Thursday, February 23, 2023

Quartz Buttes Hike

 I was reading a post over at Starbucks Exploring that really intrigued me called "Quartz Butte Pictographs". I had never hiked this area of Joshua Tree, and Guy's photos and finds were captivating. We've hiked together before, and he was kind enough to give me some pretty good hints about were he started the hike and the direction of travel. I would be on my own as far as finding any pictographs or quartz buttes, but hey, that's half the fun! After spending literally hours on Google Earth, I was able to find what I thought looked like a quartz butte. There was supposed to be a second butte, but I couldn't located it and just had to hope I might spot it during the hike. As far as finding any rock art, well, that would require a lot of luck and a lot of exploring. I wasn't very hopeful but I was excited to get out and take a look. Put on your hiking boots and let's go see what we can find!
The hike was interesting right from the start, and I knew it was going to be a good day. We were able to follow this steep-sided wash for quite a distance. No human footprints... my kind of hike!
 
We would occasionally leave the wash for higher ground so we could scan our surroundings for buttes or interesting rock formations. No quartz buttes, but look at this big piece of quartz! Almost as if someone had placed it here.
 
A huge quartz boulder. There must be a quartz butte around here somewhere!
 

Interesting rock formation.
 
Roger, center, and Mitch to the right, looking over/under/around rocks and boulders for anything of interest. So far, nothing.
 
We were finding a lot of what looked like chipped stone or stone flakes, which is usually a good sign. And then, on a wall in a partial shelter...
... a pictograph, faded but still visible to the naked eye, and quite large. I asked Roger to stand next to it and took a picture using dStretch.
dStretch does funny things to humans (sorry, Roger!), but it really helps bring out the detail in pictographs. This one reminds me of a sun with rays radiating out, but only from the top and bottom. Or perhaps crab? Very unusual!
 
Another interesting rock formation. For some reason, all I could think of was hot dog buns! And then something came to mind that I hadn't thought of in many years. Does anyone remembrer the Oscar Mayer WienerMobile??
 
Rockfish

Finally, we spot quartz butte. It's unmistakable and unique looking. Surrounded by granite boulders that are much more common is a huge quartz formation. 
 
What's harder to see in the photo is the quartz littering the ground everywhere you step. It's amazing, and a rock lovers dream come true! Mostly white quartz, which at times looks like snow, but also pink, gold, and even clear quartz.
 
Mitch, directing an imaginary orchestra, on top of quartz butte.
 
I notice the rocky knoll in the above photo and wonder if that might be the second quartz "butte" that I heard about. Let's go take a look. 
 
Yes, definitely another quartz outcropping. 

Climbing up quartz butte #2. I love that ocotillo plant!

Classic desert beauty, with ocotillo, yucca, and quartz all over the ground!

See if you can spot Roger climbing up quartz butte #2.
 
Mitch & Roger on quartz butte #2. Look at that sky!!
 
After leaving quartz butte #2 and poking around in a few more rocks, I come across this really unusual rainbow petroglyph. I knew it was out here somewhere, but to actually find it was an incredible piece of luck. The blog article (Starbucks Exploring) thinks it's the only rainbow petroglyph in Joshua Tree National Park, and I agree. It's not going to win any awards for being big and splashy, but its unusual shap makes it special.
 
Roger spots something he calls "buttcrack boulder." I dutifully pose next to it.
 
Hello there! I see two eyes, and maybe a nose and mouth?
 
A favorite photo of mine because I can vividly remember the golden light and the feeling of having completed a very special hike. Finding both quartz buttes, along with the "crab" pictograph and the rainbow petroglyph totally surpassed my expectations! 
 
We had decided to stop following the wash (which was getting choked off with rocks and cats claw) and instead follow this ridge back toward the car. It was quickly getting dark, but at one point I looked down and spotted a nice pottery sherd! I think it was Roger who asked where I found it, and upon showing him I spotted a couple more! 
Up on this narrow ridge was a totally unexpected place to find Native American pottery sherds. It's much to narrow and exposed to be a habitation site. My theory is they used this ridge, much like Mitch, Roger and I were today, to travel through the area. In their travels they dropped a pot, and all these many years later, I found some of the remains. Who knows, it might have even been an olla carrying water from the wash below that dropped and broke. It was already getting dark so we didn't have time to continue looking for more sherds or other clues. I put the pottery sherds back exactly as I found them and we moved on.
 
Last photo of the day. An example of how great digital cameras are these days. This was taken well after sunset, and it was much darker than the photo shows. I cranked up the ISO to 1600 to get this shot, and it doesn't even look grainy or blurry. Pretty amazing! Seeing the steep rocks on either side of the wash told us we were nearly back to the car. What a great hike this has been!
 
 If you stuck with me all the way to the end, THANK YOU!
Linking with Skywatch Friday.
Thanks for stopping by!


42 comments:

  1. The pic with the two eyes looks like an old timey doll head to me. One of the creepy ones. That looks like it was a great hike.

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  2. ...my friend, you and I live in two different worlds. You have such gorgeous skies to share has I look out at my ice coated world with overcast skies. In the Adirondacks we have our share of buttcrack boulder too. Thanks for taking me along for the tour. Take carce and stay well.

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  3. Quartz butte does have that unique appearance and it is such a good find in this national park.

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  4. Dearest Peter,
    That indeed was a very special hike!
    Great photos by the way.
    Those quartz buttes are stunning and buttcrack boulder is a special one...
    Hugs,
    Mariette

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  5. Absolutely amazing photos. What an incredible hike.

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  6. Lots of interesting rock formations and Roger does look sunburned. However, Oscar Meyers wins the prize for weird. I hear there are only six of these mobiles around. Thanks as always for sharing your wonderful world. :)

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  7. Another fun adventure - I like the quartz buttes

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  8. This certainly was a great hike! I loved seeing quartz fields glistening in the sun and all the different cacti in your photos. The petroglyphs were interesting. The "butt rock" was funny and, yes, pretty realistic....lol

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  9. What a special hike this is with the quartz buttes, the rainbow petroglyph ~ and great photos ~ thanks, ~ the stone work is fascinating also ~ Wow!

    Wishing you good health, laughter and love in your days,
    A ShutterBug Explores,
    aka (A Creative Harbor)

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  10. Exploration and discovery are two of the great things about hiking. Someday I'll have to visit Joshua Tree NP. It looks amazing.

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  11. That rock with the eyes looks like a sad puppy to me. I was touched by your interest in my medical issues. I was happy to see that you read my blog every now and then. We both love the desert. I wanted to clarify that I didn't say the medicine made my blood sugars go high, I said it lowered my estrogen levels, which can cause blood sugars to go high in Type 1 diabetics. Probably Type 2 diabetics as well I'm not familiar with that though, since I have Type 1. I'm having a very difficult time controlling my diabetes and am looking forward to talking to my oncologist about this. And my diabetes team.

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  12. Very interesting rock formations you´ve found yet again. And great photography all around.

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  13. Wow, quartz buttes are something I was not expecting but wow, what a thing. I am used to little pieces of quartz, not a whole butte of them.
    Excellent photography, great navigational skills across the snake heaven of desert you traversed and great eyes for the pictographs you found. That crab is not a crab, any Okie knows that it is a tick.

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  14. Very interesting hike with nice blue sky. Great photos of the rock formations, the buttcrack boulder made me laugh!

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  15. I love those rocks! Gorgeous photography.

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  16. An exciting journey. Great your have wonderful partners. Your quest is motivating! Good that your camera is fine with ISO1600. Mine looks grainier even at 800

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  17. The rock person is really a child with fingers from both hands stuck in his mouth. A fine post, my friend.

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  18. The environment makes the picture. Beautiful again with very nice rock formations that can be interpreted in different ways. Can't get enough of it.

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  19. Yep a stunning hike is about all I can say. To see those rock formations in Quartz is something you would never get here in the UK, more likely to see chalk. Love the last two rocks, you did not stick you head in the Buttock rock or hold your nose as you stood by it

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  20. Great tour with you of the rocks and formation. Love the desert photos that you do. By the way. the Wiener mobile has been in the news lately, have you seen the problem it has had?

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  21. More great stuff--well, except for the weenie mobile (I'll have that bloody song stuck in my head for a week!). Thanks for doing all the adventuring I wish I could do. Right now I'm sick of north Texas clay soil, and long for lots and lots and lots of sand.

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  22. Thanks for letting us go on this amazing hike with you, I love the photos!

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  23. What a place! Thanks for sharing your hike with us, I've really enjoyed it, albeit from the comfort of my chair!

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  24. Great shots of a fascinating place! I’m glad you found the rainbow petroglyph. How exciting!

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  25. Great scenes, great stories, great finds, great rocks - just great. And yes, I remember the Weinermobile, although I never saw it in person.

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  26. Rainbow petroglyph, quartz, but my favorite was the Oscar Meyer boulder. I thought it looked like a huge turtle see the eye? Enjoyed your adventure from beginning to end. See you next week.

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  27. Enjoyed the fun car
    Very beautiful album of many wonderful pictures

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  28. Rockfish looks like hey beverage farm goldfish snack! Very enjoyable post.

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  29. WOW!!! The nature around you is so amazing and so otherworldly (for me!) and so, so very beautiful. Visiting your blog is always like a small vacation!

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  30. Wow, what an adventure! You really had some excellent finds beyond what you were seeking. It was so interesting that you were able to pick this place out on Google Earth. We have a small (3x 4 ft) white quarts outcropping in the granite ledge just outside our window.

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  31. What an awesome hike the three of you had. Such fun! Thanks for writing about your trip, as I really enjoyed reading about it :)

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  32. I'm used to seeing occasional quartz rocks in some of the more rocky parts of the UK, but I've never seen such an outcropping of quartz. And we certainly don't have any pictographs! That was a special hike to be allowed to see through your lens.

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  33. Excellent hike! Congrats on finding the quartz buttes! The scenery and rock formations are fantastic as usual. The pictograph was a nice find!

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  34. The strange rock formation, to me, looks like either a snake head emerging from the ground, or a sock hand puppet! I certainly do remember the wiener mobile! My youngest kids saw it several times at the county fair and got little plastic wiener mobile whistles. I think my son still has his.

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  35. Your photos are just breathtaking! So cool to find the buttes you were searching for and the petroglyphs. I love the desert. Since the last time I read your blog, I have since moved from near Lake Mead in Henderson, NV to the Blue Ridge Mountains of NC. I love where I am, but miss the desert too. Funny how the mind works. Oh well, I’ll see it through your blog.

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  36. The steep sides along the path would be fun to walk along. The horizon views with the rock formations are a fascinating scene. And you found petroglyphs and pottery shards! You have a good eye.

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  37. Beautiful photos and all that quartz. What a find. The sky in your photos is just amazing. Another great hike.

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