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elgatoloco
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[*] posted on 2-8-2015 at 11:33 AM


Quote: Originally posted by Bajaboy  
Quote: Originally posted by elgatoloco  
Quote: Originally posted by Bajaboy  
headed out there next weekend:biggrin:


Lucky you! :cool:

AB is a gem of a place. So much to see and do.

I envy you! :saint:

Hoping for wildflowers this spring.

http://www.desertusa.com/wildflo/ca_abdsp.html


plenty of room around the fire:light:


Day trip on Sunday! Maybe. :coolup:




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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 02:56 PM


Have any of you been to the mud caves further south off of S-2?



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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 03:14 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
Have any of you been to the mud caves further south off of S-2?


Yes, in Tapiado Canyon?




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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 03:28 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
Have any of you been to the mud caves further south off of S-2?


Bob--------I assume you mean the one's along Arroyo Tapiado, a feeder canyon of Vallecito Creek, which in turn flows into Carrizo wash-----yes, been to them several times, starting in the early '50's with the Sierra Club, San Diego chapter. I have not been IN the caves, however, as I am distrustful of anything made out of "mud". For the most part, they are only "caves" because the sides of very narrow slot canyons have collapsed onto each other. They have changed over the last 60 years that I am familiar with, which tends to support my suspicion that they are rather unstable. They ARE in neat bad-lands country and fairly deep semi-slot canyons, and I really enjoy it all. Last time there at the "caves" was spring of 2001. They are normally accessible via SUV, and occasionally you might need 4-wheel drive due to sand or mud, and/or exposed rocks.

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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 03:42 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
Have any of you been to the mud caves further south off of S-2?










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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 03:55 PM


I have been all over that area and inside a lot of the caves. There are more hidden ones if you are in the mood to hike back and look for them. They actually seem very stable to me.




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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 04:04 PM


Those caves look like snake magnets!



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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 04:14 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
I have been all over that area and inside a lot of the caves. There are more hidden ones if you are in the mood to hike back and look for them. They actually seem very stable to me.


Did you do the 'belly crawl'? Very intense, scary if there was a quake! I learned of it back in my Geocaching days, around 2001, with my kids. It is past the first caves of my photos above... and to the right... takes you to the top of the mesa.




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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 05:03 PM


Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
I have been all over that area and inside a lot of the caves. There are more hidden ones if you are in the mood to hike back and look for them. They actually seem very stable to me.


Did you do the 'belly crawl'? Very intense, scary if there was a quake! I learned of it back in my Geocaching days, around 2001, with my kids. It is past the first caves of my photos above... and to the right... takes you to the top of the mesa.


Haven't been inside that one. I'll check it next time I go which will probably be in April. A bunch of us usually camp a Blair Valley every April and head down to the caves.




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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 05:25 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
I have been all over that area and inside a lot of the caves. There are more hidden ones if you are in the mood to hike back and look for them. They actually seem very stable to me.


Whatever turns you on. (-:

I was much more comfortable hiking and camping all over the now-closed "Carrizo Bombing Range" just north of the "caves" back in the late '40's and '50's, even with blown-up tanks, and ordinance sticking out of the ground. (No touchy, tho)

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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 05:34 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Barry A.  
Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
I have been all over that area and inside a lot of the caves. There are more hidden ones if you are in the mood to hike back and look for them. They actually seem very stable to me.


Whatever turns you on. (-:

I was much more comfortable hiking and camping all over the now-closed "Carrizo Bombing Range" just north of the "caves" back in the late '40's and '50's, even with blown-up tanks, and ordinance sticking out of the ground. (No touchy, tho)

Barry


I really enjoy doing that too. I have been trying to find one of Patton's tanks that was left stuck in a wash out there for years. I have yet to find it.




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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 05:51 PM


I significant sweep of the Bombing Range was accomplished many years ago by the Military, and I believe all the "visible" military stuff was removed. My understanding is that it remains closed because new military stuff kept resurfacing after the "sweep" after rains, which scared the Manager's immensely (and understandably). Now, they are very serious about the closure, and there are big fines for going in there, I believe. My last trip thru the Bombing Range was solo back in about 1961 via auto (Fish Creek Wash over the divide to N. Fk. of Deguynos Wash and down to Carrizo Wash with side trips up Red Rock and Barrett Washes, and the Military caught me in Barrett :O. ) They were great guys, but I definitely got an escorted evacuation out to Plaster City, with an admonition to NEVER do THAT again.

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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 05:54 PM


But Barry, did you keep the black nuggets??? :light:



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[*] posted on 2-9-2015 at 06:02 PM


Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
Quote: Originally posted by David K  
Quote: Originally posted by Bob53  
I have been all over that area and inside a lot of the caves. There are more hidden ones if you are in the mood to hike back and look for them. They actually seem very stable to me.


Did you do the 'belly crawl'? Very intense, scary if there was a quake! I learned of it back in my Geocaching days, around 2001, with my kids. It is past the first caves of my photos above... and to the right... takes you to the top of the mesa.


Haven't been inside that one. I'll check it next time I go which will probably be in April. A bunch of us usually camp a Blair Valley every April and head down to the caves.


I just checked Geocaching.com... and it is an archived cache (from 2001), it is no longer there or active, so enjoy the description of where we went back then:

Mud Cave Cookie Tin N 32 55.830 W 116 11.756

Geocache Description:

This cache is fairly hard to reach due to it's location even though it is not far from Palm Spring and the corner of Hollywood and Vine (you will see when you get out there). The scenery and views are well worth the trouble! Four wheel drive is recommend due to sandy washes or an extra 4 mile hike from the main hwy. While you are in the area, be sure to visit the Palm Spring.

Located in southern Anza-Borrego desert, this cache will require some thinking on your part to find the right path to get there. If you find this cache, please hide it well again due to its exposure. Please be thoughtful of where you walk as the ground is susceptible to erosion and crumbles easily.
There is a hidden split in the path that is the best way to take (very near the cache), but is hard to see (really hard!) at N32 55.773 W116 11.770. Then get on your belly and crawl Be careful of the path you take, the ground is unstable in places and a fall could be fatal.

Additional Hints

The cache is located above the mud caves in Arroyo Tapiado canyon wash. Enter the larger mud cave at N32 55.628 W116 11.725. Follow this back for about 10-15 minutes. Watch for the belly crawl on your right about knee level at N32 55.773 W116 11.770. You really have to get down on your knees to see this! It's a 35 degree up-hill crawl on your belly for the first few feet, but really isn't too hard. Work to the top the ridges once you find a safe spot, you will see a group of 5 ocotillos at the cache site. The cache is buried under the largest of the ocotillos, under a pile of rocks.




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[*] posted on 2-10-2015 at 06:10 AM


My wife Kathy and I go to Anza Borrego quite frequently. About mid January, we camped free at Peg Leg Monument (BLM land) and got an early start on Villager Peak. The parking area for the hike is a little over a mile from the turnoff to Font's Point, on the left. We started hiking about 6:30 because I had run out of daylight in November. It is a 5000 foot elevation gain in 6.5 miles. Great views the entire hike.


View towards the West from Villager Ridge


Google View of the route

Got back to the truck about 4 PM. Met a guy on the mountain named Dave who rides every year with some vaqueros in Baja Norte for a week in the area around San Pedro Martir. Small world!
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[*] posted on 2-10-2015 at 12:01 PM


Great pics, McFrog, and a great hike.

With a little more effort you could also bag Rabbit Peak. :biggrin:

(something I never accomplished)

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[*] posted on 2-10-2015 at 01:22 PM


Quote: Originally posted by David K  
But Barry, did you keep the black nuggets??? :light:


No, I traded them all in for Stocks in America's and the World's premier Corporations which have rewarded me many times over what the actual "nuggets" would ever have. :biggrin:

-------and JoJo, I know you will brand this statement as BS, and for once you will be right!!!

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[*] posted on 2-10-2015 at 01:50 PM


One thing Choral Pepper told me she regretted doing was giving the black gold nuggets to the new Desert Magazine publisher when she sold the magazine. As you might know, the person who claimed to have found Peg Leg Smith's gold (that was coated with a black desert varnish) in letters to Desert Magazine, mailed them to her as proof. I believe she made one into a piece of jewelry she kept.

When she sold the magazine, she sold everything that was part of it, 'furnished' if you will... except for the Baja related letters, and photos... which was given to me per her wishes, by her children.




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