
And then the sky. Far from city light, Joshua Tree keeps some of the darkest skies in Southern California — a certified International Dark Sky Park where the Milky Way throws faint shadows and the stars come down to the horizon. This desert has drawn people for a very long time: the Pinto Culture thousands of years ago, and the Serrano, Cahuilla, Chemehuevi, and Mojave peoples, whose communities still belong to this land and who left rock art, grinding stones, and gathering places at desert oases like Mara. These are living cultures and sacred places, named here with respect, not as souvenirs.
Today Joshua Tree is where the Mojave’s strangest tree reaches for the darkest, starriest sky. Our Joshua Tree designs gather that identity — the bear-and-star emblem, the trees, the boulders, the desert night — into wearable form. Joshua Tree — where two deserts meet under California’s darkest sky.
Why People Visit Joshua Tree
People come for the strangeness: trees out of a storybook, boulders made for scrambling, and a night sky so dark the Milky Way throws shadows. Pair the park with the town’s desert-arts scene and you have a high-desert getaway unlike anywhere else in California.