Joshua Tree National Park

Passing VW buses leaving Lake Havasu, Arizona.

We drove through a lot of desert after leaving Lake Havascu, most of it in California. I felt like we were hardly moving. Even in this bare landscape, there was graffiti made with wood and stones.

The long, long road ahead.
Desert Graffiti

We arrived at a town called Twenty-nine Palms and turned to enter Joshua Tree Park.

Cacti at the visitor's centre at Joshua Tree Park

We were still travelling with the Bodeswells and they wanted to take a picture of a Joshua Tree just like the on the U2 album cover, but we couldn’t remember what it looked like. So we took a picture of the coolest Joshua Tree we could find.

A great specimen of Joshua Tree

Morgane had a scavenger hunt to do for her junior ranger badge and we found a lot of evidence of life – around every plant were different sized burrows where snakes, kangaroo rats or large spiders might live. I’m glad to say they were all sleeping or hibernating at the time.

The one and only Skull Rock.

Our next stop in the park was to check out the amazing rock formations. The kids loved it and they could squeeze through little cracks and crevices, but I found it difficult and the rock really hurt my fingers. Angela got a nasty scrape when she was helping the kids get down.

Morgane on a rock

Stop number three was to admire the view over the valley where Palm Springs sits. It was cold and windy, but we had a good view despite a few ominous clouds.

At the lookout in the park.
Look Mom! That's Palm Springs way in the distance.

After that we appreciated the park only from inside our van. We drove past many more rock formations and hillsides covered with Joshua trees before we exited the park. Morgane got her gold junior ranger badge. They even liked the fact that she had invented a new desert animal: the dogadillo who lives in a prickly cactus doghouse and eats catmice.

Those are people on top of the big rock.

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