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Cedar Canyon Road rises through a healthy joshua tree forest, with Cima Dome still in the background when I look behind me

3983-cima-dome.jpg Cedar Canyon Road's famous "pavement ends" sign, Mojave National PreserveThumbnailsOnce Cedar Canyon Road enters the Mid Hills, it drops down into Cedar Wash for a couple of milesCedar Canyon Road's famous "pavement ends" sign, Mojave National PreserveThumbnailsOnce Cedar Canyon Road enters the Mid Hills, it drops down into Cedar Wash for a couple of milesCedar Canyon Road's famous "pavement ends" sign, Mojave National PreserveThumbnailsOnce Cedar Canyon Road enters the Mid Hills, it drops down into Cedar Wash for a couple of milesCedar Canyon Road's famous "pavement ends" sign, Mojave National PreserveThumbnailsOnce Cedar Canyon Road enters the Mid Hills, it drops down into Cedar Wash for a couple of milesCedar Canyon Road's famous "pavement ends" sign, Mojave National PreserveThumbnailsOnce Cedar Canyon Road enters the Mid Hills, it drops down into Cedar Wash for a couple of miles

Unfortunately, most of the joshua trees on the opposite side of the road (not visible here) were burned during Mojave National Preserve's brush fires of 2005. The old Mojave Road is still visible climbing up the far-away hill.