Where can I find more of this?

>dry
>lots of sunny days
>quaint shade trees
>clear water streams
>hot weather
>low tourism and human footprint
>has to be pretty first world

Dont want to spill the beans but its just “peak Earth” if im going to be honest, there sinply is no other places that compete naturally.

I was looking into Arizona but seems like the over tourism shit and over population from Phoenix area has ruined any prospect of that area.

Was thinking Spain or Oman are the only places I can think of.

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  1. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Lol. That's that blackland prairie of Texas to a T. Biggest problem with the state is they absolutely do not value their prairie and woodland as public spaces so it's guaranteed to be private everywhere you go. Shittiest part of living in the state because there's a lot of natural beauty to be had.

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      its very gay, it'd be peak comfy for winter camping

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Bullshit. Texas is a shithole no? Yea and the private property thing is terrible, this picture I have on OP is private property believe it or not. Besides ur pic hardly looks like a desert...

      Eastern Oregon, Southern Idaho, Northeast California, Most of Nevada

      >eastern Oregon
      Possible. But a lot of cope probably I looked into Bend seemed kinda gay and cold.
      >southern Idaho
      Boise u can larp but it's in a city so gay and larpy.
      >California
      Yea there is so truth but still not a real desert stream
      >Nevada
      As far as I know there is no streams aside from maybe reno?
      It seems like grand canyon, and sedona area are the only areas and ofc they are all Indian land or over touristy shitholes. Spain, I've no clue prob best for Europe. Asia and Africa who knows, I know Oman is prob top notch.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        It's not a desert. It's prairie, but prairie is only about 4 inches of rain from desert. It's otherwise, hot dry, unpopulated and really pleasant rolling grassland dotted with oak in the wetter parts and mesquite in the drier parts. Beautiful country.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        >no streams aside from maybe reno

        >>dry
        >>lots of sunny days
        shade trees
        water streams
        >>hot weather
        >>low tourism and human footprint
        Rural Nevada.
        >>has to be pretty first world
        How much money do you have?

        >Rural Nevada.
        SHUTUP!!! NEVADA suckshard!,,,,dont even THINKABOUTIT!!,
        ,,,full of prostituteS!,and,,,uhhh,,uhhhh,,,,Black folk!,
        ,thats righterible rathole!,,,,just keepout!, SAVEYOURSELF!,,,,no dont look back, GO ON,,leave me behind,,,, ill hold themas longas i CAN!

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          Gay. Looks too cold. Idk send better pic, need a true desert stream. Here's a recent picture flow was not too good so give me a break.

          • 3 months ago
            Anonymous

            >Looks too cold
            Most deserts are cold at night.

            • 3 months ago
              Anonymous

              Parts of Australia are like this. The biggest problem is finding clear creeks that run year-round: you'd be limited to certain areas where the rainfall is higher, or you'd have to get a good sense of the local geography and weather, or you'd have to choose rivers instead.

              Also as said, our deserts and semi-arid land can be freezing cold at night because they've got no cloud cover to reflect heat back or bodies of water to act as thermal mass.

        • 3 months ago
          Anonymous

          Speak English, ESL-kun.

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        >I looked into Bend seemed kinda gay and cold.

        Bend is not Eastern Oregon, it is Central Oregon.

        >Boise u can larp but it's in a city so gay and larpy.

        Why do you think all of Southern Idaho is Boise?

        >As far as I know there is no streams aside from maybe reno?

        lol

      • 2 months ago
        Anonymous

        >Yea there is so truth but still not a real desert stream

        Might double check that, lots of streams all over northeastern California, even has a couple large natural lakes. It's kind of hodgepodge of environments, you've got bits of cascade mountain range, sierra mountain range, great basin dessert, pine forest, juniper scrubland all within an hour or two drive off each other.

        Tourism is non existent, but most of the land is BLM or Sierra Pacific owned (Sierra Pacific has a policy of allowing hikers and hunters on their land with out written permission). Winters can be a little harsh some years, but it's a short season.

        Lived in Susanville for a few years, that area seems to be close to what you are looking for, Susan river is even big enough to go swimming in.

  2. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Eastern Oregon, Southern Idaho, Northeast California, Most of Nevada

  3. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    Northern Argentina

  4. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    >>dry
    >>lots of sunny days
    shade trees
    water streams
    >>hot weather
    >>low tourism and human footprint
    Rural Nevada.
    >>has to be pretty first world
    How much money do you have?

  5. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    There are at least several thousand perennial streams in AZ alone. The most touristy ones get millions of visitors every year (Arizona gets up to 15 million visitors in total in an average year, no joke, and up to 5 million "snowbirds" in winter in the lower deserts below 4,000 ft ASL), while the remaining 99.99% of the locations get maybe a few hundred or a few thousand visitors in a year. Most of AZ's perennial streams are spring fed and emerge from cliff faces or mountains. Some of these area have signs of human settlement going back over 10,000 years by the way, pre-clovis (during the Pleistocene, the Arizona high country had an climate similar to central Alaska but wetter). And all the higher elevation areas are in fact cold (very cold sometimes -18C occasionally, and some areas get more snow than the Austrian alps some winters), areas below 5,000 ft elevation in AZ are what you would be looking for. Many Arizonans have two houses, one in the desert for winter (never freezes) and one in the mountain forests for summer (never gets above 100F/38C). If you want only hot weather you will be disappointed in AZ and most of the US west.

  6. 3 months ago
    Anonymous

    this exists in every southwest state ca thru tx

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      Looks noice. Is there any green shade trees?

    • 3 months ago
      Anonymous

      theres are two cottonwoods, young and old in that pic. they look sparse because that was taken right when they started to get their leaves. where there is water in an american desert, there are cottonwoods

      • 3 months ago
        Anonymous

        meant for

        Looks noice. Is there any green shade trees?

  7. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Most of lowground Europe in the summer.
    You probably consider it peak Earth because it's what your ancestors grew up in - a temperate climate, warm sunshine, trees, lots of streams, birds singing. It's quiet serene tranquillity to be in such a place.

  8. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    >low tourism and human footprint
    Not if I go and tell you where it is

  9. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    western montana/wyoming

  10. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    most of nevada is like this if you stray far from the public access roads

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Most of Nevada is like this directly next to the public access roads.

  11. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Australia
    Northeast Brazil
    Chile
    South Africa
    Southern Spain
    Central mexico

  12. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Nevada.

  13. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Pick any desert in the american southwest and make sure you go during the winter months, you're sure to find streams and maybe even some rivers.

  14. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Southern Arizona is like that but the streams are mostly only full during the summer.

  15. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Literally Australia

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous
    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Literally Nevada.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      I was going to say this too. He is describing Australia.

  16. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Katherine, NT
    Watch out for the crocs

  17. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Cuyo region Argentina.

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      it's funny how chile and argentina mimic the weather and vegetation patterns of the western us but upside down

    • 2 months ago
      Anonymous

      Jesus, fricking tourists stacking cairns even in Argentina.

      • 1 month ago
        Anonymous

        That's a rock formation brother

    • 1 month ago
      Anonymous

      this looks like it could be in Arizona or New Mexico. very pretty

  18. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    Gaza

  19. 2 months ago
    Anonymous

    southwestern New Mexico around Gila NF

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