Tag Archives: Joshua Tree National Park

“Double Scoop” Pictographs

This site, in Serrano territory in Joshua Tree National Park, was an accidental discovery on our part. We just headed out semi-randomly, on a “Let’s see what’s out there!” quest, and after a while our wandering took us down a narrowing wash lined with uninspiring rock piles. We wondered whether we would end up with a dud of a trip!

As we picked our way past yet another obstacle, enthusiasm waning, a troop of rock climbers came up behind us. I didn’t feel like being surrounded by a gaggle of strangers in the middle of nowhere so I suggested we turn back and walk down a different, larger wash we passed a while back instead.

We waved to the climbers ( who seemed as surprised to find us out there as we were to see them. I guess you always assume – or hope – that you will have nature all to yourself when you step off the beaten path ) and retraced our steps.

That turned out to be a good call. Barely a hundred yards down this new wash we struck pay dirt in a big way!

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“Hidden In View” Pictographs

Sometimes you wander through the desert and find a bounty of pictographs tucked into a small overhang or in a hollow in an otherwise very ordinary looking boulder.

Other times, your heart beats a little faster as you happen upon a magnificent overhanging cliff face and feel sure the jackpot is just ahead … only to find a sparse smattering of tiny elements, if anything!

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The Iron Door of Joshua Tree National Park

There are plenty of theories about the Iron Door Cave.  Perhaps Bill Keys, the pioneering rancher whose name looms large in Joshua Tree National Park’s recent history, built it as a prison for his schizophrenic son.  Or maybe it was a cold storage room.  Or perhaps it was a hidden strong room to secure gold from nearby mines ( or maybe just the dynamite ).

The door was made to be barred from the outside and is very well hidden. Of course it is easy to hide something in the jumbled boulders of the Wonderland of Rocks, but this place is especially well hidden. You can walk right by and not spot it. I know I did just that the first time I was in this area specifically looking for it!

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“Hot Cross Buns” Pictographs – “Sky Cross” Edition

I don’t usually write twice about sites when I revisit them, but this site is so unusual that I thought another entry would be worthwhile here, especially since we found a few additional pictographs on this visit.

This was one of the first sites I ever found, and one of the first sites I ever wrote about.

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“Sunny Side Up” Pictographs

Now here’s a site that I’ve spent some time hunting for! Even though I first found it years ago, I’m only now getting around to writing about it, after we’ve been back to take some more pictures of it. It is in an area of Joshua Tree National Park I’ve visited often, but it isn’t really obvious. You kind of have to know that it is there.

My only clue to find it was that it was in a hollow rock, so I spent an insane amount of time eyeing the huge granite boulders, wondering whether they were solid or not, and walking around them looking for a way in. How often do you see someone march up to a boulder with a speculative glint in their eye before they start circling it and bending down looking for hidden entrances? Looks like they got a touch to much desert sun to the head when they start doing that, I’ll tell you!

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“Hidden Cave” Pictographs

This was one of the most rewarding site hunts I’ve ever had. Over a couple of years I pieced together a variety of small clues, finally discovering one key piece of information that revealed the location. This is one of my favorite things about visiting these sites – the search itself! Just grabbing some coordinates and barreling straight for a site is not as satisfying as doing the legwork towards discovery for myself, and experiencing that moment when all the clues come together to reveal the location.

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“Peaceful Valley” Pictographs

We visited this site with a fellow desert explorer, Guy Starbuck of starbuck.org.

This little site is hidden deep in the backcountry of Joshua Tree National Park. It look a long slog through vale and gully just to get here, climbing up and around many obstacles, wriggling through manzanita and choosing to bypass this yucca here in favor of that cactus over there, simply because the gap between thorn and boulder seems a little wider over there than down here and besides, have you seen what a yucca leaf can do when you meet it at the wrong angle? Always choose the cactus over the yucca.

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“Homestead” Pictographs

This pictograph shelter forms part of a much larger habitation complex.

The pictographs themselves are not particularly special – in fact, some are fairly rudimentary – but the whole area is of archaeological interest because of midden fields and other evidence that this was an extensively used habitation site at one time. Across a small open space from this overhang there is another, much larger shelter, and while there are no pictographs in that second shelter the soot deposits on the ceiling shows that it was inhabited too.

The pottery sherds that archaeologists recovered at this site point to Serrano or Cahuilla occupation, dating from around a thousand or so years ago to historic times. The site also yielded lithic scatter and midden deposits, the later radiating away from the rock shelter.

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Ryan Mountain Trailhead Pictographs

The trailhead for Ryan Mountain is a popular spot in Joshua Tree National Park. Typically, many vehicles are parked in the lot and plenty of people are on the trail to the peak, hoping for fresh air, exercise and beautiful views.

If you keep right of the trailhead you’ll notice a small sign for the “Indian Cave”. This sign points you to a small habitation site with some weathered pictographs. It is a quick way to step back in time and think about what life in JTNP used to be like.

Most visitors bustle up the side of the mountain, ignoring the history of the area. If you take the time to go look, here is what you’ll see.

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Twin Tanks area Petroglyphs

Reaching the Twin Tanks area in Joshua Tree National Park from the Twin Tanks backcountry board requires a little bit of a hike, either cross country proper or up a wide wash.

The tanks referred to are dams built by cattle ranchers to enhance natural tanks that were used for years prior by the Native Americans who lived in the area.

The tanks are interesting enough by themselves, but today’s entry is about the older history of the area.

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