Hellhole Canyon in Anza Borrego Desert State Park, is located on Montezuma Valley Road, about 1,000 feet south of the entrance to the State Park Visitor Center. A large parking lot is located next to Montezuma Valley Road, and from there you need to take a one mile hike to the point where Hellhole Canyon narrows to a width of about 200 feet. From this narrowing point, Hellhole Palms and Maidenhair Falls are reacehd after walking another 4,500 feet.
CARPETS OF PINK, WHITE, VIOLET, YELLOW, AND BLUE. During the desert bloom occurring in February and March, I visited Hellhole Canyon, Glorietta Canyon, Coyote Canyon, Henderson Canyon, and Yaqui Pass, and took photographs of the flowers in each each of these places. Each of these visits was on a weekday (not on Saturday or Sunday), and I skipped work in order to avoid the traffic and the crowds that occur during the annual desert bloom. My posted photographs show sand verbena (colored violet), California evening primrose (colored white), and annual wooly sunflower (the tall yellow-colored flower). Also, in the photograph showing me kneeling, a few ocotillo plants can be seen in the background. A guide for identifying flowers can be found at www dot borregoflowers dot com.
GEOGRAPHY OF HELLHOLE CANYON. Pages 40, 56-57, 79-81, 85, and 90 from Geology of Anza-Borrego describe Hellhole Canyon. We learn that the lower slopes contain metasedimentary outliers. The sediment was deposited from 500 million years ago to 120 million years ago, and after that, pressure converted the sediment to shale, limestone, and quartz-rich sandstone. We learn that a large alluvial fan occurs at the mouth of Hellhole Canyon, and that this canyon is a cut within the San Ysidro Mountain escarpment, and that the oasis at Hellhole Palms was created by a fracture in rocks caused by an earthquake fault.
RESTING WOMAN (looking like Nina Simone) IS VISIBLE FROM THE TRAIL LEADING TO HELLHOLE CANYON (but not adequately visible from areas that are much further to the north, south, east, or west). About one mile north of the State Park Visitor Center is a mountain range, and this mountain range is about six miles wide from north to south. From the Visitor Center, the angle of vision is not right for seeing the resting woman. But while walking from the parking lot at Hellhole Canyon towards the trailhead, then the angle of vision will be perfect for seeing the resting woman. On March 30, 2019, I posted my photograph of the resting woman on the BorregoBlooms Facebook page. Angela Carmen posted a comment, "Love the resting woman." I was amazed, because I had not noticed the resting woman until this comment was posted. I decided that she looked like Nina Simone. A year later, I read Geology of Anza-Borrego by Remeika and Lindsay, and learned that the correct name for this part of the mountain range that is just north of the Visitor Center, is INDIANHEAD PEAK (see, pages 4 and 78 of this book). read more