Dates: Wednesday, November 26 – Sunday, November 30, 2014
Location: Joshua Tree National Park
Photos: As noted
Synopsis: Over Thanksgiving week, Mrs. UCL and I headed down to Joshua Tree National Park with Enginerd, Schralph Macchio, MapleLeafGilles and Judit. Joshua Tree is located in Southeastern California and encompasses the intersections of the Mojave and Colorado deserts. The park is nearly 800,000 acres large (roughly the side of Rhode Island) and is well known as a climbing haven. You could literally spend a year in Joshua Tree and likely not climb all of the routes.
The benefit of car-camping in Joshua Tree is the abundance of gear you can take. The down-side of car-camping in Joshua Tree is also the abundance of gear you can take! The moniker of "well, we don't have to carry it" tends to back-fire once you load up the car and realize how much you have. Enginerd and I were packing my car the Tuesday night before and ended up having to jerry-rig a double roof box set-up that was too wide for my base bars. Fortunately, extra climbing rope solved the trick! Photo: UCL
After unpacking camp on Wednesday, we headed over to Intersection Rock to try and squeeze in a route before the sunset. What is great about Joshua Tree is the routes are predominately single-pitched with essentially no approaches – in some cases you could literally belay from the car! On several days we went to zones that we could set up multiple ropes on ajoining routes so we could all top-rope a number of routes quickly. It was great to be able to sit and belay and hang out with Mrs. UCL.
We picked a nice route up Intersection Rock that had a rap off for Enginerd, Judit and me. Mrs. UCL got some great pictures! Picking our line. Photo: Mrs. UCL
UCL leading up. Photo: Mrs. UCL
Enginerd and Judit working up the cool crack system. The gigantic boulders of Joshua Tree are pretty surreal. Photo: Mrs. UCL
I had set a belay just below a traversing roof and then after Enginerd and Judit got up I took a cut and working around the roof. After flailing a bit, Enginerd took over and topped us out and Judit and I followed up without problem. Nothing like a butt kicking on a section of the 1st route of the week! We got to the top and rapped down just as the sun was setting. Photos: Mrs. UCL
That night we had a great campfire and linked up with Schralph Macchio and MLG to see how their day was. Schralph, MLG and I stayed up to get some shots of the Milky Way out in the dessert (with the iconic Joshua Tree in the foreground). Photo: UCL
On Thanksgiving Day, Mrs. UCL and I planned on just exploring the Park as this was our first trip to Joshua Tree. Enginerd, Judit, Schralph and MLG headed to go hike out to some climbs so we didn't link up with them until the end of the day.
After a nice trail-run in the morning, Mrs. UCL and I first hiked up to the summit of Mt. Ryan, which provided awesome 360 decree views of the entire park. Along the hike up, you encounter some awesome desert vegetation, including the Joshua Tree Jumping-Cholla Cactus (the second "cacti" below). Photos: UCL
Up at the summit, there were pretty incredible views of the Park. Here is a multi-shot panorama I stitched together looking West towards Hidden Valley and beyond. Photo: UCL
Some other shots from the summit. Photos: UCL
Meanwhile, Enginerd, Judit, Schralph and MLG were out approaching a climb that admittedly took them quite a bit of Type II Fun to get to. It was pretty funny in retrospect that 95% of the climbs in Joshua Tree are super accessible, but Schralph convinced them all to go get on a couple of climbs that took several hours to get to. Over the campfire that night, the stories of the hike out off the climb in the dark were pretty funny. Nevertheless, from the pictures it looked pretty awesome. Enginerd leading up one climb. Photo: Judit
Schralph following up another. Photo: Enginerd
After coming down off Mt. Ryan at lunch, Mrs. UCL and I drove down to the Eastern side of the Park towards the lower-elevation Colorado Desert. It was pretty cool as there is not much climbing down that way, but the views are wide-open, Big Country vastness. Reminded me of the old Western flicks. We stopped and climbed up a bluff for some shots. Photos: UCL
The Cholla Cactus grove is down that way as well. It was crazy, and unlike anything either of us had seen. You definitely need to watch out for the "Jumping Chollas" – if you were travelling cross-country to a climb and hit one the pods jump out and stick to everything. They are essentially hundreds of little toothpicks. Photos: UCL
On the way back, Mrs. UCL and I stopped to check out the Jumbo Rocks area, and generally scramble around. Photos: Mrs. UCL, UCL
That night we had a big pot-luck Thanksgiving feast around an awesome fire. Photos: UCL
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