High
architectural drama, in the form of classic modern dwellings, is starting to
come to the high desert. There seems to be a vibe, an undercurrent of interest
and excitement about high desert living. Before the pandemic broke out, VBRO
and Airbnb locales were everywhere. Even now with a slowdown in real estate
activity, there still seems to be a strong interest in escaping to the quiet
and serenity of the vast open desert. And this is nothing new for the region.
Before
and during the 1950s, the high desert was home to simple shacks on homesteaded
land. No water, electricity, or amenities. Initially the outlaws, urban rebels
and adventurous few gravitated to this Spartan existence. Over time, the
elements took their toll and many shacks were abandoned and forgotten. Most
reverted back to the Bureau of Land Management.
Then
in the 1960s and 70s, artists, musicians, urban castaways and bohemian rebels
found the high desert a perfect refuge from the craziness that had overtaken
most of the coastal cities. These new explorers flocked to the area in their VW
pop-up campers, tents, sleeping bags and simple woolen blankets. It was like an
unorganized gathering of like-minded souls each of whom was lost inside their
own head.
Now
a whole new generation of architectural aficionados, Gen Xers, boomers, outlaws,
urban pioneers, and retirees are reclaiming the desert and rebuilding those
dilapidated shacks into something more attractive only this time with all the
amenities. A lot of the Airbnb listings are remodeled versions of these old
shacks that used to be part of a homesteading craze decades ago.
Since
its founding as a refuge for tuberculosis patients to escape the confines of LA
and San Diego, Palm Springs and the Coachella Valley have always attracted a
strange assortment of colorful characters. The Valley’s surrounding locales
have pushed that equation even further by attracting an eclectic assortment of
artists, musicians, painters and other veterans of the school of hard knocks.
Taken together, the region is a mecca for the rich, the famous and the
enfranchised. For me, it’s a virtual chalkboard for any number of story lines.
Whether
it’s the weather, the proximity to Los Angeles and San Francisco or the
distance between it and the rest of the world, the valley, and its surrounding
high desert has always been a sanctuary for lost soul-searchers seeking the ultimate
creative elixir.
Some
choose to express themselves and show their wares in galleries in the valley or
in the high desert. Others are off radar and like it that way. It’s as if there
is another world just beneath the surface of shimmering pools, lush green golf
courses and cloud-less aqua skies. Whispers come from the wastelands
surrounding the Salton Sea as do siren calls from the high desert. Like a
resistant drug, fatal attraction or sinful thought, it keeps drawing me back
for more exploration. It is a world that offers the opposite of the known,
contentment and comfortable.
The
high desert of the Morongo Valley, Yucca Valley and Joshua tree continue to
attract musicians now as it has since the turn of the century. Far from the
crystal clear pools of Palm Springs and its emerald green golf courses lies
another world of vast nothingness peppered with the sad remnants of past lives.
The
area has become a mecca for aging rock stars, artists and modern-day bohemians
along with ordinary people all in search of a new beginning. It’s the place
where people go to get lost and be creative. A place where stillness thunders
louder than the wind and God did some of his finest paintings. A vast virtual
sound studio for the creative mind.
The
high desert of the Morongo Basin is like a modern day outback of more than 9.5
million acres of public land in the California desert. Its home to old walking
trails first used by Native Americans between seasonal encampments then
followed by Spanish explorers and finally 19th century gold seekers
and pioneers. Reminders of past human lives are everywhere.
Abandoned
mines litter the area with their relics of past hopes and dreams scattered about
the ground. Ramshackle old cabins planted amid miles of sage and scrub brush,
sit isolated and lonely in the desert. The evidence is all here if you can look
past the dust and dirt and castles made of boulders to imagine all the past
lives that once pasted through this place on the way to a better life.
Now
a new generation of seekers is trudging down those same dusty pathways and
hiking the boulder-strewn mountain trails in search of something they’ll only
find inside their head. It’s a wonderful atmosphere for self-reflection,
contemplation, and wandering ‘what ifs.’ The only distractions are the thoughts
that keep pushing their way into your head, each clamoring for attention.
It’s
a meditation mat complete with sun and sand and endless horizons.
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