Winter Camping in the Deserts of Arizona and California
On February 9, 2009, I hooked up my rig and pulled to Quartzsite, AZ,
 where I would spend the night, prior to a midday appointment in 
Phoenix, Arizona the next day.  Being two thirds of the way to Phoenix 
from Simi Valley, CA, makes it a good stopping point on Interstate 10.  As always, I stayed at the bucolic, but efficient Holiday Palms RV Park.  With a reservation guaranteed for late arrival, Quartzsite represented my safe harbor for the night.
Although economic realities had diminished the snowbird RV-exodus
 to the Arizona desert this winter, the town was still alive.  Row upon 
row of large RV’s lay unwanted and unloved at the temporary dealership 
lots set up for a crowd that never arrived.  If Quartzsite were not on 
the interstate, it would have rolled up and blown away this winter.  
Still, a quiet night’s sleep in the desert is always a good thing and I 
enjoyed my brief time there.
In the morning, I unhooked the utilities from my 
Pioneer travel trailer, raised the leveling jacks and drove toward 
Phoenix under a clear desert sky.  The clear, cold air outside was in 
stark contrast to my experiences the day and evening before.
As I left LA, that Monday morning, it was rainy and 
dark.  Across the LA Basin and until I reached the top of the Banning 
Pass, it rained.  Then, as if the rain had not yet earned its place in 
the low desert of California, not a sprinkle fell during my transit to 
Quartzsite.
Once I was in Phoenix, I needed to find my doctor's 
office in Scottsdale.  With help from my Magellan GPS, I arrived there 
rested and with time to take a few deep breaths before proceeding.
During my tour of the Phoenix freeway system, I 
noticed large roadside pools of water where I had not seen water 
before.  At the doctor’s office, water stood in pools throughout the 
landscaping and along the walkways.  When I commented to the office 
manager, she indicated that a storm had released drenching rain in 
Phoenix overnight.  It seems that the storm that I watched disappear in the low desert had rematerialized in Phoenix.
Leaving Phoenix on Tuesday afternoon, I traveled 
northwest on US Highway 93.  Other than one westward jog, where it 
shares a route with Interstate 40 to Kingman, Arizona, Highway 93 makes a beeline for Las Vegas, NV, 290 miles from Phoenix.  Having departed the Valley of the Sun in the late afternoon, darkness soon overtook me.
Although a long transit on a dark, desert highway might otherwise have been a problem, my prior stays at Burro Creek Campground
 told me that I had nothing to fear.  When I arrived at Burro Creek 
after dark, it took a while to find the water-fill, but once my fresh 
water tank was half full; I found a campsite adjacent to Burro Creek, 
itself.
Although the temperature fell towards freezing, I 
was safe and warm inside.  My coach is equipped with a forced-air, 
propane heater and a propane refrigerator/freezer to keep my food 
fresh.  Since I was dry camping, I used battery power for all other 
services.  With a quiet night outside and the sound of rushing Burro 
Creek reaching my ears, I experienced an easy transition from 
wakefulness to sleep.
Wednesday morning, I continued northwest on Highway 93.  I intended to take I-40 West and arrive in Needles, CA
 that afternoon.  Early in my day’s journey, Highway 93 climbed to 
higher elevations, displaying snowy mountains on either side of the long
 valley in which the highway lies.
Stopping north of Wikieup, AZ, I discovered separate
 entrances to Windmill Ranch on either side of the highway.  There, 
framed by the posts and crossbeam of the ranch entrance were mountains, 
fresh with winter snow.  Since the highway climbs until reaching a 
summit near Kingman, AZ, I was interested to see if I might climb above the snowline that day.
When I stopped for fuel at a travel center on I-40, 
west of Kingman, snow lay across the ground, although the roadway was 
dry.  The snowy landscape, juxtaposed with the big rigs entering and 
leaving the truck stop provided ample contrast for my camera.
Leaving the travel center, I descended the long 
grade towards Kingman.  Along the way, a tour bus zoomed past me at 
seventy miles per hour.  It was the tour bus for the Harlem Globetrotters, rocketing towards a Las Vegas exhibition match.
At 
Kingman, the two highways diverged, with Highway 93 heading northwest 
towards Las Vegas.  Interstate 40, which was my route, turned almost due
 south.  With few roadside attractions on that sixty-five mile strip of 
arid desert, the trip to Needles became a moving meditation.  
Approaching Needles, the interstate turns west and finally north, 
avoiding mountain ranges and seeking a good river crossing along the 
way.
Near Needles, there are separate bridges across the Colorado River for motor vehicles, the Burlington Northern Santa Fe Railroad
 and natural gas transmission pipelines.  A concentration of electrical 
transmission lines follows this route, as well.  At that crossing, 
conduits for almost all of our Old Energy and transportation services 
converge.  The reason for this convergence of services is the topography
 on either side of the Colorado River.  
In 1890, the Santa Fe Railroad built the first bridge
 across the Colorado River, near Needles.  Since railroad surveyors plan
 rail lines with minimum elevation changes, the steep and solid 
riverbanks at Needles helped the railroad reduce both construction and 
operating costs.  When the railroad bridge was relocated just upstream 
in 1945, a new Route 66 bridge soon replaced the  original railroad bridge.  At that time, the 1916 highway bridge, known as Trails Arch Bridge, was decommissioned for vehicle traffic.  Now
 used as an oil and gas pipeline bridge, the nearly one hundred year old
 structure looks like a contemporary industrial icon.  When I-40 
replaced Old-66 in the 1960s, a new highway bridge again spanned the 
river.  Not ironically, the current I-40 bridge occupies the same space 
that the original railroad bridge did in 1890.
original railroad bridge.  At that time, the 1916 highway bridge, known as Trails Arch Bridge, was decommissioned for vehicle traffic.  Now
 used as an oil and gas pipeline bridge, the nearly one hundred year old
 structure looks like a contemporary industrial icon.  When I-40 
replaced Old-66 in the 1960s, a new highway bridge again spanned the 
river.  Not ironically, the current I-40 bridge occupies the same space 
that the original railroad bridge did in 1890.
Once I 
arrived in Needles, I proceeded to the Desert View Mobil Station, where I
 had twice bought tires for my trailer.  That second set of tires 
coincided with complete replacement of the brakes and active suspension 
linkages on my coach.  With Desert View’s lifetime warranty, I hoped to 
get my brakes fixed free.  Not only had one brake stopped operating, 
loose parts clanged away inside the brake assembly.  When I rolled in, 
the regular crew was there to greet me.  Before nightfall, they had 
replaced the faulty brake assembly and diagnosed a separate electrical 
problem with my trailer brakes.
Once the 
wheels were back on the trailer, I headed west, up the long grade on the
 California side of the river.  My destination was the Hole in the Wall Campground at the Mojave National Preserve,
 campsite for my last night before returning to LA.  Since the 
campground is twenty miles off the interstate, it takes a while to get 
there.  As twilight turned to darkness, I arrived at the sparsely 
occupied campground.
In the 
spring and fall, the campground is busy, with many of the thirty-five 
campsites occupied.  At an elevation of 4400 feet, with remnants of 
snowfall still occupying shaded areas, it was a cold 34 degrees f. when I
 arrived.  Unaware of how cold it might be at that elevation, I had 
thawed a steak earlier that day.  Unwilling to let my steak go uncooked,
 I bundled up in a heavy jacket, gloves and muffler before I ventured 
outside to grill the meat.
Once I 
was back inside for the night, I watched a DVD movie, did some writing 
on my laptop computer, ran the heater and enjoyed the lights.  Around 
bedtime, I realized that I had drained at least half of the available 
electrical current from my house batteries.  “Whoops”, I said to 
myself.  “I hope there is enough life in the batteries to spin the 
furnace motor when I need it.”  
The next 
morning, it was cold in the coach.  I checked the monitor panel and 
found the batteries in a critically low state of charge.  I was too cold
 to go outside and set up my portable Honda generator, which could 
easily recharge the batteries.  The only other power source was my 
Nissan Titan truck.  Braving the elements, I sprinted outside 
and started the engine.  Soon, electricity flowed from the alternator on
 the truck to the house batteries.  That allowed me to restart the 
furnace and warm the coach.
Well 
warmed, with a mug of hot coffee in my gloved hands, I then ventured out
 to set up and start the Honda generator.  After turning off the truck 
engine, I retreated inside to make breakfast while the generator 
recharged the batteries.  In less than an hour, the house batteries were
 full and operating properly.
In a 
flash of late brilliance, I remembered that a quiet night at Burro 
Creek's 1,960 foot elevation was not like a deep-freeze night at 4400 
feet.  This was especially true after running all of my electrically 
powered services.  Since electrical systems operate less efficiently at 
low temperatures, it is a lesson I will recall next time I winter camp 
in the California desert.
On 
Thursday morning, as the Sun began to warm the air, I ventured out to 
take pictures of canyons, mesas and mountains shrouded in snow.  Snow 
typically lasts only a few days in this arid land. 
 This being the third day since the winter storm, it was indeed a treat 
to photograph a vast, yet intimate bit of desert.  I felt as if I were 
going back in time, to epochs long forgotten.  There, I viewed a winter 
scene, much as it looked before ancient climate changes created my 
spiritual home, the desert.  As always, The Great Reflector stood guard over all.
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Travel 
trailer manufacturers design their coaches for spring, summer and fall 
camping, not for freezing weather, parked far away from a reliable 
electrical supply.  By stretching my own limits a bit, I realized that 
winter camping in the desert is gloriously fun, if different from warm 
weather camping.  Still, the rare opportunity to travel almost 1000 
miles and camp in three different desert sub-climates was, for me, yet 
another trip of a lifetime.
By James McGillis at 06:04 PM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

 
