Saturday, December 5, 2015

Southwestern Out-Takes

I have been remiss the past couple months, integrating what should have been out-takes into regular posts. Oh well. Here are a few that didn't make it...
Near Missoula, of course




















Indeed, seen all over southern Utah




















In case of fire, maybe consider taking the elevator...Moab





















Not that funny, actually




















Tomb of the Unknown Squirrel
The Duke and me




















Barad-Dur




















"In a clever disguise..."




















Christmas in the RV resort
















Lighting up the San Andreas Fault
















"Ce n'est pas un sentier"--Magritte
















Zion NP: signage in 13 languages...a new world record

Joshua Tree National Park: Skull Rock, Arch, and Cholla Cactus Garden

Our last day in Joshua Tree we did the Skull Rock ranger-led hike, the Arch hike, and the Cholla Cactus Garden, all on our way to the Cottonwood visitor center on the south side. We camped on the BLM property just outside the Park. Just FTR, we really liked Joshua Tree, mainly for the rock heaps and despite the Joshua Trees. Members of the staff seemed amused at our suggestions for more accurately re-naming the Park: "Weird Rock Formations National Park," "Heaps and Piles National Park," "Two Deserts National Park," "Monzogranite National Park," "Islands of Rock National Park." Anything but "Joshua Tree." Advice: go on week-days. Week-ends the place is crawling with climbers and wannabe climbers.
Skull Rock; obviously a Conehead skull

More heaps and piles

Happy face


Skull Rock in perspective

Windows

The Arch

Cholla Cactus Garden...now in the Colorado Desert

Should be re-named "Cholla Cactus Forest"

You have been warned

You have been warned again
















































































Relevant quote: "If the plant bears any helpful or even
innocent part in the scheme of things on this planet, I should
be glad to know of it" (J. Smeaton Chase, California Desert
Trails, 1919)
Another desert sunset sky

Joshua Tree National Park: Sunset Skies

We camped that evening at the Ryan campground, still in the Mojave section of the Park, still among the rock heaps and piles. But what commanded our attention, as the sun set during our pre-prandial promenade, were the skies above...














Joshua Tree National Park: Hidden Valley

A hundred years ago, the Mojave and particularly Hidden Valley received a good bit more precipitation than now, enough to support tall grasses and a fledgling cattle industry. The Valley was first used by rustlers, story goes, then by the Keys family, who ranched in the area until the 1950s. These days, it is the domain chiefly of tourists and rock climbers. Toward the end of our long day, we did the hike around Hidden Valley, enjoying, close-up, ever more of the fabulous monzogranite rock heaps and piles. I'll just let the pix take over...















Joshua Tree National Park: Keys View

Later we drove up to Keys View, a high point in the park's southwestern periphery, for a magnificent view of the Coachella Valley, from the Salton Sea to past Palm Springs. It was an unusually clear day, and we could easily see Signal Mountain, near the border with Mexico, 95 miles away.
A good bit of Coachella valley, Salton Sea on the left, Palm
Springs on the right
















Humongous, California-size wind farm to the right















Helpful signage; click to enlarge















More of the valley
















Salton Sea and Signal Mountain in the 95 mile distance; the
Salton Sea is a giant salt lake, formed, inadvertently, when a
dike burst on the Colorado River in the early 1900s; a lake
had been there on and off for aeons; the dike was repaired after
2 years, and the lake is sustained chiefly by agricultural runoff
from the Imperial and Coachella valleys; the salt content is
much higher than that of the oceans, and few species of fish
now survive in it; it is a birder's paradise, however, with over
400 species observed; it sits on the intersection of
three different major faults, including the San Andreas; and it
is but a few feet higher than Death Valley, that is, a couple
hundred feet below sea level; we decided to pass on visiting
the Salton Sea


























Palm Springs is said to have nearly 100 golf courses
















Thus
















Panoramic shot