On Sunday, November 18 I left Prescott and then camped where? Guess from the photo :^)
Oh, it must be Joshua Tree National Park! I got a nice campsite and settled in for a week. I might have stayed a day or two less, but that Thursday was Thanksgiving day, and finding a campsite anywhere over Thanksgiving weekend was gonna be tough, so I decided to just stay put.
Joshua trees are just the strangest looking trees:
The park also has tons of cool rock formations. It was a full moon the week I was there - barely needed my headlight to find my away around the campground after dark. The moon rose in the afternoon, making for some cool skies.
On Thanksgiving day I did a really cool hike to the 40 palms oasis. The hike went up over a ridge and down to the oasis.
Its amazing to hike thru really desolate desert like the hills in the picture above and then come to this lush oasis:
After my hike, I went back to my campsite for my camping version of a Thanksgiving feast - I'd bought a roasted turkey breast the day before, along with a can of cranberry sauce, instant stuffing and some broccoli to steam. So I had a pretty good Thanksgiving dinner.
I did several other hikes in Joshua Tree along with some scenic drives. One road goes up to Key's View, where on a clear day you can see south past the Salton Sea to mountains in Mexico. I almost think I could see the mountain in Mexico, tho not in the picture - but you can definitely see the Salton Sea.
I spent the night Sunday Nov 25 in Palm Springs, which was a surprisingly nice town. I guess I expected it to be built up and kind of pretentious, but it has a nice small town feel to it. I stayed at the Palm Mountain Resort, which was a very nice (and reasonably priced) hotel, just a half block off the main downtown street, so I was able to walk around the corner to a good mexican restaurant, the Mariposa, where I had yummy soft tacos and a BIG margarita.
On Monday Nov 26 I drove down past the Salton Sea to Anza-Borrego State Park. I stayed for three nights at the Palm Canyon campground. On Tuesday I did the Palm Canyon hike, a really nice hike up a canyon to a palm oasis. Along the way I stopped and chatted a while with an elderly couple who had lived in Borrego Springs for decades. They were telling me how changed the hike is - I guess a few years ago during heavy rains, water built up behind a natural dam up the canyon a ways, then broke thru and came down the canyon as a 20 foot wall of water, washing away palm trees and tossing boulders around (and flooding a lot of houses when it got into the valley).
On the way back down I saw a herd of 20 or so Borrego big horn sheep.
They really weren't afraid of people, and would let me get within 20 feet or so before sauntering off. Too cool!
I did a few other nice short hikes in the area, including one to an ancient native american village site, where there were morteros. These are holes in the rock worn from grinding agave and pine nuts.
On Thursday Nov 29 I moved a bit south to Agua Caliente campground, which is actually a San Diego county park adjacent to Anza-Borrego State Park. There's a natural hot spring there and I thought it'd be a good base for exploring the southern part of the park. But Friday morning I woke up to rain and the forecast called for it to keep up all day. I didn't much feel like doing my planned hike in the rain, and Agua Caliente has an indoor hot spring soaking pool, so I took my book and spent the afternoon soaking in the hot spring and reading. Worked out well that my first day of serious rain on this trip I had a nice indoor hangout spot readily available. Saturday Dec 1 the sun came out in the morning, so I was able to dry out my tent and everything before packing up and heading east to Yuma, Arizona where I spent the night in a Comfort Inn.
Sunday Dec 2 I headed east on I-8. A few miles out of Yuma I wondered if I'd gotten on the wrong interstate or something - all the sudden there are signs saying slow down and stop for border patrol agents. I was confused - had I somehow ended up at the border? But no, when I got up to the agent and asked, he assured me I was on I-8 towards Tucson, and from his reaction I wasn't the first confused tourist he'd encountered. You'd think they'd have signs explaining that it's not the border, just a symptom of the police state we seem to live in these days. The agent took a glance at my Jeep full of camping gear etc., and I guess decided I didn't have room for any illegal aliens, so he waved me thru.
That night I stayed at a BLM campground called Painted Rock Petroglyph Site, about 20 miles west of Gila Bend, not more than 15 miles off the interstate, but really in the middle of nowhere. There were tons of petroglyphs:
The campground was nice, probably 50 sites or so, but just about deserted - one RV down the other end and me in my tent. It was the only place I've stayed so far where gathering firewood was allowed, so I spent an hour or so gathering dead and downed wood. Mainly of course I was lucky to find twigs more than a half inch in diameter. But I found a few branches a couple inches in diameter and a LOT of twigs, so I was able to entertain myself with a fire that evening for a couple hours. I needed the fire to scare off the desert fox who was hanging out near my campsite :^)
On Monday Dec 3 I headed south to Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument. It was really windy when I got there, just before dark, so getting my tent up was a challenge. I had to stake it down first, and then put the poles in, or it would have blown away. I parked my Jeep so it blocked my tent from a bit of the wind, and had an early night.
Tuesday Dec 4 I did a really cool loop hike, Estes Canyon/Bull Pasture. Lots of cool cacti and amazing views. It went up a ridge, 1000 feet elevation gain or so, and it was HOT climbing in the sun. But well worth it.
Saturday we went to the Tucson Botanical Gardens. Really nice, but for while the rain was coming down sideways - we retreated into a greenhouse where they had butterfly's flying around. Fun - and warm, tho dry might be the wrong word since they kept it really humid and tropical-like for the butterflies.
The weather was still nasty so we decided against camping, but we wanted someplace nice to hang out, not just a chain hotel, so we went to a Barnes and Noble, got a bunch of Tucson/Arizona guidebooks off their shelves and browsed them while we had a late lunch in the store's cafe. Then we called a couple places and ended up at a wonderful B&B near Saguaro National Park East, the Hacienda del Desierto.
Sunday the forecast was still for rain, so we decided to stay a second night and headed off to Saguaro National Park. We took a scenic loop drive, did the short Mica View loop hike, then took a longer hike up the Tanque Verde ridge trail. The sun came out for out hike and we saw cool Saguaro cactus.
I told Amy not to hug the Teddy Bear Chollo, but she wouldn't listen.
We got some amazing views from on the ridge.
Then we headed back to La Hacienda and cooked ourselves dinner - our room had a nice kitchenette. We'd lucked out with a nice day hiking in the sun, but it poured that night so we were glad to be in our nice warm and dry room and not camping.
Today we went to Saguaro National Park West and took a nice hike through cactus.
And we saw some petroglyphs:
We'd lucked out with sun for our hike again, but the clouds were ominous, so we decided to get a hotel. We're staying at a Best Western in Tucson - thanks again to everyone at the vigil.
Tomorrow Amy heads home to Denver - so I made her haul her tent and sleeping bag on the plane, and we never camped. I feel bad that we've basically had crappy weather the whole time she's been here - but we did get some nice hikes in during the sun breaks. And it's been fun to have someone to hang out with - and handy to have someone to split hotel bills with during this rainy spell :^) If anyone else wants to come hang out somewhere in the desert with me, I'd love the company.
Not sure where I'm going next, but I promise not to let so much time go by before I update this again.
1 comment:
Sheila - glad to see you are back online. We were in Tucson last March (went there for a couple Rockies spring training games, a great drive from Denver through Santa Fe). We hiked in both halves of Saguaro NP. Amazing place. If you are in southeast Arizona you should definitely check out the Chiricahuas; one of the best mountain ranges we've ever seen - ignimbrites! The surrounding area is outstanding hard core desert, but the mountains are high enough to have an alpine zone at the peaks and on the passes. Exit I-10 at Wilcox or closer to Tucson and head to Portal. Go to Cave Creek Ranch (www.cavecreekranch.com); probably the most incredible bird watching place we've ever been - especially hummingbirds.
A bit further east is the area between Silver City and Truth or Consequences, NM - another fantastic mountain range.
Let us know if you ever want to see some snow,
F.X. and Ellen
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