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Home / Mojave Preserve and Desert bikepacking trips / Fall 2010: Route 66 and Kelso Dunes Wilderness Bicycle Camping / Day 2: Ludlow to Bristol Mountains foothills by bicycle /

This old house in old Ludlow on Route 66 is almost hidden by the surrounding athel trees, presumably planted as a wind break

6309-ludlow-house.jpg Old Ludlow's commercial strip consists of three buildings today, all abandonedThumbnailsAfter my brief tour around old Ludlow, I stop at the gas station store to pick up a couple more bottles of waterOld Ludlow's commercial strip consists of three buildings today, all abandonedThumbnailsAfter my brief tour around old Ludlow, I stop at the gas station store to pick up a couple more bottles of waterOld Ludlow's commercial strip consists of three buildings today, all abandonedThumbnailsAfter my brief tour around old Ludlow, I stop at the gas station store to pick up a couple more bottles of waterOld Ludlow's commercial strip consists of three buildings today, all abandonedThumbnailsAfter my brief tour around old Ludlow, I stop at the gas station store to pick up a couple more bottles of waterOld Ludlow's commercial strip consists of three buildings today, all abandonedThumbnailsAfter my brief tour around old Ludlow, I stop at the gas station store to pick up a couple more bottles of water

Here's another 1900-1920's house with hipped roof and front porch of the simple neoclassical style that was popular then. The vertical board-and-batten exterior was also common during that era.