I LOVE to explore. My dream is to know every square inch of the world before I die. Since that is a bit out of reach, I will settle for exploring every dirt road and trail around Southwest Riverside County, and maybe even extend into San Diego and San Bernardino Counties.
Being a photo journalist and specializing in wildfire and extreme weather photography, it's important to have a thorough knowledge of roads and trails wherever I may find myself shooting an incident. It can literally be the difference between life and death.
While shooting some extreme weather yesterday, I found some great roads and trails just southeast of Hemet in the Sage/Cactus Valley area. Because of the extreme fire danger, I stuck to the wider roads and didn't take any trails that had no place to turn around without going into the brush. Afterward, I looked the area up on Google Earth and while there is alot of private property, plenty of these trails are actually mapped roads that wind and twist around through the hills in the area. I spent about an hour driving around the areas of Hemet Ranch Road, Newby Road and Lawghlin Road before taking Crown Valley Road to Rawson Road and headed back into civilization.
Rawson Road is a fairly-well maintained dirt road that runs east/west through the hills that divide Lake Skinner and Diamond Valley Lake. Almost all of the land in that area is a nature presure and you are not allowed to leave the roadway (there are actually barbed-wire fences on both sides and signs every 300 feet or so). There are, however, a few VERY beautiful massive ranches with rolling hillsides, large private lakes and countless antique oak trees. Rawson Road then dumps you out at the intersection of Scott Road and Winchester Road (Hwy 79), right back in town. It's a beautiful little valley that most people don't even know exists. A great little drive if you're looking to kill an hour or so.
I didn't snap many photos, but I did take a few at one overlook spot I found along Lawghlin Road in the Sage area with a beautiful view of the east side of Diamond Valley Lake and the the entire Hemet Valley. I will absolutely be back to do some more exploring in this area once the fire danger subsides.
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