A Mojave Desert Transit
The day started with four hours of packing for my 4-Corners trip. By 1:15 PM, I pulled away from Casa Carrie, with my Pioneer travel trailer in tow. As floodwater rose in the Atchafalaya Basin, I headed out of LA through the high desert, via the Pearblossom Highway.
 On the north slope of the San Gabriel Mountains, clouds of snow 
obscured several peaks. In late May, avalanche chutes were thick with 
fresh snow. It was 56 degrees on the highway, so 32 degrees at higher 
elevation was not a stretch. 
On high desert cruise control, I was doing 60 mph on
 approach to Victorville. Deflecting the blur of Burger Kings and 
McDonalds from my eyes, I blew through town and headed north on 
Interstate I-15. My next stop was Love’s truck stop in Barstow, for fuel
 and a leftover chicken leg from last night’s dinner. 
Shortly after getting my GPS back on beam, I exited 
I-40 East at Essex Road, about 30 miles short of Needles. After another 
20 miles on somewhat rough roads, I achieved my destiny, which was to 
arrive safely at Hole in the Wall Campground
 in the Mojave National Preserve. Thank you, Senator Diane Feinstein for
 championing the cause of 3.5 million acres of fragile and beautiful 
landscape. To stay here for but one night is to know both the wind and 
the beauty of our Desert Southwest.
My only media tonight consisted of an AT&T 
3G-voice connection and my Verizon 3G “MiFi 2200” wireless data card. No
 TV… thank goodness. When was the last time any of us spent 24-hours or 
more disconnected from all interactive media? My last foray off the grid
 was for two days, over two years ago, at Chaco Canyon, New Mexico. In three days, I shall be in Chaco Canyon again, studying the ruins and reveling in my disconnectedness. 
During my previous visits there, I wrote several 
articles about the place on my blog. Having recently learned the term, 
“pre-Puebloan” from the author, Craig Childs, I used it in my 2008 article
 about the Kin Klizhin ruin near Chaco Canyon. Less than three years 
later, if you Google “Kin Klizhin”, that article appears on page three 
of the web results. If you then click on “images”, my pictures of Kin 
Klizhin are interspersed throughout the first five pages. Alternatively,
 if you Google “pre-Puebloan”, my 2008 article on Kin Klizhin is second 
only to the Wikipedia article which defines the term. Switching to image-results, two of the first five pictures are my own.
For the next several weeks, that is exactly what I plan to do – travel throughout the Four Corners and write about what I see, hear and feel. Please join me as I explore the last American frontier and the deserts of our mind.
By James McGillis at 01:28 AM | Travel | Comments (0) | Link

 
