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How to Enjoy a Joshua Tree Camping Experience Without the Park Crowds

Joshua Tree National Park welcomed the 10th-most visitors of any U.S. park in 2020 despite closures during popular spring months.

Camping enthusiasm exploded in the wake of 2020’s pandemic-related shutdowns, as millions of households ventured into the outdoors for overnight respites from the cramped confines and electric hypnosis of living rooms and televisions.

In all, a staggering 48.2 million United States households camped at least once in 2020. And last year, more than 10 million households went out for a night under the stars for the first time, a surge that placed national parks across the country atop scores of rapidly-evolving bucket lists. Joshua Tree proved to be a fixture on those lists, drawing the 10th-highest attendance numbers of any park in the U.S. in 2020 despite a host of closures in March, April, and May, a season which traditionally elicits swarms of tourists.

Visitor numbers in 2021, meanwhile, surged to the point of prompting Park Service officials to recommend online reservation systems for entering the park or staying overnight. In Joshua Tree, park personnel even went as far as noting that “the park may become drive-through only as the parking lots reach maximum capacity during times of extreme visitation.”

“Joshua Tree used to be a secret gem for climbers, but in recent years, it has become an idyllic escape from the hustle of the surrounding Los Angeles, Orange, and San Diego counties,” says Breanne Acio, co-founder of Sēkr, a crowdsourcing camping app that saw a 492% increase in users and a 1,530% increase in user sessions last May compared to the previous year.

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“Due to the rise in popularity, [camping] reservations at the park can be hard to come by,” Acio adds. “But there are a ton of alternative options right outside of the park … far away from people and light pollution.”

Recent camping data from Kampgrounds of America backs up Acio’s insight: Today, nearly one-third of campers opt for non-designated campsites on public or private land, and few destinations are more equipped to accommodate close-proximity alternatives than the desert haven for hikers, rock climbers, and mountain bikers that is Joshua Tree National Park.

“A special element of this area is that the parks and towns surrounding [Joshua Tree] rival the national park itself in both beauty and things to do,” says Nina Rossi, Sēkr’s community manager. “Hiking, biking, art, music, and more—there is no shortage of activities to try or interesting people to meet. Looking for a nomad adventure in the desert? This is your place.”

We asked the folks at Sēkr about a few of their favorite campsites and activities in the vicinity, and, ever the reliable source, they offered up no shortage of substance.

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Mojave National Preserve

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“No matter your camping style, this area offers an assortment of stays at every budget,” Rossi says. “From free campsites on Sēkr to resorts in Palm Springs, there is somewhere for everyone.”

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Noah Purifoy’s Joshua Tree Outdoor Museum

Amy Dickerson

“Joshua Tree is nestled in between towns that all have their own unique personality and are worth exploring,” Acio says. “Pioneertown, for example, is a former filming location-turned-community where horses have the right of way, Palm Springs is an LBGTQ+-friendly luxury oasis of culture and nightlife, Twentynine Palms is home to the main park entrance of Joshua Tree National Park, and Yucca Valley is full of outdoor public art.”

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Happy desert camping! For more information, visit the Sēkr website or check them out on Instagram.