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I've been going to Joshua Tree for more than thirty years. The park hasn't changed much.
I've been going with Maia, and her family, for nine years (the first trip Maia and I took was to Joshua Tree, early one November). Because we are not fools, we tend to travel in the cooler parts of the year. That means days are usually around 60F, and the nights are in the 20-30s (for those who don't know deserts, that's a perfectly normal swing of temperature, it's more extreme in the summers, when daytime highs can be up to the 120F range, and the nightime lows about 65F; which is why we tend to avoid them in those parts of the year).
Because the desert is so dry, things don't decay in the same ways they do where there is more water. Animals mummify, and plants are worn away. There's a California Juniper (Juniperus californica), on one of the trails we frequent, which died, maybe twenty years ago; maybe forty (an old saying about such trees, "a juniper fencepose will outlast two holes).
Dead Juniper

N.B. If you want to see what the terrain looks like, click trough
any of the photos, and go to the right and find the "map" button.
Be sure to use the "hybrid" option.
That shot doesn't do it justice. The tree was large, it's in a grand, if dilapidated way, and takes up a huge chunk of the trail. Usually they don't get to much more than 10-15 feet. This one was probably about 25' when it fell. I've been trying to catch some of the wonder of it, for at least 6 years. Pat allowed as she has given up on trying to get a good shot of it.
Being a glutton for punishment (or big fan of disappointments) I gave it another try this year. I managed some decent shots.
The first two are the same, save for the f-stop, and so the detail in the background is more evident in the second.
Sympathetic

Sympathetic II

Now comes the pop-quiz: Why is the name different on the this next image?
Non-Sympathetic

Finally, I did one which, to me, has a bit of narrative. It makes me think of the way going up the tumbledown canyons of Joshua Tree always leads to another ridge. It's also a slightly sympathetic picture.
Pointing

I've been going with Maia, and her family, for nine years (the first trip Maia and I took was to Joshua Tree, early one November). Because we are not fools, we tend to travel in the cooler parts of the year. That means days are usually around 60F, and the nights are in the 20-30s (for those who don't know deserts, that's a perfectly normal swing of temperature, it's more extreme in the summers, when daytime highs can be up to the 120F range, and the nightime lows about 65F; which is why we tend to avoid them in those parts of the year).
Because the desert is so dry, things don't decay in the same ways they do where there is more water. Animals mummify, and plants are worn away. There's a California Juniper (Juniperus californica), on one of the trails we frequent, which died, maybe twenty years ago; maybe forty (an old saying about such trees, "a juniper fencepose will outlast two holes).
Dead Juniper

N.B. If you want to see what the terrain looks like, click trough
any of the photos, and go to the right and find the "map" button.
Be sure to use the "hybrid" option.
That shot doesn't do it justice. The tree was large, it's in a grand, if dilapidated way, and takes up a huge chunk of the trail. Usually they don't get to much more than 10-15 feet. This one was probably about 25' when it fell. I've been trying to catch some of the wonder of it, for at least 6 years. Pat allowed as she has given up on trying to get a good shot of it.
Being a glutton for punishment (or big fan of disappointments) I gave it another try this year. I managed some decent shots.
The first two are the same, save for the f-stop, and so the detail in the background is more evident in the second.
Sympathetic

Sympathetic II

Now comes the pop-quiz: Why is the name different on the this next image?
Non-Sympathetic

Finally, I did one which, to me, has a bit of narrative. It makes me think of the way going up the tumbledown canyons of Joshua Tree always leads to another ridge. It's also a slightly sympathetic picture.
Pointing
