Joshua Tree National Park 22.5.-24.5

This was our gorgeous campsite in Joshua Tree:

Our site at the ‘Jumbo Rock Campground’

The Park is named after it’s most prominent and famous inhabitants: Joshua trees (see below). They only grow in California, Arizona, Utah, Nevada and northwestern Mexico but thrive best in open grassland in Joshua Tree National Park. Some trees live for hundreds of years, some even survive a thousand years.

Scientists fear that the Joshua Tree will be a victim of climate change and predict that 90% of its population will be lost by the end of the century. 😥 Therefore, they are carefully protected. 😌

Love this tree!! 😍

Upon arrival we hiked to ‘Skull rock’ right away to make the most of our short stay. We were thrilled to see that the rocks were very different yet again.

Typical rock formations in Joshua tree
Skull rock 💀
❤️

At night we sat outside and watched the sky. Boy, we’ve never seen so many stars in our lives! It was just incredible. ✨⭐🌟 We tried to capture the scene but didn’t manage. This is the best we could do:

The next day we walked two easy trails: the ‘Hidden Valley ‘ which leads to some petroglyphes (ancient rock carvings) as well as a trail called “Barker Dam and Wallstreet Mill”. It takes you to what’s left of the goldrush era.

Petroglyphes
Old house from the gold rush era
This car might have been here for a while….😁
Deserted gold mine

Typical rock formations in Joshua Tree National Park

It’s so astounding that the rocks are so different in the various places we’ve seen in the US so far.

Rather late in the day we decided to hike the ‘Panorama Loop trail’. It offered extraordinary 360° views of the surroundings. 🤩

Going back to the campsite we saw another magnificent sunset. 🌄

What a day! 🤩

Leave a comment

Design a site like this with WordPress.com
Get started