"Hole in the Wall", Mojave National Preserve
On June 1, 2008, I departed Navajo National Monument, Arizona and transited to the Mojave National Preserve in Southeastern California. Once I reached Flagstaff, Arizona, my two-lane highway driving ended and I headed west on Interstate I-40 for the balance of the trip.
In the 1970s, I-40 replaced or bypassed much of US Route 66,
also known as “America’s Highway”. From an elevation of over 7000 feet
in Flagstaff, I-40 rises and falls until it reaches a low point of 457
feet at its Colorado River crossing, near Needles, California.
From an elevation of 3962 feet at Moab, Utah, the
Colorado River falls over 3500 feet during its 500 nautical mile trip to
Needles, or an average drop of about seven feet per mile. During that trip, the river encounters the Grand Canyon, as well as Glen Canyon Dam, Hoover Dam and Davis Dam, all three of which thwart its freefall.
Having pulled my travel trailer over 440 miles that
day, I scanned the I-40 roadside for signs of the California National
Preserve, where I planned to camp. On a previous trip, a
tractor-trailer rig had blocked my view and I had overshot my turnoff by
twenty miles before realizing my mistake. Finally, as the sun dipped
in the west, I spotted the turnoff for Mitchell Caverns and Hole in the Wall Campground. As I transited the last twenty miles to my camp, the sun set behind the dry mountains of the Mojave National Preserve.
Arriving at the campground in twilight, I was
surprised to see that there was no campground host, nor did I see
campers at any of the twenty-four campsites. As eerie as that seemed, I
selected a campsite and leveled my travel trailer for the night.
Later, as I cooked dinner on my propane grill, I noticed that one other
campsite had lights showing, but that was at the far, upper end of the
campground.
In
the morning, I awoke by the sound of my fellow campers driving away.
After their departure, I had the entire campground and its hundreds of
acres of surrounding desert entirely to myself. Some humans fear being
alone in the vast open spaces, but I relished the opportunity to
meditate and commune with nature.
Having camped there twice before, I hiked again to
the top of a small ridge, which has a 360-degree view of the area. I
checked on a relict cactus patch, including species not found elsewhere
nearby and found the cacti healthy and growing, despite the persistent
drought of the past decade. Living as they do among the rocky
outcroppings of the ridge, the terrain acts as a buffer from the fires
that plague our western deserts as much as they do our western forests.
Although it was June in the Mojave Desert,
the air temperature that day reached a peak of only 82 degrees
Fahrenheit. With gasoline prices in the area hovering around $4.60 per
gallon, the lateness of the season and the fact that it was a Monday
meant that few travelers were taking advantage of our great California
deserts, which was fine with me.
Seduced
as I was by the splendor and solitude around me, I forgot about time.
It was a rude awakening when I realized that it was mid afternoon and I
had over 200 miles to travel before arriving home in Los Angeles. Finally, I pried myself away and headed back towards civilization. After nineteen days in the “four-corner states” of Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado and Utah, it was time for the pleasures of home.
By James McGillis at 04:14 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link
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