The desert sure warmed up quick this year! I was able to get out but not as much as I wanted.
I am still running behind on posting trips I've been on. More to come.
New Trips
Lost Burro Mine
Bourke Lee wrote in the 1930s: “There is a Lost Burro Mine on almost every mountain.” Prospectors spent so much time chasing their wandering burros through the desert hills that the animals became their best prospecting partners. The Lost Burro in the Cottonwood Mountains of northern Death Valley earned its

Braden Cabin and the Berman Murders
Spend enough time around the warm springs in Saline Valley and someone will eventually mention “the Murder Cabin.” The name has stuck for decades, carried by rumor and retold with increasing inaccuracy. The cabin in question once belonged to Roy “Red” Braden, a pistol-packing cinnabar prospector who built it sometime

Cyty’s Mill
Just north of the well-known Keane Wonder Mine site lies Cyty’s Mill, a smaller, seldom-visited mill site and cabin. A short hike along the base of the Funeral Mountains will lead you past scenic Keane Wonder Springs to John Cyty’s 1910 cabin and mill, which processed ore from his Big

Cliffs of Crosses Petroglyphs
Most East Mojave rock art sites have a mix of abstract designs, the occasional bighorn sheep, maybe a few human figures. This canyon has those too, but what sets it apart is the number of enclosed crosses pecked into the basalt cliffs. I didn’t name it, but whoever did had

Tungsten Mine (Okanogan)
Despite having plenty written about it, the Tungsten Mine is surprisingly hard to find good information on. There are countless disagreeing dates and details of the operation. Some individual reports even contradict themselves on the history of the mine. At various times the mine was known as the: Tungsten Mine,
Updated Trips
Both of these have been completely rewritten! Check them out.




