winks
Advanced Member
We went up north a while back to pick up a jeep, but we just spent one night in a campground.
This time we went for real.
The first night was in Johnson Valley, easy-peasy, I've been there in a car.
On the road to our next place.
That signpost up ahead...
Morning at Desert Training Center where Patton trained for WWII.
Saw about a dozen of these.
For some reason there were thousands of bees going after any moisture source. I have never seen them like that in the desert before.
So we decide to move a bit farther up an unnamed canyon I found 30 years ago where the remnants of Patton's camp was dumped when it was dismantled in 1944. It is up a nasty soft sandy wash with large boulders guarding it. It may have been a road 70 years ago, but nature has reclaimed it. High clearance 4x4, low tire pressure and luck is needed to get there.
I just turned around for this shot. It goes on for acres.
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This stuff is everywhere. There used to be a lot more. It is being scavenged for firewood. I remember 10x10 beams laying around. They are gone now.
There is wildlife everywhere here still. We encountered all kinds of birds, butterflys, dragonflys, coyotes, lizards, tarantulas, a grey desert fox, bats, bees... many bees,
This time we went for real.
The first night was in Johnson Valley, easy-peasy, I've been there in a car.

On the road to our next place.
That signpost up ahead...

Morning at Desert Training Center where Patton trained for WWII.

Saw about a dozen of these.

For some reason there were thousands of bees going after any moisture source. I have never seen them like that in the desert before.

So we decide to move a bit farther up an unnamed canyon I found 30 years ago where the remnants of Patton's camp was dumped when it was dismantled in 1944. It is up a nasty soft sandy wash with large boulders guarding it. It may have been a road 70 years ago, but nature has reclaimed it. High clearance 4x4, low tire pressure and luck is needed to get there.

I just turned around for this shot. It goes on for acres.


This stuff is everywhere. There used to be a lot more. It is being scavenged for firewood. I remember 10x10 beams laying around. They are gone now.

There is wildlife everywhere here still. We encountered all kinds of birds, butterflys, dragonflys, coyotes, lizards, tarantulas, a grey desert fox, bats, bees... many bees,