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“Discover the life you were meant to live”

“Good company in a journey makes the way seem shorter” — Izaak Walton

The Southwest 4×4 Tours Adventures

 

2 or 3 days in Mojave

See the beautiful Mojave Desert with a dozen historical stops.  Both geographical and historic wonders will capture your attention on every mile of this amazing Southwestern desert drive.  We’ll visit abandon towns, deserted mines, historical forts. We’ll see ancient, Indian petroglyphs, we’ll climb into underground lava tubes, make a water crossing through the Mojave River and much more.

 

 

3 days in Death Valley

See the amazing Death Valley with many unbelievable stops.  Some of these stops are Badwater Basin,  Furnace Creek, Dantes View, Devils Golf Course, Mequite Dunes, The Tacetrack, ghost towns and much more.

2 days on the historic Bradshaw Trail

The Bradshaw trail is fun for the explorer in everyone.  There is so much to see. Its historic and the geology is amazing. This is a great family friendly adventure. After several interesting historic stops this tour ends at in at Mule Mountain where you can visit the Colorado River or hunt for Geodes at the Houser Geode beds.

2 to 4 days on the Arizona Peace Trail

This is one of the most versatile and longest off-roading trail in the US.  Arizona nail it with a 700 mile overland trail that circles within the Southwest State.  It’s very  challenging but yet very satisfying.  We can make an adventure to fit your needs.

3 days in the beautiful California Mountains

This is one of the most scenic tours.  We’ll go mountain hopping from San Diego  through the Inland Empire then ending in Los Angeles Country.  Well see the best of California, camp at the most pristine areas and see the most beautiful views.  We’ll tour the gold trails of the Southwest and follow the same trails as they didn’t a century ago.

Don’t see where you want to go on this list?  That’s okay,  let us know and we’ll put it together.

San Bernadino National Forest

It was a beautiful day with beautiful people on the our weekend 4×4 adventure.  We did some moderate trails and then we served lunch under the shade of tall mountain pines. We are gearing up for the overland season.  Death Valley will be the ready soon.  It’s not too early to put yourself on the list.   Contact us about our all-inclusive package that includes accommodations transportation and a 4×4 Jeep rental.  Yes, a Jeep rental, but you need to sign up soon.

The Death Valley Sailing Stones.

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This photo was taken on an American SW 4×4 tour in 2017

Start at the Furnace Creek visitor center in Death Valley National Park. Drive 50 miles north on pavement, then head west for another 30 miles on bone-rattling gravel roads. During the drive—which will take you four hours if you make good time—you’ll pass sand dunes, a meteor crater, narrow canyons, solitary Joshua trees and virtually no evidence of human existence whatsoever.  But soon after cresting the Cottonwood Mountains, you’ll come upon a landscape so out of place even in this geologically bizarre park that it almost seems artificial.

Racetrack Playa is a dried-up lakebed, ringed by mountains, about 3 miles long and flat as a tabletop. During summer, the cracked floor looks prehistoric under the desert sun; during winter, it’s intermittently covered by sheets of ice and dustings of snow. But the dozens of stones scattered across the playa floor are the most puzzling part of the view. Ranging from the size of a computer mouse to a microwave, each one is followed by a track etched into the dirt, like the contrail behind an airplane. Some tracks are straight and just a few feet long, while others stretch the length of a football field and curve gracefully or jut off at sharp angles.

Staring at these “sailing stones,” you’re torn between a pair of certainties that are simply not compatible: (1) these rocks appear to have moved, propelled by their own volition, across the flat playa floor, and yet (2) rocks don’t just move themselves.

“It’s very quiet out there, and it’s very open, and you tend to have the playa to yourself,” says Alan Van Valkenburg, a park ranger who has worked at Death Valley for nearly 20 years. “And the longer you stay out there, it just takes on this incredible sense of mystery.” The mystery is rooted in an extraordinary fact: No one has ever actually seen the rocks move.

Theories drift towards ice, which can occasionally form on the playa during the winter. During the early 1970s, a pair of geologists—Robert Sharp of Cal Tech and Dwight Carey of UCLA—attempted to settle once and for all whether ice or wind was responsible. The team visited the Racetrack twice a year and meticulously tracked the movements of 30 stones, giving them names (Karen, the largest boulder, was 700 pounds). They planted wooden stakes around the stones, surmising that if ice sheets were responsible, the ice would be frozen to the stakes, thereby immobilizing the stones. But some stones still escaped—and despite frequent visits, the pair never saw one move.

Still, ice remained the primary hypothesis for decades. John Reid, a Hampshire College professor, took student groups to the playa annually from 1987 to 1994 to study the stones. Because of the many parallel tracks, he came away convinced that they were locked together in large ice sheets that were blown by strong winds.

From the Smithsonian
Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/how-do-death-valleys-sailing-stones-move-themselves-across-the-desert-98287558/#pQO6sb0yp7mMHCKu.99
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Read more: https://www.smithsonianmag.com/travel/how-do-death-valleys-sailing-stones-move-themselves-across-the-desert-98287558/#pQO6sb0yp7mMHCKu.99

“There are 2 great days in everyones life, the day we are born and the day we discover why”

Come to the American Southwest and discover yourself.  Take in the forest the mountains and the desert.  See the vast expanse of the land, realize that we are here to explore and discover. The American Southwest covers 45,000 square miles. 45,000 square miles of beauty and wonders.  Our guides made it a life mission to explore and discover  amazing places in the Southwest and we want to share these discoveries with you.  Let us guide you to discover the lands and on this adventure you may discover yourself.

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Discover yourself in the amazing Southwest United States