
Nance Fite (baseball hat), Jennifer Lagusker (cowboy hat), and other volunteers posing with the camels – supplied to the media by Jennifer Lagusker
Today’s good news comes from the Good News Network
After Mojave Fires, Camels Help Restore Iconic Joshua Tree Groves in the Cherished California Desert
The Mojave National Preserve is having its iconic Joshua trees restored thanks to a crack team of a dozen volunteers, 3 beasts, and 6 humps.
Following wildfires in 2020 and 2023, the National Parks Service undertook a massive project to breed Joshua trees in nurseries and pack them into the high desert country, and a team of volunteers are using camels to do it.
Camels (two humps), not to be confused with dromedaries (1 hump), would have been present on the North American continent during the last Ice Age thanks to the Bearing Land Bridge, so their presence isn’t a total disturbance.
Indeed, the volunteers working with the camels on behalf of the National Park Service argue they cause less disturbance than mules or horses.
Speaking of the Ice Age, the Mojave Desert’s Joshua tree forests are the most expansive in the country, but they were only able to number in the millions because of the Giant Ground Sloth.
These huge furry mammals fed on the Joshua trees and would have been like double-decker buses for their seeds, carting them around to all corners of the desert. Since the extinction of the Giant Ground Sloth, the plant has had to rely on wind and rodents, with decidedly less success.

The germination rate is now extremely low, so the NPS knew the only way to ensure the Joshua tree forests remained as robust as possible was to start a reforestation program for them—setting up a nursery in the Mojave Wilderness Area right on top of the burnt scar from the fires in 2020.
Being that the Mojave is a National Wilderness, there are no roads, no tracks, and no ICE vehicles are permitted inside, so volunteers with the NPS were reduced to hiking hours to the Cima Dome reforestation site with a few seedlings, the cages to protect them, and water to nourish their growth, before having to walk back to the nursery.
Nance Fite, a longtime volunteer at the Mojave National Preserve, realized she had the perfect solution to the arduous task and called up her friend Jennifer Lagusker.

“The job was to pack them and have them carry these things into wherever the park service had us go,” Lagusker told LAist. “When Nance told me about this, I thought, ‘Well, what better way to advocate for the camel than to show the world, hey, they can pack, they really like it, and honestly, they need that kind of a job.’”
Camels are desert specialists, obviously, but their advantages go beyond helping them survive. Their wide and soft feet allow them to pass across the desert wilderness without disturbing the sandy soil and vegetation.
Since 2021, Lagusker and her three camels, Herbie, Sully, and Chico, have been doing most of the restoration work at Cima Dome, a remote area scorched by the wildfires, but after a second round of fires in 2023, the Cima Dome project was considered finished after 3,500 seedlings were successfully planted—carried out into the remote desert on Herbie, Sully, and Chico.
This year,, the caravan is off to another area, where reforestation work on the Joshua trees will continue for a long while.
The good news in this article is that a person thought of a perfect solution to make the project successful. Today’s JohnKu talks about great ideas. I hope you have a wonderful week.
Solution by John W. Howell © 2024
Einstein defined that,
Wanting different results…
From same plan, insane.






















Another outstanding post for good news, John. The more we save this planet, the better it is for everyone!!
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I agree, GP. This i the only one we have.
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Maybe the people behind the importation of camels into Texas for use during the Civil War weren’t so nuts, after all. They are wonderful creatures, and this is a great way to use them and keep them occupied and healthy.
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I thought the idea was genius. Thanks, Linda.
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Camels are amazing creatures. I love this story. Well done everyone.
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Thank you, Darlene. 😁
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How wonderful to know that Camels are in the spotlight AND that the Joshua Trees are benefitting!! ❤
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Thanks, Annette. My thoughts too. 😊
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Cheers to another example of the good things done by a few good people for the benefit of many. I haven’t seen them, but have heard the Joshua Tree groves in this desert are beautiful.
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I haven’t seen them either. Bucket list item.
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Heroic camels!
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Yes they are.
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That’s so cool. Now I want to find the old movie, Hawmps. It was a Slim Pickins film about the cavalry’s attempt at camels.
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Loved Slim Pickins in Blazing Saddles
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Me, too.
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Yay for camels! I didn’t realize how large they are until I saw that picture. Have a great weekend, John!
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I hope you have a great weekend as well, Teri.
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Thanks, John. Another example of how old solutions chase fresh problems. Such insights encourage us to look over our creative shoulders for what’s already available.
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And not stick to old approaches that don’t work.
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Great post, John. It does my heart good to read things like this. Thanks for sharing. 😀 ❤
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A pleasure, Marcia.
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Hurray for good news and creative solutions!
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The best part of being human.
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Yes!!
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😊
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Wonderful solution! I love the camels – rode one in Jordan, and it was NOT comfortable. I used to take my students to Joshua Tree National Park every year to observe a desert landscape.
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Wow. Lucky students. Thanks for sharing, Noelle.
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Wow! I didn’t know that about camels’ feet. Seems like this is a good deal for the people and the camels. 🙂
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I think both are happy.
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That’s great news, John, and your Johnku says a lot. ❤
Camels would surely be excellent helpers for that job, making it possible for humans to get it done. I wonder if they are most eager to do the work on Wednesday. 😆
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I think they would like the day off. 😁 After all they gave a hump at the office.
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😁
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What a wonderful solution to a difficult problem. I think the camels enjoyed the work. I hope they got a bonus.
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I’m sure they could have as many lumps of sugar as they wanted in their coffee.
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🙂
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Thank you, John. And thanks, espècially, to the camels for a job well done! Cheers.
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Yes, let’s hear it for the camels. 😁 Thanks, Joy.
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Wonderful post, John. Very hopeful. And your JohnKu brings it all together perfectly. 😊
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Thank you, Gwen. So glad you liked it.
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What a brilliant idea!
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I think so too.
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Great story Boss, as per.
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Thank you, Pilgrim.
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Hooray for Herbie, Sully, and Chico, and all those who made things happen! 🙂
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I agree, Mae. Thank you.
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This is marvelous, John. Hugs.
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Thank you, Teagan
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I love this story and had not heard of it though I knew the trees needed to be restored somehow. Camels make sense and packing is what they do best. Have a good weekend, John.
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Thank you, Jo. I hope you have a good weekend as well.
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Great inspiring news, dear John! Thank you for spreading a word about this wonderful organization. 🙂🍤🍤🍤🍻
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Yes they are wonderful. Thank you, Maria.
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What a great idea to use the camels and wonderful idea to plant new Joshua Trees! Great story, John.
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Thank you, Deborah.
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Very cool and creative way to use camels. I flashbacked to one of my worst jobs ever when I carried a backpack down the side of a mountain filled with 500 seedlings in those plastic white containers. I was supposed to plant them every few feet, but I was more concerned with getting to flat ground safely. I lasted two days before common sense prevailed.
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Sounds like you made the right choice, Pete.
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Wonderful story!
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It is wonderful, Jennie. Glad you liked it.
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😀
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😊
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What a wonderful and positive ecological story. We’re rooting for the 🐫 and wish for success of the seedlings to help restore the desert.
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I agree, Monika. Three cheers for them.
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When people work together, they can accomplish so much more. Such a fabulous plan to use camels, used to such terrain. Wonderful share and JohnKu, John.
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Thank you, Dale. 😁
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😊
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😊
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Fantastic!
Yay camels!!
I’ll bet those camels more than like their work/purpose, but are luxuriating in the love and respect of the huansworking with them.
Wonderful share, John! Cool JohnKu, too!
🐫X 🐫X 🐫X 🐫X
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I think if I was a camel I would love hanging out with those kids. Thank you, Resa.
🌴X 🌴X 🌴X 🌴X
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💋 🐫X 🌴X 💋
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😊
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That’s really fun. I would love to work with camels. And interesting about the giant sloth.
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I would not want to meet a giant sloth after dark
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Haha. Me neither, but maybe I could outrun it.
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Black belt or not. Good idea.
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Haha. 🙂
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😁
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