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After a couple of miles on the power-line road, I locate the nearly invisible road that leaves on my right toward Coyote Springs

07149-wash-cutoff-800px.jpg After a couple hours of hike-a-biking, it's a pleasure to remount the bike and ride down into the wash south of Pachalka SpringThumbnailsAfter a couple of miles, I pass the Cima Store at 4200 feet, and it's actually open this time, at this late hour!After a couple hours of hike-a-biking, it's a pleasure to remount the bike and ride down into the wash south of Pachalka SpringThumbnailsAfter a couple of miles, I pass the Cima Store at 4200 feet, and it's actually open this time, at this late hour!After a couple hours of hike-a-biking, it's a pleasure to remount the bike and ride down into the wash south of Pachalka SpringThumbnailsAfter a couple of miles, I pass the Cima Store at 4200 feet, and it's actually open this time, at this late hour!After a couple hours of hike-a-biking, it's a pleasure to remount the bike and ride down into the wash south of Pachalka SpringThumbnailsAfter a couple of miles, I pass the Cima Store at 4200 feet, and it's actually open this time, at this late hour!After a couple hours of hike-a-biking, it's a pleasure to remount the bike and ride down into the wash south of Pachalka SpringThumbnailsAfter a couple of miles, I pass the Cima Store at 4200 feet, and it's actually open this time, at this late hour!

On the way here, I spotted several short roads that weren't what I was looking for, and which turned out to lead only to the base of transmission towers.

If I were to stay on this road further, I would cross Kelbaker Road after another mile or two, and then Foshay Pass, the low spot in the Providence Mountains ahead. (I crossed Foshay Pass by bicycle on my Mojave National Preserve trip in 2000.)