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kellinahandbasket/Flickr

Borrego Palm Canyon

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Borrego Palm Canyon
Hike to a leafy oasis of towering fan palms

Anza-Borrego’s most famous hike leads to Borrego Palm Canyon, a watery haven fed by underground springs and shaded by California fan palms, the only palm that is native to California. It’s not a major hike round trip (3 miles/4.8 km total), but it feels like a trek from the desert to the tropics. Head off into a sandy wash twisting through a rocky canyon dotted with barrel cacti and ocotillo (look for hummingbirds flitting to the plant’s crimson flowers).

"A little further along, you come upon lush willows and the sound of little waterfalls"

A little further along, you come upon lush willows and the sound of little waterfalls, until finally, rocks give way to deep pools of shade cast by the soaring, shaggy palms (their untrimmed fronds make them look a bit like Wookiee out of Star Wars). A series of severe rainstorms and flash floods in the last decade wiped out many of the oldest palms in this grove, but Palm Canyon is still the largest of the palm groves in Anza-Borrego. Over 80 species of migratory birds use Palm Canyon as a watering stop as they travel through the desert. Bighorn sheep like this spot, too. Scan the high ridges to catch a glimpse of them; if you’re lucky—and very still—they may come down for a drink.

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Harriot Manley/ Sunset Publishing

Southern California

Spotlight: Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

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17
March
Average (°C)
Mar - May
33°
High
6°
Low
June - Aug
41°
High
20°
Low
Sept - Nov
38°
High
10°
Low
Mar - May
33°
High
6°
Low

The park’s combo name pairs the name of famed Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza, who crossed this desert in 1774, and the Spanish word for sheep (‘borrego’)—referring to the region’s native bighorn sheep. This desert preserve—California’s largest state park—protects more than 600,000 acres of badlands, palm oases, slot canyons and cactus-studded hills. A geology lesson in the making, as the terrain is still being altered by erosion and flash floods, it’s a wild and remote place, with much of it accessed via primitive roads, or on foot. (Consider hiring a 4WD with high clearance for best access.) But the pay off is stunning stillness and unforgettable beauty. 

Start your trip just north west of Borrego Springs at the park’s visitor centre, built underground for cooling efficiency, to learn more about this fascinating park and to get tips on where to go. Bighorn sheep are often spotted on nearby trails to Palm Canyon.

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Lars Dugaiczyk/Flickr

Borrego Badlands & Font’s Point

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Borrego Badlands & Font’s Point
See sweeping vistas of a sculpted desert

At sunset and sunrise, the Borrego Badlands’ creased and wrinkled ridges cast bold shadows across a maze of golden hills and sand-coloured arroyos. As you look across this parched landscape, wrap your mind around this: The whole view was shaped by water. Fossilised seashells found in the region prove that it was once submerged under a blend of salty tropical waters from the Gulf of California and fresh water from the Colorado River. Scientists suspect this brackish sea teemed with aquatic life—home to fish, sea turtles and sharks.

One of the best places to get a look at the Badlands’ surreal scene is at Font’s Point, nicknamed California’s Grand Canyon. The point is a coveted spot for photographers, especially at sunset or on full-moon nights. If you’re trying to catch that magic light, allow time to stake out a prime spot, and keep in mind that it’s slow going—4WD only—on the sandy and rutted 4-mile-long road to the point). Or leave the driving to others and join a ½- or full-day guided Jeep tour with California Overland Desert Excursions or Borrego Jeep Photo Adventures. 

For another perspective from a paved access point, travel to the park’s southernmost badlands at Carrizo Badlands Overlook (on the east side of County Route S-2). Pull off the road, unpack the binoculars and survey the scene of uplift and erosion.   

Borrego Palm Canyon  vc_borregopalmcanyon_st_rf_rf_148171080_1280x640_0
kellinahandbasket/Flickr

Borrego Palm Canyon

Borrego Palm Canyon  vca_maps_deserts_0
Borrego Palm Canyon
Hike to a leafy oasis of towering fan palms

Anza-Borrego’s most famous hike leads to Borrego Palm Canyon, a watery haven fed by underground springs and shaded by California fan palms, the only palm that is native to California. It’s not a major hike round trip (3 miles total), but it feels like a trek from the desert to the tropics. Head off into a sandy wash twisting through a rocky canyon dotted with barrel cacti and ocotillo (look for hummingbirds flitting to the plant’s crimson flowers). 

A little further along, you come upon lush willows and the sound of little waterfalls

A little further along, you come upon lush willows and the sound of little waterfalls, until finally, rocks give way to deep pools of shade cast by the soaring, shaggy palms (their untrimmed fronds make them look a bit like Wookiee in Star Wars). A series of severe rainstorms and flash floods in the last decade wiped out many of the oldest palms in this grove, but Palm Canyon is still the largest of the palm groves in Anza-Borrego. Over 80 species of migratory birds use Palm Canyon as a watering stop as they travel through the desert. Bighorn sheep like this spot, too. Scan the high ridges to catch a glimpse of them; if you’re lucky—and very still—they may come down for a drink.

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Chris Palmer/Flickr

The Slot

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The Slot
Squeeze your way through a narrow siltstone passageway

Anza-Borrego bares its soul at The Slot. This is the geologic landscape dissected, the earth cut open by time and water. The easy walk through The Slot’s narrow siltstone canyon is a fun desert adventure, like a funhouse attraction created by Mother Nature. Plus it’s just a bit south-east of Borrego Springs, and regular cars can negotiate the dirt access road. The canyon’s entry point is not well marked, but it’s obvious. Just follow the plentiful footprints that descend more than 20 feet into the crevice, then head left and slightly downhill. Almost instantly the canyon narrows, and you’ll squeeze through walls that occasionally constrict to less than shoulder-width. The Slot’s pink and tan siltstone, magnified by the blue sky above, makes for striking photographs. Not far from the start, you’ll pass under a gravity-defying natural bridge, a boulder precariously lodged in a narrow gap, before the canyon widens and meets up with a Jeep road. Here’s where you retrace your steps to your car, enjoying the magic of The Slot all over again. 

A Ricardo Breceda Sculpture outside Borrego Springs
Harry Pherson/Flickr

Borrego Springs

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Borrego Springs
Stars, art, and citrus in a laidback desert town

Smack in the middle of Anza-Borrego Desert State Park lies the unpretentious town of Borrego Springs, population 3,429. It’s the only California town that is completely surrounded by a state park, and that’s just one bullet in its list of bragging rights. It’s also an official International Dark Sky Community—the first in California—dedicated to protecting the night sky from light pollution. Backyard stargazing parties happen almost every night. Then there’s the ruby red grapefruit season, which begins in late December and ends when all the grapefruit are eaten. Some local fruit stands are run on the honour system: collect a bag and place your money in the box. The central town area has abundant ice cream shops, restaurants and accommodation, but the local art scene evokes the most community pride. First, there are the super-sized prehistoric and fantastical beasts lining area roads, the work of metal sculptor Ricardo Breceda. Then there are galleries with more works by local artists, an open air painting event and the Circle of Art Show in spring. Get your own art on with a watercolour or pottery-making class offered by the non-profit Borrego Art Institute.

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Stargazing in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
Come to Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in late winter and early spring, and you’ll see a gorgeous carpet of wildflowers covering the desert. But any time of year, just wait until after dark for a different stunning view.
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In 2009, the International Dark-Sky Association designated Borrego Springs as the second International Dark Sky Community in the world.
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Anthony Citrano/Flickr

Stargazing in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

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Stargazing in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
Lay out a blanket to see countless stars

Among stargazers, creating light pollution is the equivalent of throwing rubbish out of a car window. That’s why the street lights in Borrego Springs are subtle, not glaring, and the local airport has adjusted its aircraft beacon to angle downward. The town’s residents like to see their skies illuminated by millions of bright stars, and they plan to keep it that way. Borrego Springs is the first International Dark Sky Community in California, having earned that distinction by restricting and modifying lights on public streets, outside businesses and even on residents’ front porches. It doesn’t hurt to have a high mountain range between here and the big, bright cities and towns of Southern California, plus 600,000 acres of undeveloped Anza-Borrego Desert State Park all around. 

If you’d like to learn more about what you’re seeing, schedule an evening under the stars with astronomer Dennis Mammana of Borrego Night Sky Tours. The Springs at Borrego, an RV resort with a small observatory housing an 11-inch diameter telescope, holds public viewings and lectures several times a year. In April, take part in even more events during Dark Sky Week.

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Stargazing in Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
Come to Anza-Borrego Desert State Park in late winter and early spring, and you’ll see a gorgeous carpet of wildflowers covering the desert. But any time of year, just wait until after dark for a different stunning view.
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Anza-Borrego Desert State Park

Native American pictographs

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Native American pictographs
Discover the markings of long-gone native artists

The Native American tribes that once lived in the Anza-Borrego Desert left a legacy of petroglyphs and pictographs on boulders and cliffs throughout the park. These early artists drew human and animal figures, sun circles, stars and other more abstract designs. Many of the drawings mark sacred locations where they celebrated rites of passage and held ceremonies.

More than 50 major rock art sites have been found in Anza-Borrego, but to protect these ancient sites, the park does not broadcast all their locations. The easiest place to see some rock art is on the Pictograph Trail in Little Blair Valley. Passenger cars can manage the dirt road to the trailhead, and the easy hike leads to views of a boulder embellished with red and yellow zigzag lines and diamond shapes that were painted by nomadic Kumeyaay Indians, possibly as much as 2,000 years ago. 

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Randy Heinitz/Flickr

Ricardo Breceda Sculptures

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Ricardo Breceda Sculptures
See fantastical creatures stalking the desert

The creatures pop up alongside Borrego Springs Road: Prehistoric elephants. A sabre-tooth cat. An ancient camel. A T. Rex and a giant bird of prey. Not the flesh-and-blood kind, but remarkable art pieces—sometimes whimsical, sometimes haunting—are the one of a kind works of sculptor Ricardo Breceda, whose creations delight and surprise drivers near the town of Borrego Springs. 

While some creatures are ambitious fantasies, such as a 350-foot-long serpent arcing across the playa, many of the sculptures represent real-life creatures that once roamed this land. In 2008, Breceda was originally commissioned by local philanthropist Dennis Avery to make sculptures for his extensive desert property known as Galleta Meadows, but the creatures seem to have multiplied around town. To find Breceda’s 130 or so rust-red, scrap-metal sculptures, collect a detailed map at the Anza-Borrego Desert Natural History Association bookshop in Borrego Springs (also a great place for nature-themed gifts). 

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Metal & Magic
The landscape of the Anza-Borrego Desert has been forever changed by the dreams and visions of metal artist Ricardo Breceda, and his massive, magical beasts. #dreambig
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Dan Keeney/Flickr

La Casa del Zoro

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La Casa del Zoro
Cozy up in luxury’s lap at this desert retreat

Wondering what to do today? With six tennis courts and five swimming pools (plus 19 more private pools), it’s a tough decision at this surprisingly posh desert retreat. 

"Retire to the Fox Den Bar for cocktails, or watch a desert sunset over dinner on the terrace of the Butterfield Dining Room"

Originally opened in 1937, La Casa del Zorro had seen some wear and tear, but a complete overhaul of its poolside and garden rooms, and its deluxe one- to four-bedroom casitas with private pools or spas, now finds the resort in fabulous shape. Look for South-western desert-style furnishings, marble baths, wooden shutters and wood-burning fireplaces for chilly desert nights. 

Luckily, you don’t have to be a guest to enjoy this desert gem. After a hike in Anza-Borrego, retire to the Fox Den Bar for cocktails, or watch a desert sunset over dinner on the terrace of the Butterfield Dining Room. If you do book a stay, get up early at least one morning to walk around the resort’s 42-acre grounds. You’re sure to spot a few other early risers—a coyote, a roadrunner, or maybe even the resort’s namesake, the big-eared desert kit fox (‘zorro’ means fox in Spanish).

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Kris Awesome/Flickr

Ghost Mountain

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Ghost Mountain
Visit the silent ruins of one man’s dream

When most people visualise living off the land, the first thing they’d want handy is a good water supply. Not so with 1930s-40s artist and writer Marshal South, who decided to homestead on Anza-Borrego’s Ghost Mountain. South and his wife built an adobe home on top of the arid mountain and lived there with their three children for 17 years. The family tried to live simply by emulating the Spartan style of early Native Americans, inventing systems for storing precious rainfall, tending a vegetable garden and harvesting seeds and fruit from desert plants. To earn money, South wrote articles about his family’s back-to-nature lifestyle for Desert Magazine and Arizona Highways. An Australian who was an accomplished poet, South inspired a huge following of readers who eagerly awaited his next instalment. 

South’s wife eventually grew weary of the rugged desert life and her husband's odd idealism, and the family split up and left the mountain in 1947. The short Ghost Mountain Trail visits their old homestead, climbing gently through a series of switchbacks to the mountaintop. In spring, the ocotillos and yuccas put on a colourful show. At the summit, you’ll find a few partial walls, an old mattress frame and some cisterns and barrels, all that remains of South’s utopian dream. 

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Anza-Borrego Wildflowers by Daniel/Flickr

Spring wildflowers

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Spring wildflowers
A wealth of wildflowers brighten the desert sand

At first glance, the desert can seem like an inhospitable place, which makes Anza-Borrego’s wild flower bloom seem all the more miraculous. The park’s more than 200 flowering plant species put on a brilliant display each spring—if winter rains have worked their magic. Typically the bloom occurs between late February and April, with early March being the safest bet. Once the bloom starts, it lasts only for a few weeks. Call the park’s wild flower hotline for up-to-date information (+1 760-767-4684).  

Borrego Palm Canyon Trail usually has good displays of spiky ocotillo, saffron-yellow brittlebrush and desert lavender. For a longer trek, hike about 3 miles into Hellhole Canyon and reap rewards of flowering barrel cactus and sweet-smelling lupine, plus cascading water at Maidenhair Falls. If you have a 4WD, scope out the sand verbena and dune evening primrose along what’s commonly called Coyote Canyon Jeep Trail, a dirt road at the north end of DiGiorgio Road.