Thanks dude. I enjoy putting these together to share.
Long road day today. Pulled into Pueblo an hour ago. Crashing at Bill’s as another 2 hours to Denver is not possible now. Too tired.
Getting back to the action. Being that we’ve been in rain since the night before the plan was to head further south. In order to get some miles down we air up at the restaurant. We take pavement down to Quartzsite.
The way down had a little more rain and it cleared for a little bit. Tried to check out the flea market but most was covered up due to the rain. So we gassed up and took off. Before getting out of town Bill wanted to show us a crazy local house built out of huge boat. He delivered.
That town is nutty for stuff like this. Saw this gem at the truck stop.
Sightseeing done we hit the highway south as the rain starts up again. We are heading for the Kofa cabin to meet up with Nick and his son Leland. Nick have us some history of the area the next day. Kofa is an acronym for King of Arizona mine. The land was given to the feds who quickly turned most of it into a wilderness preserve. Meaning most of it is off limits to wheeled travel you could hike in on foot. We are running designated trails that cut through the wilderness area but you can’t travel off the trail by 20 feet or so. Signage is all over to remind you.
The target cabin is a relic of the mining area that has been kept up and available to use by anybody if they want too. We had to redirect due to a dubious road closed sign.
With the rain going we did get to see a rare sight in the desert, a rainbow. Hard to catch but I think I got each side of it.
Some might get bummed out by the crappy weather on vacation but given how rare it is for the area to get rain not many get to see it. The rain just acted light a highlighter making what little vegetation was green and made it more vibrant.
The new trail roughly follows a underground pipeline so it was pretty easy terrain to cover. The trail did wind off and back on the pipeline road and when it did go off usually dipped in and out of dry washes which are fun to run.
The closer we got to the cabin to more clear the sky got. A stiff breeze was blowing but the idea was to use the cabin as the wind break and park out of the wind. Problem was the cabin already had folks parked around it so we backtracked a little way and found a flat patch of dirt to call home for the night. Bill fried up a batch of his famous camp stove fried chicken as the sun went down. This stuff is legendary. I had two pieces. An 8ft bed packs a lot of gear and room for two to sleep comfortably. The mr buddy heater takes the chill off but the main source of heat is a 12v heated sleeping pad on top of the 6” thick memory foam mattress. I tried it out. It’s better than most beds at any house. I’ll be getting some for mine.
Desert sunsets are always spectacular. This one didn’t disappoint.
We tag teamed the dishes and turn in to escape the cold. Storm and I hide out in the Blazer with the furnace keeping it toasty enough to only have to use a 40 degree sleeping bag. Somewhere around 9:00ish we could hear the distinct sound of a 12v oil burner rumble up to our patch of dirt. Neither of us get out to welcome as nobody wanted to let out the heat to do so.
I’m up early as usual but it was too cold before sunrise to hang out. But I did spy the familiar orange patina of Nick’s suburban. It looked good bathed in the early morning light.
With a little more light and warmth I hopped out of the Crawlabago with the dog and my little crawler to kill time until the rest finally roll out of bed.
The volcanic rock around was fun to try to climb.
Once the rest of the troops get up I made some bacon and eggs for burritos.
Breakfast complete we all pack up and follow the lead of Nick who has a lot of experience here. We line up and pull out.
We stopped for lunch by another homestead site. No cabin but there was a horseshoe shape row of cactus planted a long time ago.

Storm was enjoying running around with not a care in the world. Her troubles from the last month are long gone. She was doing a great job honing her skill of mooching food. Nick didn’t fall for it but Leland, Bill, Jenn and I did.
It’s a fun time watching her explore, sniff around and discover new stuff. She found a quick respect for everything that pokes. We only had to pull stuff out of her paws twice.
