at SEABA Release.

4. Please arrive a few minutes prior to the meeting time posted for trips to facilitate paperwork and introductions to other trip participants.

5. Field trips may be cancelled or rescheduled on short notice due to changing weather or road conditions. Please check the website for updates prior to the Field Trip.

 

Our Southeastern Arizona Butterfly Checklist can be downloaded here. Please note that the SEABA checklist is copyrighted.

Local NABA Butterfly Counts are listed at NABA Counts

Field trips organized by the Central Arizona Butterfly Association are listed at their website: CAzBA.