ANZA-BORREGO DESERT STATE PARK
ANZA-BORREGO DESERT STATE PARK200 Palm Canyon Drive Borrego Springs, California 92004
Phone: 760-767-5311 Reservations: 760-767-5311 Email:
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Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
'Anza Borego Road'
© Images are the sole property of Riegle Photography and can not be copied, downloaded or otherwise used without permission of copyright owner, Marcia Riegle. Prints available. Email requests to mriegleyahoo.com
Dirt road in the Anza Borego desert in Spring when Ocotillos were blooming.
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
© Images are the sole property of Riegle Photography and can not be copied, downloaded or otherwise used without permission of copyright owner, Marcia Riegle. Prints available. Email requests to mriegleyahoo.com
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
© Images are the sole property of Riegle Photography and can not be copied, downloaded or otherwise used without permission of copyright owner, Marcia Riegle. Prints available. Email requests to mriegleyahoo.com
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
© 2009 C. R. Reseck-Francis
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
© 2009 C. R. Reseck-Francis
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
© 2009 C. R. Reseck-Francis
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park
© 2009 C. R. Reseck-Francis
With over 600,000 acres, Anza-Borrego Desert State Park is the largest state park in California. 500 miles of dirt roads, 12 wilderness areas and miles of hiking trails provide visitors with an unparalleled opportunity to experience the wonders of the Colorado Desert. The park is named after Spanish explorer Juan Bautista de Anza and the Spanish name borrego, or bighorn sheep. The park features washes, wildflowers, palm groves, cacti and sweeping vistas. Visitors may also have the chance to see roadrunner, golden eagles, kit foxes, mule deer and bighorn sheep as well as iguanas, chuckwallas and the red diamond rattlesnake. Listening devices for the hearing impaired are available in the visitor center.
Most visitors approach from the east via Highways S22, S2, or 78. Visitors from San Diego via Highways 79 and 78 have the added pleasure of driving through the mountainous Cuyamaca Rancho State Park--quite a different experience from Anza-Borrego. The highways from the east climb to 2,400 feet or so and then descend about 2,000 feet to the valley. Where the highway breaks out of the high-country vegetation, it reveals the great bowl of the Anza-Borrego desert. The valley spreads below, and there are mountains all around. The highest are to the north--the Santa Rosa Mountains. The mountains are a wilderness, with no paved roads in or out or through. They have the only all-year-flowing watercourse in the park. They are the home of the peninsular bighorn sheep, often called desert bighorn. Few park visitors ever see them; the sheep are justly wary. A patient few observers each year see and count them, to learn how this endangered species is coping with human encroachment.
Wi-Fi Servicewifi
Anza-Borrego Desert State Park now offers AT&T Wi-Fi Service!This service enables park visitors with wireless enabled laptop computers or personal digital assistants (PDAs) to access the Internet. You can access this service if you are within a 150 foot range base of the Ranger's Office.
FACILITIES AND ACTIVITIES OVERVIEW
Day-UseHiking Trailyes
Bridle Trailsyes
CampingPrimativeyes
Full Hookup Sitesyes