Pioneertown Mountains
The Preserve has year-round riparian corridors in Pipes Canyon and Little Morongo Canyons. It is an important landscape linkage between Joshua Tree National Park, San Bernardino National Forest, and the Big Horn BLM Wilderness.
In 2006, the vast majority of the Joshua trees, pinyon pines and junipers at Pioneertown Mountains Preserve were killed in a 70,000-acre lightning-caused fire of unprecedented magnitude. Today, much of the Preserve is going through natural vegetation succession. Some scientists predict that fire succession and climate change will favor scrub oak and Joshua tree plant communities that may replace the pinyon forests. The fire laid bare the region’s rich geological backbone.
Sunrise to Sunset
Free
HIKERS & VEHICLE ACCESS
Please enjoy our new parking area and trailhead off of Kees road. Hours are sunrise to sunset 7 days a week. Please do not park at the old access in Chaparrosa Wash. Instead continue 1 mile past Chaparrosa wash and look for our Sawtooth Mountains Trailhead sign on the left at the next dirt road.
EQUESTRIANS & ACCESS FROM TOWN
Access from Chaparrosa Wash will remain available for equestrians and guests staying in and hiking from Pioneertown on foot. Please follow the wooden
Principles courtesy of Leave No Trace Center for Outdoor Ethics.
Pioneertown Mountains Preserve has long been The Wildlands Conservancy’s pulpit for preserving the Mojave Desert and many major conservation issues have been led by Wildlands’ desert staff. Pipes Canyon Wilderness, bisected by a year-round stream, is the largest nonprofit wilderness in California at more than 20,000 acres.
Preserves
Newsletter
Thirty years of protecting land, restoring ecosystems, and opening the outdoors to everyone. We’ll share the stories when there’s something worth telling.