Wee Thump East Rd at turn to El Dorado Wagon Rd Trailhead (view N) |
Overview
The El Dorado Wagon Road Trail is a 3.0-mile one-way hike that follows an old wagon road that once connected Searchlight and Nipton. The trail parallels Highway 164, but at a respectable distance, as it runs through a forest of Joshua Trees on nearly level terrain inside the southern boundary of Wee Thump Joshua Tree Wilderness Area.
Parts of the trail are easy to follow, but other parts are overgrown with shrubs and bunchgrasses, making route-finding a bit challenging. Because this trail follows the trace of an old wagon road, it generally runs straight, so when the trail is faint, hikers should assume that it continues straight from the last more obvious bit of trail.
This is a point-to-point trail that runs between two trailheads. As such, hikers can walk in either direction, but here the trail is described as running westward. With two vehicles, hikers can walk the trail point-to-point. Otherwise, hikers can walk all the way out and back, making a 6-mile route, or just walk part way out, turn around, and walk back making for a shorter route.
Link to map. |
El Dorado Wagon Rd Trailhead (view W from Wee Thump East Rd) |
Watch Out
Other than the standard warnings about hiking in the desert, ... this is a fairly safe hike. There are many cactus and other things with sharp points, so be careful walking around.
While hiking, please respect the land and the other people out there, and try to Leave No Trace of your passage. This hike goes into Wilderness, so pay particular attention to respecting the land. This hike is fairly long, so be sure to bring the 10 Essentials. Cell phones might work, but don't count on it. Hikes in serous trouble can walk south to the highway.
This is a nice, easy trail in a scenic area, but louder vehicles on the highway can be heard, so it isn't the purest of wilderness experiences.
|
El Dorado Wagon Road Trailhead (view NW) |
Getting to the Trailhead
This hike is located in the Wee Thump Joshua Tree Wilderness Area, about 1 hour south of Las Vegas, just west of Searchlight.
From town, drive south on Highway 95 to Searchlight. In downtown Searchlight, turn right onto Highway 164 (Joshua Tree Highway) and drive west for 8.2 miles to Wee Thump East Road. Turn right and drive north on Wee Thump East Road for 0.5 miles to a pullout on the left: The Wagon Road Trailhead. Park here; this is the trailhead. |
Start of El Dorado Wagon Road Trail (view NW) |
The Hike
From the Wagon Road Trailhead (Table 1, Waypoint 01), the trail runs northwest past a trailhead sign with a map following the old wagon road through the Upper Sonoran (Mojave Desert Scrub) life zone, which generally is characterized by Joshua trees mixed with creosote bush and lots of other shrub species, and wildflowers in the spring. In this area, however, the understory is mainly composed of bunchgrass species. There are 12 species of grasses in this area. Big Galleta, Bush Muhly (Muhlenbergia porteri), and Fluffgrass are most common, and fortunately, there are few invasive grasses here. Also, keep an eye out for Curve-billed Thrashers and Gilded Flickers, in Nevada found only in this area.
Starting out, one of the largest Joshua Trees along the trail is encountered only 50 yards out, and for people only wanting a petite adventure into a Wilderness Area, there is a nice sitting log (downed Joshua Tree), only 100 yards out (Wpt. 02). There are only three such convenient places to sit and rest along the trail, so use them if you've got them. |
Approaching the first sitting log (view NW) |
In the first 300 yards of trail, the trail keeps curving slightly to the right to run north-northwest, but then it gently bends left to run nearly straight west-northwest. At about 0.28 miles out, the trail passes the second downed Joshua Tree (Wpt. 03), which again, makes a nice place to sit and experience the wilderness area.
About 170 yards past the second downed Joshua Tree, the trail passes between two curious Joshua Trees. In this area, we have Eastern Joshua Trees, recently determined to be a species different from Western Joshua Trees. Western Joshua Trees live in places like Joshua Tree National Park and up along the eastern Sierra region and western Nevada (distribution map). The two species are recognized by several characteristics, but perhaps the easiest is the growth form: Western Joshua Trees grow tall like trees with a trunk, while Eastern Joshua Trees are shorter and more shrub-like, branching closer to the ground. Here, however, we have a tree-like one and a shrub-like one growing side by side. As they say, the plants don't read our research articles. |
First sitting log (view N from the trail) |
At about 0.63 miles out, the trail again bends gently left to run due west, and at about 0.70 miles out, passes a pricklypear cactus on the left. This sprawling, long-spined cactus is a Tulip Pricklypear. During winter, pricklypear often turn red.
At about 0.82 miles out, passes the third downed Joshua Tree (Wpt. 04) near the trail. This is the last nice place to sit and relax before reaching the end of the trail (2.2 miles ahead where there is no convenient sitting).
Just past this third downed Joshua Tree, hikers will notice the first of the Banana Yuccas growing along the trail. This is a higher-elevation species, and more will be seen up the trail. There seem to be few of our lower-elevation Mojave Yucca in this area, but more of them will be seen up the trail too. The area also becomes thick with buckhorn cholla, which make for a minor hiking hazard. |
Initially, the old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
At about 0.9 miles out, the trail bends lightly left to run nearly straight in a southwesterly direction. By about 1.36 miles out, the trail makes its closest approach to Highway 164, and larger vehicles might be seen through the Joshua Trees some 200 yards distant. From that point, the trail bends gently right to run northwest.
In this area, the trail becomes a bit more faint and overgrown with bunchgrasses. Some bits of trail are more obvious, but others are not, and this part of the trail gets little foot traffic. Hikers should keep in mind that the trail generally runs straight, so when one bit if trail is found, hikers can continues walking in the same direction to find the next bit. There are more obvious parts than obscure parts, but the obscure parts always feel a bit disorienting.
At about 1.8 miles out, the trail bends gently to run due west, and in this area, the trail become more obscure than before where hikers need to connect the dots of trail bits.
At about 2.36 miles out, the trail passes Searchlight Pricklypear (Opuntia curvispina) growing on the edge of the trail, which is rare and found only in the area around Searchlight. |
Second sitting log along the trail (view NW) |
At about 2.54 miles out, now heading northwest, the trail encounters the first wash crossing (Wpt. 05) for the entire hike. The trail on both sides of the wash are obscure, and it would be easy to turn left following the wash. But as before, the trail always goes straight, so hikers should cross the wash continue in the same direction as they entered it. Shortly, hikers will find another bit of obvious trail.
About 40 yards after the first wash, the trail become obscure and crosses a second wash at an oblique angle (Wpt. 06 to Wpt. 07). Where the trail starts down into the wash (Wpt. 06), hikers can look ahead and see the trail in the distance, still going generally straight.
After crossing the wash, the trail climbs onto higher ground, and here the rocky soil is different from what has been see so far. While previous soil conditions support dense stands of bunchgrasses, here the soil supports a dense stand of Blackbrush. Blackbrush is a middle-elevation, very slow growing species, and a dense stand like this suggests the area has not burned in some 500 years. |
Second sitting log (view N from the trail) |
Because the blackbrush grows so slowly, and because the soils here don't support dense stands of grasses, the trail is once again easy to follow. The trail bends gentle to run west, then bends gently again to runs southwest and gradually gets closer to the highway. Eventually, the backside of the trailhead sign comes into view, and shortly thereafter, the trail bends hard to the left (Wpt. 08). Two carsonite signs mark this bend because the old wagon road continues straight, but hikers need to turn left into the bushes.
Now heading due south, the trail is obvious, but shortly it becomes more obscure. None the less, the trailhead sign is visible ahead. The trail drops into a broad, sandy wash and runs out towards the trailhead sign. Adjacent to the sign, a gap in the highway fence permits entry into the Sprint of Wilderness Trailhead (Wpt. 09) parking area along Highway 164. |
|
The old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
The old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
Another, not so great, sitting log along the trail (view NW) |
Tree-like one and shrub-like Eastern Joshua Trees |
The trail runs through a grassland with Joshua Trees (view NW) |
The trail runs through a grassland with Joshua Trees (view NW) |
|
|
Easy trail with Buckhorn Chollas and a Mojave Yucca |
Tulip or Brown-spined Pricklypear |
Easy trail with more Buckhorn Chollas |
Trail approaching the third, and last sitting log (view NW) |
Third sitting log (view N from trail) |
For hikers heading east, this is the first sitting log (view NE) |
Grand views in the Wilderness Area (view NE) |
Grand views in the Wilderness Area (view E) |
The old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
The old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
The old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
The old wagon road trail is easy to follow (view NW) |
The old wagon road trail becomes more obscure (view NW) |
At closest point, Highway 164 is visible from the trail (view SW) |
At closest point, Highway 164 is visible from the trail (zoom) |
A tractor-trailer is visible on the highway |
The old wagon road continues, but remains obscure (view NW) |
The old wagon road continues, and most is obvious (view NW) |
The old wagon road continues, and most is obvious (view NW) |
The old wagon road continues, and most is obvious (view NW) |
The old wagon road continues, and most is obvious (view NW) |
The old wagon road sometimes is carpeted with Fluffgrass (view NW) |
Dense stands of Big Galleta cover the trail (view NW) |
Sometimes Joshua Trees block the view of the trail |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is more obvious |
Sometimes the trail is more obvious |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is more obvious |
Sometimes the trail is more obvious |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is more obvious |
Searchlight Pricklypear, a rare species |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
Sometimes the trail is more obvious |
Sometimes the trail is less obvious |
The trail crosses the first wash (don't turn left up the wash) |
The trail crosses out of the first wash |
The trail becomes more obvious after the wash |
The obscure trail enters the second wash and continues across |
Climbing out of the second wash |
Rocky soil supports a large stand of Blackbrush |
On higher ground, the trail is obvious |
|
|
The Fluffgrass can't obscure the trail here |
More buckhorn cholla along the trail |
Looking left, the trailhead sign comes into view |
Looking left, the trailhead sign comes into view (zoom) |
Soon, the trail reaches two carsonite signs |
At the signs, the trial turns left, off the old wagon road |
Initially, the trail south is quite obvious, but becomes obscure |
At edge of broad wash, trailhead sign is visible again |
Crossing wash towards trailhead sign |
Trail passes through gap in the fence to enter trailhead parking |
|