From Barstow to Mesquite - A Mojave Desert Adventure
In May 2014, I departed Casa Carrie in Simi Valley, California, heading for Mesquite, Nevada. While my ultimate destination was Moab, Utah, Mesquite stood half way along my route. To complete my trip to Moab
in only two days, I planned to travel 375 miles each day. When towing a
travel trailer, that distance approaches my outside limit for daily
travel.
After merging on to Interstate I-15 North, my trip to Moab would continue on Interstate I-15 and I-70
almost all the way. Although the archaic speed laws in California
require large trucks and autos towing trailers to proceed at no more
that fifty-five miles per hour, I find it safer to travel on the
Interstate at between sixty and sixty-five mails per hour. Why
California does not synchronize the speed between towed vehicles and
other traffic is an open question. For as long as I can remember,
California has stuck to its slowpoke truck and trailer speed limits.
Throughout the Four Corners Region, trucks, trailers and autos all have the same speed limits.
On Interstate I-5 North, the high desert cities of Victorville, Barstow and Baker offer slight relief from the boredom of transiting across the Mojave Desert.
In order to save on fuel costs, I usually stop at the Love’s Travel
Center in Barstow. Upon arrival, I found a convoy of two U.S. Army
Reserve Humvees and a larger transport truck stopped for refueling. In
speaking with three of the team members, I discovered that they were
traveling to nearby Fort Irwin for two weeks of Reserve training
exercises.
On a previous trip to Moab, I had seen a surplus early model Humvee
stripped down and converted to off-road use. With no armor at all, the
older model Humvees became potential deathtraps during Iraq War
combat. The current model Humvees that I saw in Barstow featured heavy
steel-plate exteriors, blast-resistant
doors and steel armor built into their undercarriages. With no
front-end crash protection, and unarmed gun turrets up top, these Army
Reserve Humvees looked sleek, but not yet combat ready.
During my fuel stop, I remembered that I was heading for two weeks of fun and adventure in the Four Corners Region.
For the following two weeks, the reservists would engage in war games
and training at the one-thousand square miles of open desert at the
nearby National Training Center.
With Memorial Day fast approaching, I was happy to have such dedicated
and talented individuals training to protect our liberties in the
United States and abroad. After I thanked the Los Alamitos, California based reservists for their service, they headed out.
Heading north from Barstow, I soon passed the turn-off to Fort Irwin. By
then my new friends from the Army Reserve were entering the gate at
the “fort”. Fort Irwin’s name helps tell the story that in 1846, the
U.S. Army created a rock fort at nearby Bitter Creek. From there, the
U.S. Army Mormon Battalion and others chased supposedly marauding
Apache, Shoshone and fugitive Mission Indians from Mission San Gabriel,
near Los Angeles. Although some stole horses, guns and food from
travelers along the Old Spanish Trail, most Indians in the Mojave Desert exemplified the notion of nomadic loners, seeking no contact with outsiders.
Soon, I came upon Ivanpah, California. Ivanpah shares an otherwise desolate valley with Primm, Nevada. There I got my first blinding look at the glint and glare from the new Brightsource Solar Thermal Plant in operation. In May of 2012, I had passed that place during construction of the controversial, three unit active-solar power generating station. At that time, the tops of the three receiving towers were dark, as if shrouded in black cloth.
In a recent Los Angeles Times article, I read that a number of native birds had perished in the solar flux at Ivanpah. Some experts hypothesize that prolonged focusing of eyes on the solar receiving towers could burn our retinas. I thought to myself, “Shouldn’t that be illegal?” One thing is for sure; you will no longer
As my rig descended the grade into the Ivanpah Valley, I kept my speed below sixty miles per hour. Thinking that I might get a good photo of the towers, I lowered the side window on my vehicle. Although the ambient temperature that day was about 90 °F (32 °C), heat radiating from the solar thermal generators was palpable on my skin. The feeling reminded me of the rays that emanate from a parabolic electric heater. With its vast array of mirrors and three thermal collecting towers, I discovered that Brightsource Primm had a “heat island” effect far greater than even its massive size suggested. The good news is that without the previously available multi-
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After that surreal experience, I proceeded past the lure of Primm’s several casinos, driving north toward Las Vegas, Nevada. My goal was to reach Mesquite Nevada, ninety miles north of Las Vegas before dark. With that in mind, my visit to Las Vegas would consist of a “drive by” on I-15 North. After almost two decades of expansion in Las Vegas, I-15 has reached the limits of its right-of-way. With six or eight lanes in each direction at the southern end of The Strip, the road and its connectors can carry a tremendous volume of traffic. Ironically, when a driver reaches North Las Vegas, there is usually a traffic snarl. There, highway planners provided too few lanes to handle the through-traffic heading out of Las Vegas to the north, east and west.

About twenty miles north of Las Vegas, I exited I-15 North at U.S. Highway 93, also called the Great Basin Highway. If the Ivanpah Valley is California’s version of the new Industrial Desert, the area north of the Las Vegas Motor Speedway and south of the Moapa River Indian Reservation is a no man’s land dedicated to the Old Industrial Desert. Despite hosting a large photovoltaic panel array to the west, an open pit mine adjacent to I-15 and the natural gas fired Harry Allen Generating Station dominate the landscape. Adding environmental insult to injury, a nearby chemical loading depot disperses clouds of white powder and dust across that desolate valley.
Prior to my departure, I spotted a Nevada Highway Patrol (NHP) vehicle exiting the parking lot. Other than some low-slung lights on its roof and official markings on its sides, the vehicle looked like any contemporary Ford Ranger SUV. In order to identify the occupant as clearly as possible, the words “Highway Patrol” and “State Trooper” blazed across the front fenders and doors of the dark blue vehicle. In a nod to mobile communications, “Dial *NHP” occupied each rear quarter panel.
After my visit to virtual Bunkerville, I proceeded to Mesquite and to the “Oasis Resort Hotel and Casino” RV Park . Only a few years ago, the Oasis Resort had welcomed my arrival with a huge “Welcome MoabLive.com” on their lighted message board. By May 2014, the resort hotel, casino and even the lighted
I can understand demolishing an obsolete casino, but removing the venerable landmark that was the Oasis sign is just plain dumb. Would Las Vegas tear down its classic 1960’s “Welcome to Las Vegas” sign? In Mesquite’s zeal to become a thoroughly sanitized city in the desert, it has consistently destroyed its once quaint highway history. After viewing the destruction, all I could say was, “Good luck, Mesquite, Nevada”.
By James McGillis at 02:15 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link
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