One of the
really nice things about the desert, is that you don’t have
to stand in line waiting to get on a plane. Out here on the
Pacific Coast, we are within a few hours of scenic driving
to the deserts or the mountains or the sea shore. At the
time for this trip, in 1977, I was still living in Whittier,
California.
February
is a prime month on the desert, so having a little time available
I took a short vacation to one of my recent discoverys in
Arizona, the Castle Domes. Getting there is half the fun
to me, so I headed out on Interstate Hiway 10 East.
I had left
around ten O’clock, rolling along in my Ford Camper-Special
truck. I took the “high route” passing through the communities
of Claremont, Montclair, Upland, and passed what little
was left of a once booming wine industry around Guasti.
A little
further ahead were the Kaiser steel plant and its towering
smelters.
If I went
by there in the dark early morning I might arrive when they
applied the oxygen lance to the top of the Bessemer Converters.
A stunning plume of brilliant white fire would flare out
into the night as “pig-iron” was converted into steel.
Passing
rapidly through the freeway interchanges of San Bernardino,
I continued East and into the country. To my left, the towering
San Bernardino Mountains, still snow-capped. To my right,
the sharply-rising San Jacinto (pronounced: ha sin toe) Mountains
where backpackers, day-hikers, and a million Boy and Girl
Scouts could be found on the weekends, practicing their woods-craft
skills.
After climbing
for a bit, the freeway leveled out and started its drop to
the desert. Soon I rolled through the narrow San Gorgonio
Pass and its constant wind, the driving force for all the
spinning wind generators that made up a giant wind-power farm
that fed electric power into the “grid”.
I think
that the wind generators have slowed the wind velocity as
it leaves the wind-farm. In the early 1970s, the winds were
strong enough to turn the sand dunes into sand blasters that
would strip paint off your car, and partially bury cars that
had pulled off the freeway to wait for the wind to die down.
My buddy, Larry, had much of the paint on his truck completely
sand blasted to bare metal once.
I continued
on Interstate 10, now Southeast, until Indio and then left
the freeway to go down the East side of the Salton Sea via
State Hiway 111.
The 111
route demanded a bit of driving skills. It passed bye the
foothills and so had many dips and chunks of asphalt removed
in places. It was not such a “hurry-up” route as the West
road, State 86, with its constant 18-wheeler traffic. One
Eleven also parralled the railroad tracks of the Union Pacific.
As I rolled
along, I admired the afternoon shadows on the foothills to
my left and the shimmer of reflected sunlight from the ripples
of the Salton Sea to my right. At one time, the Sea was much
lower and the Eastern shoreline was further out with now-sunken
houses along the shore. Even further back was a salt works
complete with mill and a steam locomotive still sunk to this
day.
At last
hiway One Eleven turned due South, leaving the Chocolate Mountain
gunnery impact area and headed to El Centro via Niland, Calipatria,
Brawley, and Imperial. Here, I picked up fuel for the truck
and fuel for my stomach.
One of the
cities I passed East of, is Westmorland; it is very seismically
active. It is my opinion that Westmorland lies atop a large
magma plume and will one day be a volcano. I hope I am still
around to see it.
Refreshed,
I turned East onto Interstate 8 and headed for Yuma, Arizona,
where I picked up US Hiway 95 North to good old Milepost
62 and the Castle Dome Mountains. I arrived at our camping
area at 5 O’clock and set about unpacking the camper and preparing
my supper. Long-time readers of this column will remember
Larry and my detailed initial exploration of this area in
1975. Now we both use it as a solo camping area, in this
case it was 1977.
In 1975,
we had placed reflectors at the utility corridor that crossed
the desert pavement of our base camp mesa. Since then I found
our reflectors had been removed; both at the corridor crossing
point, and up near the hay bales that were still being left
for the wild burros. We had coated a nearby rock with yellow
traffic marking paint and fine reflective glass beads. We
never saw who was leaving the hay bales, but they were either
fresh or almost eaten up. Each time we had to replace our
beaded rocks. We did see burros in the area several times.
For years
Larry and I made “Scotchlight”covered, narrow, aluminum, short
stakes, we used to find our way back to favorite camps in
the dark. For several years, the Rust-oleum paint company
made a heavy duty “highway” spray paint in spray cans. Those
paints were approved for hiway lane use etc. I found a work-safety
supply store in Los Angeles and bought the glass beads used
to sprinkle over the wet paint making our own reflectors.
The store sold the beads (in different sizes) in four pound
paper bags. When I retired and moved back to San Diego, the
smallest quantity I could locate came in forty pound sacks.
By then we had settled on a particular bead size that worked
for us. I bought the traffic marker paint as it lasted the
best under outdoor conditions of sun, wind, and rain. I had
white, yellow, silver and red.
This was
not for graffiti. Only a small rock was painted and left
on the ground at car headlight distance. During daytime,
they were not visible At night they looked like the reflection
of a wild animals eyes.
Now back
to my solo vacation. I was rewarded by a supurb sunset and
by dark, I climbed into my sleeping bag in the camper and
fell instantly to sleep.
The next
day arrived, as they will. I got up around eight O’clock,
had my usual breakfast of freeze dried noodle soup cup, donuts,
and hot chocolate. It promised to be another beautiful day,
and it was. Around noon, as I took a stroll, I saw several
very large Hares in an adjacent wash. I could see why this
area bordered a wildlife preserve. Now, I understand the
“keep out” signs are all the way to the hiway.
In the afternoon,
a light breeze started up. Still very pleasant. I read and
relaxed. For dinner freeze-dried Tuna Newburg. There were
quite a number of ladybugs today. The desert was starting
to bloom from Whitewater and Eastward. The evening treat was
a fire log and a few dead sticks for kindling. Bed time at
midnight and how the stars had shone in the black velvet sky.
Sunday was
another nice day. It started a nippy 50 degrees at sunrise,
then soon warmed up to 90 degrees by noon. I indulged in
finishing off some double-eight color film in my old 8mm Keystone
movie camera I had bought from a coworker. I never could really
get into movies. I did lots of slide and color prints. But
it was a good little camera without the high “new-cost”.
Again I
made a camp fire, finishing my three hot dogs & buns with
a cigar, brandy and a headache. Bed at eleven thirty O’clock.
Monday,
glorious Monday. When I got up early (seven O’clock), I saw
a beautiful mirage to my South. Magic black-colored buildings
and towers danced above a glistening band of sand at the
horizon. An early breeze, made things hazy by the time I
finished breakfast. South to Yuma and West to Picacho, the
previous two days, were sparkling clear in those directions.
Now it was hazy. I prepared a large red reflector rock at
this site. I would emplace smaller stone markers along the
route as I left in the afternoon.
Well, time
to pack and clean up the site. 2:30 O’clock in the afternoon,
I and my camper moved out of #62-2 camp toward #62-1 camp.
3:20 O’clock at camp #62-1 after several false leads. I think
my new markers will help that. Windy. 5:40 P.M., an incredible
sunset! 5:45, I left the camp site and 6 hours later, I arrived
home in Whittier.
A major
sandstorm west of Indio; rain in Beaumont & Banning-
Glad you
could ride along,