More Stars than Hollywood

Astronomers setting up one of the telescopes and waiting for the setting sun to be replaced by millions of stars.

Visitors to the Preserve had a great time at our June Star Party, with great food, company, and stars shining overheard.  Our friends at the Old Town Pasadena Sidewalk Astronomers brought some high-powered telescopes with which visitors had the chance to see the features of planets in our solar system, and far away galaxies. But the view with the naked eye is also impressive, especially as the Milky Way comes into view.  This is a special treat because nearly one-third of the world's population does not have a regular opportunity to see the Milky Way because of light pollution, according to a study.

Even deep in the Mojave, sometimes the sky does not cooperate.  We had cancelled a prior Star Party attempt because of a severe weather forecast.  But some visitors were not deterred.  Although the organized event was cancelled, they showed up and set up their tents.  Mother Nature rewarded them when the clouds broke later that night and revealed the Milky Way. But even when clouds linger a night in the Mojave is a wonderful experience.  Distant thunder, the song of a coyote, the hoot of an owl, the flutter of bats and specialized moths. The Mojave is alive at night.

If you want to experience this, stay tuned. We are planning another Star Party for the fall.

Castle Mountains Gain Permanent Protection

The Conservancy applaud's President Obama's designation in February of the Castle Mountains as a National Monument to be managed by the National Park Service.   Totalling nearly 21,000 acres, the Monument neighbors the Mojave National Preserve and protects a Joshua tree-studded landscape punctuated by the rugged Castle Mountains. 

But it is not just the strange looking Joshua trees that make this place special.  Botanists have identified 35 native grass species that make up the understory beneath the Joshua trees, a unique ecosystem in the Mojave that once hosted pronghorn antelope before they were locally wiped out in the early 1900s. One day the antelope may once again roam the area.  The Castle Mountains currently host mountain lions, bighorn sheep golden eagles, and a multitude of other wildlife.

As early as the 1980s desert enthusiasts wanted to include the area in what was to become the Mojave National Preserve. But by the time Congress finally passed legislation in 1994 establishing the Preserve, the Castle Mountains had been excluded from the conservation designation out of deference to a gold mine operator.

The gold mine will still be allowed to continue operations in the new Monument, but the mining lands will become part of the Monument once the mine is decommissioned.

The Castle Mountains can be accessed from Nevada via Walking Box Ranch Road off of Nevada State Rd 164 (Nipton Road) or from several unnamed dirt roads off of Lanfair Road in the Mojave National Preserve.