1MK
ExploreDesert
After putting in some overtime hours at work, decided I’d take off to Anza Borrego and do a little over night trip for my birthday. Along the southern border of the park an old overland route makes it’s entry into the parks border and works it’s way north. While the Southern Emigrant Trail isn’t nearly as popular as the Mojave Road in today’s time, it may have been more widely used in the past.
A relatively short drive put me in the small town of Ocotillo to top off on fuel, then tires on the dirt near Plaster City in a little under an hour and a half.
The Colorado Desert is one of three that reach into California. To the north is the Mojave then the Great Basin that lays east of the Sierra’s.
I picked up the overland route near Plaster City where the Southern Emigrant Trail and the Juan Bautista de Anza Expedition trail (pretty cool history in itself and also how California’s largest state park got it’s name) overlap for a short distance before going their separate ways. It’s worth mentioning that throughout the early years various paths led man to essentially the same destination, and they all have their spot in history. Different names were used throughout it’s progression and changes, but my trip will be based off it’s later years when it was used by settlers & 49’ers that were moving into California and as a route for the Butterfield Overland Mail service.
It’s a short distance before the two trails split. Emigrant trails heads west, while the Anza Expedition ventures north. Have to cross under the “overlander gatekeeper” before proceeding. This railroad which extends from Plaster City is the last operational industrial narrow gauge railroad in the United States, owned and ran by United States Gypsum Corporation – the largest distributor of wallboard in the US and the largest manufacturer of gypsum products in North America. Neat.
A relatively short drive put me in the small town of Ocotillo to top off on fuel, then tires on the dirt near Plaster City in a little under an hour and a half.
The Southern Emigrant Trail has a long and interesting history. In its heyday, it was the major overland route in and out of Southern California, and it played a part in every era of California history for more than a century. Its most famous era was the period from the start of the Mexican War, through the California Gold Rush, and on to the days of the Butterfield stage.
But unlike many other early overland trails, the Southern Emigrant Trail survived the coming of the railroad, and was still being used to cross the California desert well into the twentieth century. – Source Credit Branding Iron, Los Angeles Corral of The Westerners
The Colorado Desert is one of three that reach into California. To the north is the Mojave then the Great Basin that lays east of the Sierra’s.
Five million years ago tectonic forces ripped Baja California from mainland Mexico and created a large rift valley – the Gulf of California, flooding present day Imperial Valley and extending a shallow sea as far north as Indio, California.
At the same time, the Colorado River was busy carving a path through the Colorado Plateau, etching out the Grand Canyon and delivering loads of sediment toward its delta in the gulf. Three million years would pass before river sediments formed a large natural dam at the delta, holding back water from the gulf, and cutting the shallow sea in two. Isolated, the stranded sea to the north evaporated.
I picked up the overland route near Plaster City where the Southern Emigrant Trail and the Juan Bautista de Anza Expedition trail (pretty cool history in itself and also how California’s largest state park got it’s name) overlap for a short distance before going their separate ways. It’s worth mentioning that throughout the early years various paths led man to essentially the same destination, and they all have their spot in history. Different names were used throughout it’s progression and changes, but my trip will be based off it’s later years when it was used by settlers & 49’ers that were moving into California and as a route for the Butterfield Overland Mail service.
It’s a short distance before the two trails split. Emigrant trails heads west, while the Anza Expedition ventures north. Have to cross under the “overlander gatekeeper” before proceeding. This railroad which extends from Plaster City is the last operational industrial narrow gauge railroad in the United States, owned and ran by United States Gypsum Corporation – the largest distributor of wallboard in the US and the largest manufacturer of gypsum products in North America. Neat.