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Home / Mojave Preserve and Desert bikepacking trips / 2010, Mojave National Preserve / Day 4: Pinto Mountain day hike, Mojave National Preserve /

Beyond the juniper campsite, the shortcut road to Cedar Canyon Road fades out somewhat due to lack of use

4143-ahortcut-road.jpg This is another area of the Mid Hills that was partially burned, but not completely, during the 2005 brush firesThumbnailsOff-camber stretches of the shortcut road toward Pinto Mountain make it unusable by low-clearance vehiclesThis is another area of the Mid Hills that was partially burned, but not completely, during the 2005 brush firesThumbnailsOff-camber stretches of the shortcut road toward Pinto Mountain make it unusable by low-clearance vehiclesThis is another area of the Mid Hills that was partially burned, but not completely, during the 2005 brush firesThumbnailsOff-camber stretches of the shortcut road toward Pinto Mountain make it unusable by low-clearance vehiclesThis is another area of the Mid Hills that was partially burned, but not completely, during the 2005 brush firesThumbnailsOff-camber stretches of the shortcut road toward Pinto Mountain make it unusable by low-clearance vehiclesThis is another area of the Mid Hills that was partially burned, but not completely, during the 2005 brush firesThumbnailsOff-camber stretches of the shortcut road toward Pinto Mountain make it unusable by low-clearance vehicles

Many orange desert mallow flowers add colour to the landscape. The flowers are numerous, but small, which means that they are more visible to the human eye than a camera lens.