Culinary Arts Program

Four students at Pueblo are taking part in a Culinary Arts Program through JTED. These students travel to Santa Rita every Tuesday & Thursday each week to attend culinary classes.

Culinary Students
Pictured L to R: Armando Ruiz, Ana Castro, Saul Soto & Sara Castro

As part of a counselor outreach program, they recently served breakfast on 3 occasions for about 60 guests. They would prepare a menu for each session and purchase ingredients accordingly. Cooking would begin before sunrise at 6:00 a.m. in order to have food ready for our guests.

On this occasion the menu included: chilaquiles topped with queso fresco, scrambled eggs with nopalitos, frijoles, tortillas and a chilled glass of orange juice or coffee.

Breakfast Serving
Breakfast Serving

We look forward to more events hosted by these students as they move forward towards their career as Chefs.

Pueblo Star Party 2010

The Pueblo Science Club invites EVERYONE to join them on February 12 from 7:00 – 9:00 p.m. to a Star Party. Come explore the night sky from our Football Stadium.

Telescopes & Support will be provided by the Tucson Amateur Astronomy Association. There will be games and activities for all ages. D0or prizes will be given every 20 minutes.

Download and post our flyer
Download, Print & Post for promotion

Snacks will be sold by the Science Club.

Comedy Hypnosis Show

The Pueblo Future Educators of America invite you to a Comedy Hypnosis Show starring Master Stage Hypnotist Michael DeSchalit. The event will be held in the Auditorium on January 22nd, 2010 at 7:00 p.m. Advanced Tickets are on sale now for $8 ($10 at door) and can be purchased in Room 253. There will only be one performance, tickets will be subject to availability.

Michael DeShalit performs with family
Michael DeShalit performs with family

The show is a fundraiser for the Pueblo High School Future Educators of Arizona Program. Pueblo’s Déjà Vu Dance Group will open the show. This event is going to pay for travel expenses for the student members of the group to attend FEA Conferences and to support many different FEA projects. A portion of the funds will support Déjà Vu, also. This show is a high energy show where audience volunteers become the stars of the show by acting out wild and crazy skits using only their imagination. The show is appropriate for families with children.

Call 520.225.4539 or 520.907.3868 for more information.

SpadeFoot Phenomenom At Pueblo

During the summer monsoon season, something extraordinary happens in the southwest corner of Farber Field. The pounding of rain drops serves as a wake up call to some interesting creatures that it’s time to resurface from their subterranean homes to breed.  They are Coach’s Spadefoot Toads and Pueblo is their home.

Spade Foot Pond
Pond that forms during summer monsoon rains in SW corner of football field

Although we did not see the toads breeding, we were able to capture the thousands of eggs they left behind. They look like flowers, but instead of petals, they are full of eggs.

Spade Foot Eggs
Eggs left behind by Spadefoot toads were scattered everywhere

It doesn’t take long for eggs to become tadpoles, usually about 15hrs. The very next day the pond was full of life and this is what it looked like:


Sadly, we saw fewer and fewer tadpoles every time we visited the pond after that. It takes about two weeks and a strong will for a tadpole to mature into a young frog. Of the thousands of eggs that started, very few survived, as many simply died and others were eaten by birds.

It also didn’t help that it hardly rained during the subsequent days. Mr. Michael Smith, a Biology Teacher at Pueblo, had to drag water hoses to fill in the pond. He really went out of his way to help these amphibians survive. Kudos to him.

Spade Foot Mike Smith
Mr. Smith adding water to pond

In the end we did not see any young frogs jumping around, but it sure was an interesting phenomenon to witness. One that we hope will continue happening at Pueblo every summer for years to come.