seen from United States

seen from Suriname

seen from United States

seen from United States
seen from Australia
seen from United States

seen from Malaysia

seen from Malaysia
seen from Argentina

seen from Germany

seen from United States
seen from United States
seen from Türkiye

seen from Netherlands
seen from United States

seen from Netherlands

seen from Malaysia
seen from India

seen from United States
seen from Malaysia
Heading home
Raggedtop sunset 07/05/2026 - Inter-dependance Day
"I was born in the summer of 1776. I started life as a minuscule seed, hidden beneath the canopy of a paloverde tree that shielded me from the blistering Arizona sun. Out East, a new nation was declaring its independence. But right here, my roots were just taking hold in the soil of the Tucson basin.
I grew roughly an inch at a time, watching history unfold without moving an inch: In my youth, I watched the Tohono O'odham farm the river valleys, their laughter drifting on the desert wind as they harvested the bright red Bahidaj (saguaro fruit) of my elders. I watched Spanish soldiers pack mud and straw into adobe bricks to build the Tucson Presidio (1775-1776).
It took me nearly 75 years just to grow my very first arm. By the time I did, the maps were changing, and the land beneath my roots was about to become a part of the United States (The Gadsden Purchase of 1854).
I was over 100 years old when the first iron horses chugged through the valley, bringing new faces, new languages, and a bustling train station to the desert (Southern Pacific Railroad Depot in 1880).
By 1933, I was a towering giant, providing shelter to generations of nesting owls and woodpeckers, when Herbert Hoover recognized the need to protect my home as a National Monument (established March 1, 1933).
In 1962, I was reunited with my relatives as Stewart Udall worked with Juanita Ahil to amend the regulations, allowing the Tohono O’odham to resume their traditional saguaro harvests.
Today, at 250 years old, I am one of the elders of Saguaro National Park.
My stature and my scars hold the memory of droughts, monsoons, and centuries of human footsteps. If my time on this earth has taught me anything, it is that a landscape—just like a nation—is not defined by a single moment or a single voice. America, much like this desert, is a living tapestry built by the resilience of its people and the myriads of unique perspectives, cultures, and stories that have led us to this historic milestone."
Happy 4th of July from some of America’s oldest living witnesses! 🌵