Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (#  0627)

California Desert


Folder: California
Most of the desert regions of Southeast California, with the exception of items from major areas covered by other albums (e.g., US 395, Death Valley, Coachella Valley (Palm Springs)).

Photos are in order by place name.

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25 Dec 2020

2 favorites

169 visits

Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (# 0627)

These are the first sculptures that I encountered, and I liked them best mainly because of the naturalness of the setting -- but also because there was no one else around :) **** Part of an extensive metal sculpture display scattered across the desert in Borrego Springs, CA. Overall there are 130 sculptures scattered over the open desert; the display was created with an aim of using sculptures in natural settings (often of animals native to the area) to encourage reflection on the environement. The original creator of the display was Dennis Avery, the owner of Galleta Meadows Estate where many of the sculptures are located. The artist was artist/welder (Ricardo Breceda) who is based in Perris, CA. When Avery died, the Under the Sun Foundation took over responsibility for sculptures. The pictures are from a Christmas Day 2020 visit to only a small portion of the display, since there are many pictures, I’ll post them at various times in the future. Sources: underthesunfoundation.org www.desertusa.com/borrego/bs-art.html

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25 Dec 2020

4 favorites

1 comment

179 visits

Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (# 0630)

These are the first sculptures that I encountered, and I liked them best mainly because of the naturalness of the setting -- but also because there was no one else around :) **** Part of an extensive metal sculpture display scattered across the desert in Borrego Springs, CA. Overall there are 130 sculptures scattered over the open desert; the display was created with an aim of using sculptures in natural settings (often of animals native to the area) to encourage reflection on the environement. The original creator of the display was Dennis Avery, the owner of Galleta Meadows Estate where many of the sculptures are located. The artist was artist/welder (Ricardo Breceda) who is based in Perris, CA. When Avery died, the Under the Sun Foundation took over responsibility for sculptures. The pictures are from a Christmas Day 2020 visit to only a small portion of the display, since there are many pictures, I’ll post them at various times in the future. Sources: underthesunfoundation.org www.desertusa.com/borrego/bs-art.html

Location:
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25 Dec 2020

4 favorites

186 visits

Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (# 0628)

Rams at work? **** Part of an extensive metal sculpture display scattered across the desert in Borrego Springs, CA. Overall there are 130 sculptures scattered over the open desert; the display was created with an aim of using sculptures in natural settings (often of animals native to the area) to encourage reflection on the environement. The original creator of the display was Dennis Avery, the owner of Galleta Meadows Estate where many of the sculptures are located. The artist was artist/welder (Ricardo Breceda) who is based in Perris, CA. When Avery died, the Under the Sun Foundation took over responsibility for sculptures. The pictures are from a Christmas Day 2020 visit to only a small portion of the display, since there are many pictures, I’ll post them at various times in the future. Sources: underthesunfoundation.org www.desertusa.com/borrego/bs-art.html

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25 Dec 2020

3 favorites

2 comments

186 visits

Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (# 0631 )

I particularly liked this one of a ewe and her lamb. Unfortunately, due to the very bright sun and a bush on the other side, I couldn't get a better shot. **** Part of an extensive metal sculpture display scattered across the desert in Borrego Springs, CA. Overall there are 130 sculptures scattered over the open desert; the display was created with an aim of using sculptures in natural settings (often of animals native to the area) to encourage reflection on the environement. The original creator of the display was Dennis Avery, the owner of Galleta Meadows Estate where many of the sculptures are located. The artist was artist/welder (Ricardo Breceda) who is based in Perris, CA. When Avery died, the Under the Sun Foundation took over responsibility for sculptures. The pictures are from a Christmas Day 2020 visit to only a small portion of the display, since there are many pictures, I’ll post them at various times in the future. Sources: underthesunfoundation.org www.desertusa.com/borrego/bs-art.html

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25 Dec 2020

3 favorites

3 comments

191 visits

Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (# 0632)

"Mom, make them stop fighting" "Don't worry, it's all bluster, that's just what guys do." **** Part of an extensive metal sculpture display scattered across the desert in Borrego Springs, CA. Overall there are 130 sculptures scattered over the open desert; the display was created with an aim of using sculptures in natural settings (often of animals native to the area) to encourage reflection on the environement. The original creator of the display was Dennis Avery, the owner of Galleta Meadows Estate where many of the sculptures are located. The artist was artist/welder (Ricardo Breceda) who is based in Perris, CA. When Avery died, the Under the Sun Foundation took over responsibility for sculptures. The pictures are from a Christmas Day 2020 visit to only a small portion of the display, since there are many pictures, I’ll post them at various times in the future. Sources: underthesunfoundation.org www.desertusa.com/borrego/bs-art.html

Location:
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25 Dec 2020

3 favorites

192 visits

Borrego Springs, CA bighorn sheep sculptures (# 0634 )

The ewe and her barely visible lamb. **** Part of an extensive metal sculpture display scattered across the desert in Borrego Springs, CA. Overall there are 130 sculptures scattered over the open desert; the display was created with an aim of using sculptures in natural settings (often of animals native to the area) to encourage reflection on the environement. The original creator of the display was Dennis Avery, the owner of Galleta Meadows Estate where many of the sculptures are located. The artist was artist/welder (Ricardo Breceda) who is based in Perris, CA. When Avery died, the Under the Sun Foundation took over responsibility for sculptures. The pictures are from a Christmas Day 2020 visit to only a small portion of the display, since there are many pictures, I’ll post them at various times in the future. Sources: underthesunfoundation.org www.desertusa.com/borrego/bs-art.html

26 Nov 2020

2 comments

162 visits

Algodones Dunes / pandemic Thanksgiving 2020 (# 0597)

A very close friend and I wanted to get away from Palm Springs on Thanksgiving, but needed to find a place where we felt safe from infection risk. I had suggested the Salton Sea since that area is never busy, but then we decided to stretch it another 60 miles and go to Algodones Dunes (more on the Dunes later). I knew the Dunes would be busy with dune-buggy folk, but also knew that they would ignore two people who clearly weren’t into their culture – and it’s a very wide open and windy area. So, low risk in terms of contagion, but I was a little concerned since dune-buggy culture seems to equate with the political right. Surprisingly, other than lots of American flags, we saw little overt political expression. Almost all of these photos are taken from a lookout park just off CA-78 which is the highest, easily accessible, point in the dunes. There were a surprising number of campers in the parking lot at the top, and it looked as if many of them belonged to clubs that regularly met. I didn’t ask what this formation was about, but this group later went off in more-or-less a caravan of following each other across the dunes (later pictures).

26 Nov 2020

1 favorite

147 visits

Algodones Dunes / “Thin Blue Line” / Thanksgiving 2020 (# 0596)

A close up of the group in the previous photo. A couple of points here re politics and dune-buggy culure…. Politics: The only expressions of politics (other than lots of American flags) we saw while exploring the dunes were some people flying the ‘Thin Blue Line’ American Flag (see the second buggy from the right in this photo.) The flag itself started out in 2014 as an expression of support for policing during periods when we were having large demonstrations against race-biased policing. Being from a social group with a long history of police harassment (gays), I get worried when there are demonstrations in support of policing – but the flag’s interpretation has gone much further than just support for policing. With the increase in social divisiveness that the Trump administration has multiplied, the flag has come to be also interpreted as a symbol of white supremacy, racism, homophobia – crazed nationalism in general. So, when you see one, you don’t know if it is ‘just’ support for police, or for much more. (BTW, the flag on the far left is Arizona’s state flag.) Dune-buggy wealth: When I was a teen in Florida in the 1960’s, people built dune-buggies out of old cars that had been junked and it was a hobby of people who had mechanical skills but little money (i.e., my brothers). The modern dune-buggy culture still seems to be ‘blue collar’ in expression, but I wonder about the money. The buggies themselves seem to be in the $12K-$20K (and more) range and then people are out here for a long weekend in large RV’s that cost $60K or so, and they have expensive enclosed trailers to haul their buggies. So, it’s not a poor man’s sport.

26 Nov 2020

4 favorites

177 visits

Algodones Dunes / just chillin / Thanksgiving 2020 (# 0598)

If you zoom in a larger version of the picture, you can see that there’s what looks to be a group of men just hanging out on a ridge. Looking up from them, I’m looking southeast down what is more or less the length of the dunes. The dunes are a huge, relatively narrow, strip about 45 miles (72 km) long and 6 (9.7 km) miles wide running northwest-southeast from just across the border in Mexico up through Imperial County of California. Wikipedia has some wonderful pictures of the dunes from space and then of riders at night – links are below. In the space photo, the road we’re on can barely be seen as a thin line across the dunes on the left side of the picture. Night: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algodones_Dunes#/media/File:Glamis_Presidents_263.jpg From space: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Algodones_Dunes#/media/File:AlgodonesDunes_ISS011-E-11543.jpg
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