The Desert's Joshua Trees

 •  3 min. read  •  grade level: 9
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Joshua trees in American deserts have been planted by the Lord, too, and He has placed around them many living creatures. These trees are found only in the deserts of the United States from Utah to California and northern Mexico. A large display of them can be seen from your car in the Joshua Tree National Monument in southern California where soil and rainfall are just right.
Many grow as high as 40 feet with an assortment of odd-shaped branches supported by a thick, woody trunk and ending in clusters of thick, dark-green leaves. In the center of these clusters of leaves, a pretty display of greenish-white flowers appears after the winter rains. When other desert plants spring to life at the same time, the desert looks like a beautiful flower garden.
The Creator has arranged that Joshua trees do not crowd one another, for each needs lots of space to benefit from scarce rain and nourishment from the poor desert soil. But they are there for a purpose; they are a shelter and life support for many animals, birds and other kinds of desert life, many never seen by human eyes but always under the Creator's care.
For instance, many lizards live here including the zebra-tailed variety, scooting over the ground with its striped tail lifted over its body. Another is the long-nosed leopard lizard that always runs upright on its two hind legs, and the loose-skinned chuckwalla that never seems to be in a hurry, and many others.
Certain tortoises find a good life among the Joshua trees as do a variety of snakes, including some rattlers. Kangaroo rats make their homes here, too. Gophers are all around, and desert wood rats make nests underneath or up in the tree trunks. Mice, too, are plentiful and jackrabbits and cottontails represent part of the assortment, as do occasional coyotes, foxes and badgers.
Great numbers of birds abound here, including falcons, roadrunners, hawks, quail, ravens and owls. Many of them make nests in these trees and others locate on the ground underneath. Bats hide in the Joshua’s in daylight and hunt desert insects at night.
Although people may drive by these trees and scarcely give them a glance, we see they are really another wonderful example of God's creation and His constant care over it all. How happy those of us are who know this loving, caring, planning God. We can clearly see a master design and know that all things did not come into being "just by chance." This is why the Bible says, "Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth." Eccl. 12:11Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them; (Ecclesiastes 12:1). And to remember our Creator means also to remember the love that brought Him from heaven to die on Calvary's cross for all who will admit they are lost sinners and accept Him as their Savior. Are you one of these happy people?