Showing posts with label San Jacinto-Santa Rosa Mountains National Monument. Show all posts
Showing posts with label San Jacinto-Santa Rosa Mountains National Monument. Show all posts

Monday, December 30, 2019

Day trail heads into valley’s thermal belt

Red-tailed hawks often can be seen riding the thermals above the
Cathedral City Foothills Trail.
Cathedral City Foothills Trail aerial map.
Click for larger version.
The following blog entry originally was written for and published by the Uken Report.

Day hikers can traipse across the metaphorical coals that make the Coachella Valley such a pleasant place to be via the Cathedral City Foothills Trail.

While many trails crisscross the foothills surrounding the valley floor, a moderately challenging hike that’s easy to reach is this 1.5-mile round trip path that leaves from the cove at the end of Cathedral Canyon. There’s no official name for well-worn path, so it has been christened the Foothills Trail here for convenience sake.

To reach the trailhead, from Calif. Hwy. 111 in Cathedral City, turn south onto Cathedral Canyon Drive then left/west onto Terrace Road. At the Vista Drive intersection, park on the street; head north onto the sand-covered, unfinished Vista Drive. When the road curves west and ends at the development’s edge, take the dirt path entering a wash and then the foothills.

The wash marks the boundary of the San Jacinto-Santa Rosa Mountains National Monument. The public land, administered by a number of federal and state agencies, covers 280,071 acres and stretches from the border of San Diego and Riverside counties southwest of Mecca to Interstate 10 east of Cabazon.

About midway through the wash, which sits at 450 feet elevation, the trail forks. Go left/west. You’ll soon begin climbing a ridgeline. In less than a fifth of a mile, the trail reaches 656 feet elevation.

Thermal belt
The ridgeline offers increasingly great views of the Coachella Valley below and the Little San Bernardino Mountains beyond. You also get a good sense of the crumpled landscape that makes up the foothills, which can appear monolithic from the valley floor. If hiking in the morning, you might even feel heat rising off the surface.

If so, you’re sensing the thermals that help ensure the Coachella Valley is a tourist and snowbird destination.

As sun warms the earth, the ground heats the air directly above it. Soon small plumes of warm air – known as thermals –rise then twist and flow with the wind at a rate of up 1-3 yards a second. This displaces the cooler air above that then descends to the ground and in turn is warmed. The sparse, rocky surface of the foothills and mountains surrounding the valley are an ideal surface for creating thermals, because they have a more direct angle to the sun than the valley floor and so heat faster.

The thermal belts across the foothills leads to higher night-time temperatures in the winter and lower daytime temps during the summer. For example, in nearby Palm Desert, the average daily high is 87.1 degrees F while the average daily low is 62.8 F – the usual temperature across the valley at the end of April or mid-October.

Red-tailed hawks
Besides the temperate climate, thermals also create a great amount of lift, which birds can take advantage of. On the Foothill Trail, red-tailed hawks often can be seen riding the thermals, usually in wide circles.

Red-tailed hawks prefer the foothill’s open country where they can more easily spot prey. If you see one dive slowly, its legs outstretched, in its attack mode.

The red-tailed hawk can be difficult to identify unless you’re above them or they tip your direction as curving through their air. They are dark brown with light barring on their wing feathers and brilliant red tail feathers. Though adults stretch 18 to 26 inches from head to tail and boast a wingspan of 3.4-4.8 feet, they are extremely light, weighing a mere 2.4 pounds.

In addition to being beautiful, they are vital to population control of rodents, which can make up to 85 percent of their diet. They also enjoy a good snake, lizard and even a jackrabbit now and then.

Another benefit of the thermals is the valley’s agricultural industry. While it can’t be seen amid the housing developments and golf resorts from this trail, in the valley’s southern portion the warm year-round climate allows farmers to grow fruits such as dates, figs and mangoes. Indeed, overall crop production exceeds half a billion dollars a year in the valley.

When the Foothill Trail reaches a T-intersection with another unnamed trail at 1148 feet elevation, you’ve reached the turnback point at about 0.75 miles from the trailhead. Take in the great views, and then retrace your steps back to Terrace Road.


Thursday, October 3, 2019

Hike heads to prominent Indian Wells peak

Eisenhower Mountain, seen from the trailhead at the Living Desert Zoo and
Gardens, rises to nearly 2000 feet.
Eisenhower Mountain Trail Map Plate I
Eisenhower Mountain Trail Map Plate II
Eisenhower Mountain Trail Map Plate III
Eisenhower Mountain Trail Map Plate IV
Day hikers can head to the base of one of Indian Wells’ iconic peaks on the Eisenhower Mountain Trail.

The 4.3-miles round trip actually is a collection of three trails – a stem and two stacked loops – that
sits in both the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens’ 360-acre nature preserve and the San Jacinto-Santa Rosa Mountains National Monument. Storm damage temporarily closed the trail in winter 2018-19, but it since has reopened.

Though the mountain and the trail are in the Indian Wells city limits, the best way to access the route is via a trailhead in neighboring Palm Desert at the Living Desert Zoo and Garden. To reach the trailhead, from Calif. Hwy. 111 in Palm Desert, turn south onto Portola Avenue. Park at the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens on the road’s left/east side. An entry fee is required.

Desert scrub and wash
You’ll get to explore a little of the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens. The trailhead is at the facility’s northern edge on the north side of a spur jutting out of the foothills. The hike starts at about 320 feet elevation.

The trail quickly splits to form the western end of the first stacked loop, which is known as the Adventure Loop. Go left/northeast onto the trail so that you take the route clockwise.

You’ll cross a desert riparian woodland. Scrubland surrounds the path, but after a rainfall it comes alive with the color of desert wildflowers.

The trail next passes over a desert wash or arroyo. In doing so, the trail dips and briefly becomes quite sandy.

East of the wash, the trail reaches the western segment of the second loop, the Wilderness Loop. Go left/north onto it. The route starts to gain elevation, as it heads up a desert mountain ridge.

Eisenhower Mountain
The trail’s eastern leg is its high point, specifically a picnic shelter at close to 1000 feet elevation. This offers a fantastic view of Eisenhower Mountain, which tops out at 1952 feet.

While a mountain by Minnesota or Maine standards, in California it’s really just a steep foothill. Still, it’s a prominent peak in the foothills above Indian Wells, dominating the southern skyline beyond the Eldorado Country Club.

Once taking in the sights, begin the return leg to the Living Desert Zoo and Gardens. The trail back descends through a rocky desert draw. The path narrows and requires a little boulder scrambling. This is a good section to spot rare bighorn sheep.

The return trip offers great views of Indian Wells to the north and northeast and Palm Desert to the northwest. Looking west, you can see the summit of San Jacinto Peak which rises over Palm Springs about 15 miles away.

Along the way down, the trail passes Hidden Valley on the left/south, a built-up area on a low saddle in the spur coming out of the foothills.

San Andreas side trail
Once past Hidden Valley, the trail junctions with the eastern loop of the Adventure Loop. Go left-straight/west onto it.

Just before reaching the loop’s stem, take a side trail to the left for an interpretive exhibit about the San Andreas Fault. There’s a great view of the fault, which sits on the valley’s other side, running in a line just north of Indio to just south of Desert Hot Springs.

An alternate trail to Eisenhower Mountain’s summit runs from Eldorado Country Club. but the route is extremely steep and partially runs up draws.

As there is little shade except the foothills’ shadow, be sure to don sunscreen, sunglasses and a brimmed hat for the hike. Bring plenty of drinking water as well. The trail is open only from October 1 to May 30.