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I turn around for a view back down to Cima while climbing up Cima Road

03619-cima-road.jpg I'm really hungry, so I get out my pot and propane burner, but decide to take sunset photos instead of cooking supper right awayThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI'm really hungry, so I get out my pot and propane burner, but decide to take sunset photos instead of cooking supper right awayThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI'm really hungry, so I get out my pot and propane burner, but decide to take sunset photos instead of cooking supper right awayThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI'm really hungry, so I get out my pot and propane burner, but decide to take sunset photos instead of cooking supper right awayThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI'm really hungry, so I get out my pot and propane burner, but decide to take sunset photos instead of cooking supper right awayThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitors

Panoramic views of the Mid Hills from here. Eagle Rocks, where I hiked last week, is the small pointy, light-grey outcrop on top of the hills.

This photo makes the Cima area below look like a valley, when it's really a pass. To the left, the terrain drops slowly down to Ivanpah Valley (I just came up that way). To the right, the land slopes down into the Kelso Valley, where I spent the first two nights of this trip.