The first stop is the Visitor Center. Take a map and look at the approximate route. The route is very simple, a one-way road, around a circle. This Visitor Center is the most beautiful one I have ever seen. Outside it is a small exhibition center. It introduces the geological features of the park and the causes of the special landforms. The rocks here are red because of the fact that the rocks are red. A hundred years of wind and rain erosion of rock sand by iron oxide infiltration, will form a fire-like red. Looking out from the Visitor Center, it's the Calico attraction. From a distance, it's the red hills and bushes all over the mountains. Despite the desert, after years of harnessing, the desert is no longer barren land, but a wilderness full of shrubs, grasses and Joshua trees. Unlike the imagined desert, the desert here has a little vitality. My favorite is the Joshua tree, which is a unique plant in the Mojave Desert. It's hard to see anywhere else. From a distance, it's a bit like paper-cut, with simple and clear lines.