Adventure

EV Challenge: To Burro Schmidt’s Tunnel

Range anxiety is the boogie man if you want to roadtrip in an electric vehicle. Finding fast chargers along your route can be a kind of Easter egg hunt. And when you do find them they’re often occupied or out-of-order. I took my Ford F-150 Lightning out to Pioneertown without too much effort. I found

A large statue of Jesus on a desert hillside, with a jet aircraft flying over, leaving a vapor trail

A Jesus Theme Park on the Way to Joshua Tree

When I first learned about Desert Christ Park in Weird California, I put it on my bucket list because it seemed like good fodder for a snarky blog post. But instead, I found the experience strangely moving. Just about two hours outside of Los Angeles and half an hour before you reach Joshua Tree National

A deserted street in an old western town

Pioneertown: One of the Last of the Great Movie Ranches

About two hours outside of Los Angeles is a strange landscape that feels worlds away from anywhere you’ve ever been. The hills are populated with scraggly ocotillo and creosote bush…and massive piles of boulders. If you were going to film a movie like Of Dust and Bones, this would be your place. But when you

Two kayakers paddling in a placid bay, a sandstone cliff rising sharply at one side of the bay with a modern house at the top of the cliff.

Kayaking in Back Bay, Newport Beach

This past week I took my blow-up kayak down to Newport Beach and went for a paddle in the Back Bay. It’s something I’ve wanted to do for over 40 years. It’s a large inland bay with a marshy wetlands and little rivulets snaking through it. The nice thing about this paddle is that right

A young man is working in a fruit stand shaped like a banana. Outside is another man on a Segway scooter.

Ford F-150 Lightning First Run – to the Banana Stand!

Let’s say that you suddenly had a high-tech, all-electric pickup truck at your command and no nearby 10 year olds to help you figure out how the gizmos work? Where would you go on your maiden voyage? For me, that’s a no-brainer. I’m going to the Banana Stand. Why? Because that’s where the money is.

Sections of broken concrete roadway, heavily graffitied, with an ocean view and radiating clouds

Sunken City, Point Fermin, California

Sunken City is a section of parkway just east of Point Fermin Park in San Pedro that nature has reclaimed for its own. In the early 1920s Sunken City was a collection of high-end beach bungalows, a section of Paseo Del Mar Street and a charming walking trail very similar to the Cliff Drive section

A large camphor tree in a small park, with Santa Claus and other Christmas decorations below.

The Hay Tree, Paramount, California

The Hay Tree is a 120 year old camphor tree where local dairymen from Hynes and Clearwater would bid on hay back in the first part of the 20th century. I don’t think there’s any more significance to the tree beyond a couple guys saying, “hey, let’s meet under that big tree over there.” I

A small child making an adventure of walking across a patio, shadow trailing behind

2024: the Year of Microadventure

Alistair Humphreys, author and adventurer, tells a story about the moment he realized that his galavanting around the world was taking a toll on his family life. If he wanted to be present in the life of his two sons and his wife, he would have to give up his epic adventure to the South

A man and two women backpacking in Sespe Creek where there is no trail

Adventure

Wild Rye has gone through a couple of phases, including a stint as a sort of adventure blog. There were trail notes, gear reviews, and survival tips. Well, Wild Rye isn’t really an adventure blog now. But some of these posts are still informative and if you’ve gotten this far, by all means take a

thomas fire trail closures

Thomas Fire Trail Closures

NOTE: This post was written in 2018. Some trails have been reopened. Others are closed because of 2023’s high rainfall. To find out more about trail closures in the Los Padres Forest, visit the Los Padres Forest Trail Association’s News link. Along with the loss of life and property caused by 2017’s Thomas Fire, there

off-roading in a sedan

No Jeep? No Problem. How to Take Any Car Off-Roading

So you want to venture into the wilderness but you don’t want to fork out the dough to build an ultimate adventure rig? No problemo. Outside Magazine tips you to what you need to venture off the beaten path no matter what kind of car you’re driving. At the top of their list is traction

How Robots Might Change the Experience of Off-Roading

A road trip is the ultimate journey into the unexplored territory of one’s soul. FastCo Design asks the question “how will that change when cars drive themselves?” Honda invited creative director Morihiro Harano to highlight the company’s autonomous driving tech by talking about his love for exploration: “My inspiration for this project came from a

Jeep Trails: Ballinger Canyon (part II)

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Despite drought conditions this year, the Shrubby Brushweed plants are covered with yellow flowers in Ballinger Canyon. Other flowers blooming in the canyon are Hareweed, Phacelia, and Bush Lupine. It’s a different story in Quatal Canyon to the south where hardly any wildflowers are blooming at all. On this trip to the Ballinger OHV park

Jeep Trails: Big Caliente

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The drive to Big Caliente isn’t challenging enough to be a good Jeep trail, and it isn’t smooth enough to be pleasant. But when you finally make it to the floor of Blue Canyon, you feel like the time was worth it. The canyon is a large meadow area with sycamore and oak with the

Day Hike: Mount Cleff Ridge Wildwood Park

White-tailed Kites are fairly common around here. You often see them hunting in freeway medians. They have a characteristic way of hovering in one spot like…well, like a kite. I saw this fellow hovering at the base of the Mount Cleff Ridge in Wildwood Park. Slowly, deliberately the kite dropped ten feet, fifteen, feet, and