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03619-cima-road.jpg I get back on the 10-ton bike and start riding up to the top of the Cima Dome hillThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI get back on the 10-ton bike and start riding up to the top of the Cima Dome hillThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI get back on the 10-ton bike and start riding up to the top of the Cima Dome hillThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI get back on the 10-ton bike and start riding up to the top of the Cima Dome hillThumbnailsA little further up Cima Road is the Kessler Springs Ranch property, which is inhabited and off-limits to Preserve visitorsI get back on the 10-ton bike and start riding up to the top of the Cima Dome hillThumbnailsA 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.