Desert Solitary

“You can’t see anything from a car; you’ve got to get out of the goddamn contraption and walk, better yet crawl, on hands and knees, over the sandstone and through the thornbrush and cactus. When traces of blood begin to mark your trail, you’ll see something, maybe.”

― Edward Abbey, Desert Solitaire

Edward Abbey would surely roll-over in his (illegally dug, hidden somewhere in a desert) grave if he saw us driving through the desert in our “contraption”. The Sportsmobile enables us to find amazing places we might otherwise never see without crawling through the thornbush.

After leaving our Alaska companions home near Bend, OR, we began the solitary trip down the eastern edge of the Sierra Nevada range to the deserts of southern California. Rough itinerary? Death Valley National Park, the Mojave National Preserve, and the Joshua Tree National Park. Fall in the desert should be warm and dry with few tourists.

We quickly crossed the high (cold) desert of western Oregon, Nevada and California’s eastern Sierra to get down to Bishop, CA’s relative warmth (70F).

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The view from atop the Mono Lake vista point.

Death Valley National Park

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Here again for the second time in two years. Now with a bit more off-road experience and time to explore.

Big Pine to Saline Valley Warm Springs

Big Pine served as the launch-point into Death Valley via the northern Waucoba Springs road. Getting to Saline Valley took about 3.5 hours for the 55 mile trip.

Alone in the Alabama Hills

In 11 months of #VanLife, we came full circle. Alone in the same campsite where we spent last Thanksgiving with friends.

Death Valley – Cottonwood and Marble Canyons

Furnace Creek

From Furnace Creek we will top-up fuel, have lunch at the fancy lodge, then head down the Furnace Creek Wash Road through Greenwater Valley. The plan is to explore some old mine camps, find a nice place to camp for a night or two, then exit Death Valley out the southern exit near Shoshone.

Greenwater Valley

Mojave Preserve

We jumped out of Death Valley to the south and headed right for the Mojave Preserve.

Mojave Road

Granite Pass

With a Jumbo Rocks site reserved at Joshua Tree NP the next day we looked off-road for some primitive sites near Granite mountain and Granite Pass to spend one night.

Joshua Tree

Enough Desert Solitary

Time to reenter society. Time to plan our Baja trip with Chris & Chris in a month. Time to get ready to go to Mexico! What will we need for this? A month relaxing in an RV resort of course. Wi-Fi. Amazon delivery. Grocery stores and wine shops nearby. Movies to catch up on. Restaurants. A rental car for getting around easily. Check, check and check.

Thus ends our solo desert sojourn. Now we’ll spend the next few weeks getting ready to travel down Baja California with our friends Chris & Chris.

3 thoughts on “Desert Solitary

  1. There is no better art form than natural beauty. Incredible adventure. Thank you for sharing your pics and how beautiful they are it doesn’t do the sunsets, landscape and adventure justice. Can’t wait to hear the stories.

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