Google Analytics Alternative

The Expert in Baby Boomer Travel

Travel Copywriter
Flowering ocatillos add splashes of red to the desert landscape. Photo by Catharine Norton.

Flowering ocatillos add splashes of red to the desert landscape. Photo by Catharine Norton.

Though hardly a household name outside its region, southern California’s  Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is the Golden State’s largest, spanning some 600,000 acres of the Colorado Desert about two hours’ drive northeast of San Diego.

Anza-Borrego has rugged canyons, badlands, mesas, nature trails, campgrounds, oases, cacti gardens, Native American rock art, and wildlife, all surrounded by rugged mountain ranges, the latter of which are virtually all road-free wilderness areas.

My wife, Catharine, and I just spent several days there with friends from California — hiking, rock scrambling, seeking out springtime blossoms, four-wheel driving over sandy, bumpy “roads” leading to remote outposts of  desert boulders and vegetation, and searching in vain for signs of desert bighorn sheep, the elusive animals that take to Anza-Borrego’s  mountainous, rocky terrain. (“Borrego” is Spanish for bighorn sheep).

While we would have loved to have spotted some bighorns — one herd makes periodic appearances near the Palm Canyon Trail, the park’s most popular hike — we didn’t feel too bad about it. The park shelters somewhere between 250 and 600 of the iconic creatures, which means that each animal has an average of at least 1,000 acres in which to roam.

Cacti bloom annually in mid to late March. Photo by Catharine Norton

Cacti bloom annually in mid to late March. Photo by Catharine Norton

We did spot a roadrunner or two — or at least their tails as they zipped by  — as well as the usual desert allotment of lizards, jackrabbits, and a wide array of birds, including hummingbirds in hog heaven gorging on the succulent spring nectars.

Vegetation on Parade

Anza-Borrego’s rich vegetation, which varies with the elevation, comes in a plethora of shapes and sizes: tall, stem-like ocotillos topped with bright red flowers; yellow-blossomed, green-branched palo verde trees; sharp-needled chollas; spiky-looking agave plants; rounded, spiny barrel cacti; appropriately shaped beavertail cacti; and pink-flowered hedgehog cacti among the most prominent. (You won’t find the well-known Saguaro cacti here — recognizable by their imposing height and signature arms; those grow in the Sonoran Desert of Arizona and northern Mexico).

At the end of the Palm Canyon Trail lies a cooling palm oasis. Photo by Catharine Norton

At the end of the Palm Canyon Trail lies a cooling palm oasis. Photo by Catharine Norton

Though we were there toward the end of spring blossoming season, there were still plenty of colorful blooms to admire, in shades of purple, yellow, red, pink, and white.

The Palm Canyon Trail, which leads from the campground near the Visitor’s Center, is easily the most accessible and well-marked trail in the park. While hikers of all ages managed to complete the three-mile round trip, it was not an easy stroll.

But it led to California’s third-largest palm oasis, featuring a number of distinctive California fan palms (native to the region)  and a stream of cool water — welcome on a hot, dusty day — emerging from the mountains behind.

While camping is a popular activity, we opted for a hotel with swimming pool — a concession to our aging bodies — in the town of Borrego Springs, which lies in a valley adjacent to the park. Borrego Springs has plenty of Mexican (and a few other) restaurants, lodgings, and some wonderful public art sculptures that I’ll write about in my next post.

Don't get too close to this spiny cholla. Photo by Clark Norton

Don’t get too close to this spiny cholla. Photo by Clark Norton

The “season” in Anza-Borrego runs pretty much from October through April, after which the searingly hot summer temperatures scare off most everyone but mad dogs, Englishmen, and visiting Germans, who seem to relish 125-degree heat.

So this is a good one to file and save for next year — especially spring — when the desert landscape comes alive with color once more.

Once the summer months appear, I’ll keep heading west toward San Diego and the California beaches. But then again, I’m not German.

2 Responses to In Search of Desert Cacti, Blooms and Bighorns

Leave a Reply to Clark Norton Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Auto Europe Car Rental

retirees_raise-2015-v2-300x250

Save

Save

Save

Save

Sign up to follow my blog


 Follow me on Twitter
 Connect on Facebook
 Amazon Author page
 Connect on LinkedIn

Travel Writing Blogs

Save

Getting On Travel Top Boomer Travel Blog 2018 Badge

2014Seal_Gold

Baby

retirees_raise-2015-v2-300x250

Save

Save

Save

Save

Save

image001

NATJA SEAL-Gold winner

According to government and private surveys:

  • Leading-edge baby boomers (born between 1946 and 1955) and seniors account for four out of every five dollars spent on luxury travel today.
  • Roughly half the consumer spending money in the U.S.--more than $2 trillion--is in the hands of leading-edge baby boomers and seniors.
  • Baby boomers (born 1946-1964) travel more than any other age group.
  • When asked what they would most like to spend their money on, baby boomers answered “travel” more than any other category, including improving their health or finances.

Auto Europe Car Rental