I thought the juniper in the median of I-17 near Cordes Junction burned for certain this summer. Glad I was wrong...the juniper tree known as "Scrubby" not only survived but is sporting his annual Christmas flair. The tradition continues!
Update: 12/14.2020 The woman who reported this story to the town of Cave Creek was incorrect and plagiarized the photo as reported by @Alston_Neal.
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Last edited by LosDosSloFolks on Dec 14 2020 8:41 am, edited 1 time in total.
@LosDosSloFolks
When was this photo taken? We just drove by Scrubby and there wasn't a very robust look to him/her. Certainly not like the photo, more of an eight month Covid-19/drought/fire/post election/2020 kinda look.
@Alston_Neal
I did some research on the Town of Cave Creek Facebook page and several people have called her out on the "fake news" about "Scrubby". My apologies for adding to the problem. Scruffy indeed does not currently look well at all. I updated the original post.
I can report the junipers growing several hundred feet below Montezuma Sleeping and directly out of cracks in the cliff face have also survived. Looked healthy, too. The drought this summer appears to have not killed them. Amazing. The junipers in the Estrella are some impressively hardy specimens.
@LosDosSloFolks
I didn't want to rain on your positive post, but every once in a while I channel Chums. We travel I-17 a lot now, our kids moved back from Seattle to Cottonwood and we now have our first grand boy Alston Mikael Neal. So we know I-17 way too well and of course check the tree on every trip.
Apparently the "aliens" thread about the Utah monolith followed the path of the monolith itself.
So anyway, I'm thinking that Scrubby should be replaced with a newer, more delicious, eatable gingerbread version. Peace on Earth and joy to all. Who doesn't love spreading some holiday cheer?
Gingerbread Monolith Mysteriously Appears at SF Park