The first animals we spotted, far off in the distance on Saturday afternoon, was a cluster of camels and llamas.
The following morning, we headed off in the direction of some primitive pachyderms - the gomphotherium.
More camels, and a mother-and-child giant ground sloth could be found just up the road.
Our final encounters were with the missionary, Father Francisco Garces, and the nearby giant tortoise and the mildly disapproving Aztec God.
The interplay between the sculptures and the arid desert landscapes was something to behold. No doubt there are plenty of the real-estate types who've dragged the country's economy into the sewer who see such projects and open space and wonder how many split-level developments they could cram into the valley. I'm glad individuals like Dennis Avery can see beyond such sort-sighted plans and recognize how much things like open sculpture parks add to communities. As my friend wrote me in an email, paraphrasing the original newspaper article - "All hail the whimsy of multimillionare Dennis Avery!"
1 comment:
The sculptures are great! How cool to encounter them in the "wild."
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