Linda Ronstadt’s Borderland
http://www.nytimes.com/2013/12/29/travel/linda-ronstadts-borderland.html
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When Linda thinks of home meaning where your soul inhabits the soil, wherever else your body might be its not Southern California, the place forever associated with her professional life, as Queen of Rock in the land of Byrds and Stone Poneys and Eagles. Nor is it San Francisco, where she lives now.
Her home lies in dryer, poorer country.
Its in southern Arizona and northern Mexico, in Tucson and points south, where giant saguaros, slender and humanoid, signal touchdowns all over the hills and beside the highways. Its where the mountains are jagged islands in a blue ocean of sky, where the rock-and-thorn terrain is hostile to people but friendly to cottonwoods, organ-pipe cactus, green-skinned palo verde trees and mesquite. Its fertile range for cattle and horses, and well cultivated in alfalfa, peanuts and agave.
Its the cowboy-and-Indian West. Its a deep vein of Mexican-America, a rich stretch of bicultural borderland from Nogales to Agua Prieta. It was where Ópata, Yaqui, Pima and Apache Indians, Mexicans, Spaniards, Basques and Jesuit missionaries converged and collided in the 17th and 18th centuries.
slide show:
http://www.nytimes.com/slideshow/2013/12/29/travel/29ronstadt.html#3