Take a Journey to Joshua Tree
If you've been following the blog for a while, you know that I love getting away from the city to Joshua Tree National Park and the surrounding areas. I've written about it here, here and here. This past weekend, a national holiday here in the States, I went to The 29 Palms Inn, a motel where Kaz and I once stayed for his birthday. Quite a different experience travelling with a canine companion. For one, the motel didn't feel quite as romantic as I remembered. I also noticed things I hadn't noticed before, like the dozens of rabbits, lizards, birds, and hundreds, if not thousands, of ant hills, all of which Ruby gleefully pointed out to me.
We arrived just after sunset, a little later than expected but a beautiful time to view the hundreds of wind turbines near Palm Springs, part of California's effort to use natural energy.
The next day we woke up a little after dawn to catch the sunrise.
Ruby stared at the vista for a while. We were clearly very far from the city.
I was a bit nervous bringing her to the desert in July, when temperatures can soar as high as 105 Farenheit. Before leaving I read some articles about how to manage with a dog in extreme heat. They all said to keep the dog out of the sun, hydrate the dog often, walk the dog only in the morning and evening, pay attention to signs of heat stroke and, if the dog is pale, apply sunscreen (dogs can get skin cancer too). I ended up taking her on a couple of early morning hikes and with lots of cold water and ice rubdowns, she managed pretty well.
We saw some amazing scenery.
My city friends often ask me why I love going to the desert so much. I suppose it's one of my favorite places to think and write. While I'm not a religious person, I have often felt a certain something while in the park, similar to how I felt at Mount Sinai in Egypt's Sinai Peninsula years back. Joshua Tree might not be as historically and religiously significant as Mount Sinai, but it contains a silent power nonetheless, and inspires a feeling I can best describe as oneness.
Perhaps not surprisingly, the name Joshua tree was given by a group of Mormon settlers who crossed the Mojave Desert in the mid-19th century. Apparently, the tree's unique shape reminded them of a Biblical story in which Joshua reaches his hands up to the sky in prayer. All I know is it's a special place... and not without a sense of humor.
Joshua Tree is a favorite destination for rock climbers because of the incredible rock formations, formed 100 million years ago from the cooling of magma beneath the surface. Groundwater is responsible for the weathering that created the spheres from rectangular blocks. The most famous formations include Skull Rock, which looks quite a bit like a human skull.
(source: andreea.francu.com)
There's also Jumbo Rocks, Split Rock, and the Hall of Horrors rock formation where someone actually fell to their death last year.
Kaz and I used to play this game of naming the rock formations we would come across. I think if we had seen this one, we would have called it Listening Rock.
This one might have been Hamburger Bun Rock.
Overall, it was a great weekend. Hot but restful. I missed Kaz, missed having a person with me, but was grateful to not be entirely alone. Ruby made a good companion and charmed everyone she encountered. She seemed content to slow down, sleep in the shade and be near me in this hot, dusty, windy, wild-looking place. Times like these I feel very grateful to live in California.
Do you have a place of natural beauty near you?
Related Articles:
http://www.energy.ca.gov/wind/overview.html