In Joshua Tree

In Joshua Tree Local guide to Joshua Tree National Park and the desert towns around it.

We’re still in spring, but summer is already whispering.Soon, monsoon clouds will gather over Joshua Tree, the light wil...
05/31/2026

We’re still in spring, but summer is already whispering.

Soon, monsoon clouds will gather over Joshua Tree, the light will turn silver, and the desert will release one of its most unforgettable scents: wet creosote after rain.

It’s hard to explain until you’ve experienced it.

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Your first good coffee stop on the way to Joshua Tree. recently opened in Yucca Valley, right off Highway 62 as you ente...
05/29/2026

Your first good coffee stop on the way to Joshua Tree.

recently opened in Yucca Valley, right off Highway 62 as you enter town on the way to Joshua Tree National Park. It’s a simple, beautiful stop for coffee, art, and, if you time it right, donuts from local .

For visitors driving in from Los Angeles, Palm Springs, or anywhere west of the park, this is an easy place to pause before continuing deeper into the desert.

Save this one for your next desert morning.

Matson Ambroise Coffee + Art
55386 Twentynine Palms Highway, Yucca Valley
Thursday — Monday, 8 a.m. — 2 p.m.

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The Monument House feels like a portal hiding in plain sight.Designed by architect Josh Schweitzer and completed in 1990...
05/21/2026

The Monument House feels like a portal hiding in plain sight.

Designed by architect Josh Schweitzer and completed in 1990, this geometric desert retreat sits just outside Joshua Tree National Park, tucked among boulders like it was always meant to be here. It’s bold and surprisingly harmonious with the landscape.

Yes, you can actually stay here. The Monument House is available to book through , for anyone who wants to experience Joshua Tree through architecture as much as nature.

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Most visitors come to Joshua Tree for the park.Locals know another truth: the desert has its own rituals, and the swap m...
05/15/2026

Most visitors come to Joshua Tree for the park.

Locals know another truth: the desert has its own rituals, and the swap meet is one of them.

It’s not curated or polished. It’s a weekly pulse check… a place where you can find something you didn’t know you needed, and leave with a story, not just an object.

If you want to experience Joshua Tree like you actually arrived, put this on your weekend list.

Save this for your trip planning, and send it to the friend who loves a good treasure hunt.

Full story on In Joshua Tree. Link in bio.

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04/22/2026

Joshua Tree National Park has gotten more popular for a reason. Not because the desert changed. Because people did.

We are craving what nature gives back. Silence that resets the nervous system. Dark skies that make you feel small in the best way. Flora and fauna that remind you everything is connected, even when it looks empty.

On Earth Day, let this be the reminder. If Joshua Tree has ever given you something, give something back. Stay on trail. Pack out what you pack in. Protect the dark, and respect the life that makes this place what it is.

Save this for your next visit, and share it with your Joshua Tree person.

Skull Rock isn’t the destination. It’s the trailhead. The Jumbo Rocks loop behind it is where the park opens up.
04/19/2026

Skull Rock isn’t the destination. It’s the trailhead. The Jumbo Rocks loop behind it is where the park opens up.

04/14/2026

60 miles south of Joshua Tree National Park’s South Entrance, and about 60 miles from Coachella is one of the most otherworldly places in the California desert.

Salvation Mountain is a hand-built monument of color and devotion, created by Leonard Knight, rising out of a landscape most people assume is empty. Up close, it feels impossible. Like a scene you were not supposed to find unless you took the side road.

If you are in the desert this week for the festival, or planning a Joshua Tree trip soon, save this now. It is the kind of stop that turns a normal weekend into a story.

Send this to your trip group, and pick one person who will actually make sure you go.

Video by: Paul Martinez

Spring is when Joshua Tree feels most alive.It is also when the park is busiest. If you show up expecting a quiet stroll...
04/05/2026

Spring is when Joshua Tree feels most alive.

It is also when the park is busiest. If you show up expecting a quiet stroll and a guaranteed superbloom, you might leave frustrated.

This local guide covers what spring is actually like in Joshua Tree National Park, including realistic wildflower expectations, crowd tips, best times to enter, and how to enjoy the season with less stress and more intention.

If you are planning a spring visit, save this now. You will thank yourself later.

https://www.injoshuatree.com/park-journal/spring-wildflowers-joshua-tree-national-park

Spring equinox in the desert doesn’t arrive with a grand entrance. It shows up in small, unmistakable signals, like ocot...
03/20/2026

Spring equinox in the desert doesn’t arrive with a grand entrance. It shows up in small, unmistakable signals, like ocotillo lighting up with crimson blooms.

Ocotillo may look like it’s made of thorns, but it’s built for timing. After rain, it can leaf out quickly, then drop those leaves again when conditions turn dry. And when it flowers, it becomes a bright, living beacon for pollinators, especially hummingbirds, moving through the season like clockwork.

Today is a threshold. More light. More movement. More life beginning to stir.

Take a breath, look closer, and let the desert set your pace.

Save this for your next spring visit, and if you spot an ocotillo in bloom, take a moment to watch who shows up.

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In honor of Ansel Adams’ birthday, February 20, 1902, here are some Joshua Tree photographs in black and white as a smal...
02/21/2026

In honor of Ansel Adams’ birthday, February 20, 1902, here are some Joshua Tree photographs in black and white as a small nod to his timeless eye. Modern landscape photography owes a real debt to its predecessors, and to the people who used the medium to help others see what was worth protecting.

In the mid-19th century, photography quickly became more than documentation. It was persuasion. It captured the drama of geology and light, and helped translate “remote” places into something the public could feel connected to.

Adams carried that legacy forward. His images of America’s national parks did more than celebrate beauty. They shaped how people understood the land, and why it deserved preservation, stewardship, and care through the National Park Service.

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Joshua Tree, CA
92252

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https://www.injoshuatree.com/park-journal/spring-wildflowers-joshua-tree-national-park, h

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