Bisbee
Arizona – it is a different town from what I've seen in the rest of
Arizona. It sits in the hills, on top of what was vast amounts of
copper and other minerals. It was quite the boom town until the
mining company decided to shut down the mines in 1976. It was the
typical small town story where once the company store shuts down, the
town dies. Bisbee rose from the ashes when the hippies arrived. You
could buy housing just for the cost of paying back taxes. Once the
hippies came, artists followed and then came the tourists. The town
is struggling once again because of Covid, but the history has made
it an interesting town. Another fun fact, I was told, was that Bisbee
is at the same altitude as Denver so it has actual seasons.
I
met a woman who decided to move to Bisbee from Vancouver. She
had sold her house, put things in storage and drove down in her
camper van to Bisbee. She had lived in Bisbee in the seventies (remember the hippie stage?) Those houses that you could buy for
the cost of the back taxes were now going for a quarter of a million
dollars. I got to virtually house shop with her. I just love house shopping when I don't have to put up the bucks.
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Bisbee from the Queen Mine RV Park |
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This is Main Street. Not too much happening, Bisbee seemed pretty much a ghost town |
I
stayed at the Queen Mine RV park. It was located right next to
the Copper Queen mine and only a matter of walking down the hill to
get into town. On one side of the park, you had a mountain,
on the another side you had Bisbee laid out in front of you and on
the third side you had the Lavender Pit which was an open pit mine,
impressive because of it's size. Bisbee is a very walkable
town, providing you like hills. The streets are narrow, there
was no way I could drive my truck through town. At least not
the way I drive. So the location was great.
Speaking
of hills, every October, Bisbee has the Bisbee 1000 - The Great Stair
Climb. they map out a route that contains different staircases
where the number of steps is 1000. Last year, the fastest
person did it in about a half hour. The slowest came in at two
and a half hours. I am in Bisbee for four days - I decided that
was probably how long it would take me. I actually only climbed
about two thirds of the steps - I might perhaps have taken a day off
from climbing here and there.
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Climbing Steps |
I
also took a tour of the Queen Mine. That was fun, you put a
hard hat on, they give you a little light, put you on a little train
and take you into the mine.
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All family groups are socially distanting and masked |
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This was the commode that they used in the mines. Empting this was considered the best job in the mines and usually went to an older miner with seniority. Nobody would sit next to you at the bar because you might have had a slight odor, but you sure didn't have to do the back-breaking miner work. |
There was a small town called Lowell, right next to Bisbee. It was only one street but they had parked all of these old cars up and down the street.
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The Greyhound bus had seen better days but it was still stellar in it's own way |
No matter where you walked, there was always something interesting to see.
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Or perhaps a little un-nerving |
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Even the statutes were masked. Bisbee passed an ordinance or something that said if you were on the streets of Bisbee you need to wear a mask. They took it very seriously. |
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Found this in an alley |
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The RVs are a tad bit different |
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I actually cooked for Thanksgiving. Yes, it is not traditional but boy was it good!!! |