| Looking south through Death Valley |
| Pupfish in Kings Pool |
A morning trip into Death Valley National Park became unavoidable. But other treasures of the Mohave Desert proved just as spectacular.
Initially I had no plans to revisit after an epic day from January 2011 took Ben, Jeff, and myself through the park.
| Near Golden Canyon |
How could I top that? I didn’t even try. But when staying less than two hours from Death Valley, I couldn't rationalize skipping it.
This trek to Death Valley came due to closeness - Desert National Wildlife Refuge was less than two hours away and the route bypassed Pahrump, passing no towns of any size.
The drive into Death Valley was still entrancing. Plenty of roadside wildflowers bloomed. The leadup into Death Valley is the Amargosa Valley, which offers its share of stunning vistas. There was no temporary lake this April, although there had been enough water earlier in 2026 for the park service to issue warnings that launching any boat or kayak in the Badwater Basin area was illegal. Mostly I enjoyed seeing the famous Furnace Creek temperature gauge at 70.
| Golden Canyon |
| No Sand People |
| No jawas |
Wherever I could, I tried to soak in the atmosphere. Soak might be the wrong word in such an arid place, but Death Valley feels otherworldly. If you know there to look, Death Valley presents very familiar alien worlds.
I hiked in Golden Canyon, this time knowledgeable about its role in the original Star Wars. Here the Jawas stalked the lost R2D2, eventually immobilizing him with a stun gun and hauling him to their Sandcrawler. The slots along the canyon walls provided hiding spots. It was used in a later Tatooine sequence where Luke and C-3PO find R2 after he wanders off to find Obi-Wan.
| Hearty purple flowers |
I hoped some of the winter/spring superbloom remained in Death Valley, although most plants had gone to seed already.
Those that flowered were mostly hardier desert plants a few inches tall but built to withstand the brutal summer heat striking Death Valley.
Despite its massive size, Death Valley did not compare to the day’s second stop, the largest cluster of natural springs in the Mohave Desert.
Just past the California-Nevada border and the obligatory hotel-casino from another era, a little brown sign marked the dirt roads of Ash Meadows National Wildlife Refuge. Had my friend not alerted me, I would have sped past.
Ash Meadows was off my radar during the 2011 trip through the Amargosa Valley. After learning about its rare treasures, Ash Meadows could not be skipped.
Ash Meadows covers 23,000 acres of alkaline desert and numerous natural springs. It protects more than two dozen plant and animal species found nowhere else. Among the animals, most are small – insects and fish – but it’s a rare level of biodiversity and endemic species.For all its stunning contrast with the dry surrounding desert, Ash Meadows almost went condo. In the early 1980s, developers were already clearing land for houses that would herald the end of the local springs.
The refuge also includes the Longstreet cabin, a stone structure built by Old West figure James Longstreet, and its neighboring spring. A house next to a natural water supply allowed people to live quiet well in this scorching desert.
The first glimpse of Ash Meadows majesty comes at Crystal Spring. A boardwalk loop behind the visitor center travels a one-mile route through salt flats to Crystal Spring, which takes you past the stream running from Crystal Spring.
Reeds cover the spring, making it virtually impossible to spot the rare pupfish that inhabit those waters. That thin ribbon gives life to the desert with a gentle roll of water, but its reed-covered waters cannot prepare you for the natural beauty of Crystal Spring.
Upon seeing the majestic blue waters of Crystal Spring, I can’t imagine how anyone could see this as a place for development. I have always tended to side with nature instead of profits at any cost. But there’s a purity to the water in such an inhospitable place that I could not shake.
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| Devil's Hole lies somewhere up there |
Within Ash Meadows boundaries lies Devil’s Hole, a detached unit of Death Valley, a uniquely deep pool with 90-degree ancient water, an unknown depth, and the ability to register waves when earthquakes occur thousands of miles of away. It has a unique resident in the Devil’s Hole pupfish, which exists only in the pool and is critically endangered.
Due to past trespassers, the overlook of Devil’s Hole has heavy restrictions and does not provide the best views, especially for translucent fish less than an inch long. Although I was tempted, the rough road to Devil’s Hole and limited visibility led me elsewhere.
Fortunately, Ash Meadows has much better viewing spots for rare pupfish found only in its pools. The desert plants around Crystal Spring make fish viewing difficult, but they reveal themselves readily in the springs in Kings Pool at Point of Rock Springs. Surrounded by mesquite trees and many bird species, a short boardwalk runs through this collection of springs.
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| Point of Rock area |
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| King Pool at Point of Rock |
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| Pupfish habitat |
From a hilltop above Point of Rocks, viewing scopes under a canopy allow visitors to scan the Devils Hole Hills for desert bighorn sheep. I didn’t see any, but the pupfish are the chief attraction here.
The pupfish are tiny, barely visible but they come in a variety of colors including green and deep blue. I watched them far longer than I expected as the sunlight caught their scales and occasional stiff winds blurred the King Pool’s surface.
North of Desert NWR and east of Death Valley lies the infamous Area 51, the supposed holding area for UFOs. As a top-secret military installation, Area 51 has no actual visitor center, but a few businesses around the region snapped up that mantel.
Amargosa Valley is not much more than a rest area and a few gas stations, including the so-called Area 51 visitor center, a giant tourist trap with scores of T-shirts and other alien-related souvenirs. Next to the visitor center Alien Cathouse, a strip club that never closes.
I doubt anything extraterrestrial was in a hurry to beam down there. If alien visitors travelled as far as the Death Valley region, hopefully they would have the sense to spend their time at the rare springs at Ash Meadows.
| The unforgettable pupfosh |





































