Extreme Joshua Tree National Park

        


 A three-and-a-half-hour drive from Los Angeles took us to Joshua Tree National Park. Most national parks in the US do not have a permanent settlement of wild animals. Instead, it is the formation of rocks, the walking and hiking trails and the varied Human life in the park began sometimes after the last ice age with the arrival of the Pinto people – the hunter-gathers who were part of the Southwest’s earliest cultures. They lived in Pinto Basin, which though inhospitality arid today, had a wet climate some 5,000 to 7,000 years ago.
   Nomadic groups of Red Indians seasonally inhabited the region when harvests of nuts, beans, acorns and cactus fruit guaranteed sustenance. Several 19th century gold mining ventures left it in ruins. However, some of these mines are accessible by hiking trails, or unmaintained roads that can be accessed by four-wheel SUVs.


                   
                                         The ‘skull rock’ is a big attraction at Joshua Park
   The main attractions in the Joshua forests are giant branching yuccas known as Joshua trees, huge rock formations(especially the ‘skull rock’ ), fan palm oases, and ocotillo, which can be enjoyed during a leisurely six-seven-hour tour of the park, including desert zones. Though there are different trails through the rocks, it is worthwhile to at least explore the major trails.

 At various intervals, paved roads lead to viewpoints, campgrounds and trailheads. Roadside interpretive exhibits and detailed signages offer insights into the region’s complex history.     
  

   Colorado, the western reach of the vast Sonoran Desert, thrives below 3,000 feet of the park on a gently declining eastern flank, where temperatures are usually higher than in the other zones of the park.

                          

HOW TO GET THERE
Joshua Tree National Park is a four-hour drive from the city of Los Angels and the park has two entry points – on the west and north; adjacent to the towns of Joshua Tree and Twentynine Palms. There is also an airport at Palm Springs, which is an hour long drive from the park.

WHEN TO GO
Visitors are welcome round the year but the most comfortable time is to visit is during spring and fall. Summers are hot, making it difficult for camping at night. In winter, snow may blanket the Mojave due to its higher elevation. 
 

Watch  This Video:

                                          
                    
   The visitors who pass through it each year are surprised by the abrupt transition between the Colorado and Mojave section claims the Park’s western half, where giant branching yuccas thrive on sandy plains sprawling with gigantic granite monoliths and rock piles. These form an intriguing photogenic geological phenomena. 


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