Mojave Musings

Caption
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Mojave Yucca or Spanish Dagger (Yucca schidigera), is a flowering plant native to the southwest deserts of North America that grows to a height of up to 16 feet. It grows on rocky desert slopes and creosote desert flats below 8,000 feet. The bell-shaped white flowers, sometimes with a purple tinge, are segmented into six parts. The fibers of the leaves can be used  to make rope, cloth, thread and sandals. The flowers and fruit are eaten either raw or roasted and the black seeds ground into flour.

    Mojave Musings

    The Mojave Desert extends from the Base of the Sierra Nevada Range in the west to the Colorado Plateau in the east and covers all of the southern tip of Nevada.  Aside from the nearly three million people who populate the Las Vegas metropolitan area, the next largest incorporated Nevada town within the Mojave, with a population of a little more than 20,000 people, is Mesquite.

    Within Whitney Pocket, Little Finland, Buffington Pockets, Bowl of Fire, Valley of Fire, Hidden Valley, Pinto Valley and Color Rock Quarry is a land of treasure and awe. Most are within either the Lake Mead National Recreation Area or Gold Butte National Monument and only Valley of Fire State Park is accessible via good paved roads.

    Of the Sonoran, Chihuahuan, Great Basin and Mojave Deserts, that together form the North American Desert, the Mojave is the smallest and driest. The colorful and fragile formations, numerous natural arches and wildflower and cactus blooms belie the common perceptions of such a place. Although I first visited the area decades ago, I only began to explore it within the past few years after moving to the adjacent Sonoran Desert.

    I enjoy it as a photographer because it is an endless puzzle. There is beauty everywhere you look, but seeing and photographing are different things entirely. The harsh desert light, the complexity of land forms and the endless contrails that crisscross the sky are all obstacles that frustrate even those who have learned to see the beauty in these harsh environs. The moon may be a harsh mistress, but it is the sun and sky that you must master.

    These images are just a beginning. I’ll hopefully improve upon them each time I return.

     

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