It’s
quiet and serene and a great place to get lost inside your head. There’s
usually a small muddy creek meandering by. The scrub brush is in full bloom now
and nesting birds flitter about endlessly. The stillness there can be deafening
with only a few fleeting sounds floating by. All is peaceful until once or
twice a year when the rains come and wash that complacency away with astounding
fury and force in just a matter of moments.
Then as the left over residue slowly settles into the newly formed crags and crevices, the wash goes back to its dormant life once again.
We
experienced that here in the desert not too long ago. A record three and a half
inches of rain fell in one day. Contrast that to an average rainfall of five
inches for the entire year and one can understand the magnitude of the hard
rain pounding on concrete soil.
Before
the rains, the wash is alive with horseback riding, mountain biking and hiking.
Horse
trails become mountain bike meccas. Hikers wander the wash, meandering back and
forth as the rutted grounds give way to dry beds. Arroyos cut in the corners
and debris lies crumpled up in distorted jumbled piles randomly deposited
everywhere.
Fortunately
for me, the wash isn’t the only place I’ve found for tranquility and peace in
his part of my world. As a fellow hiker commented the other day. “It really is
one of the best playground for adults in the world.” I’ve also found a host of
other newly discovered venues to get lost in around the Coachella Valley.
My tabernacle on the Lykken Trail |
My tabernacle on the Garstin Trail |
Coachella Valley Preserve lagoon |
Top of the Tram |
Garstin Trail |
Joshua Tree |
Afternoon hike along the wash |
They
are all magnificent escapes just steps away from my home. Places to meet and
greet and at the same time go solitary if I want to. Its heaven’s confessional
where I reveal my earthly sins; the good ones, the bad ones and the fun times
in-between.
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