In-Ko-Pah’s Desert View Tower, the edge of nowhere

Border Angels care for migrants, version of Burning Man, UFOs, $12/night at Jacumba Hotel, Jacume across the border, naked guy buys town, Chinese castle, sculptures of Border Park

Over 525 showed up for the fourth annual In-Ko-Pah High Jinks on the outskirts of Jacumba.
  • Party at the snakes' place

  • The joke is that nobody is from here, because we are on the edge of nowhere, but, sure as snake’s teeth, the right kind of folks will settle just about anywhere, and that includes the boulder-strewn peaks and cactus-studded gullies surrounding In-Ko-Pah’s Desert View Tower. Joining them for the fourth year now are 526 outsiders converging over two stages and 14 bands playing from early afternoon ’til bar close.
  • By Chad Deal, June 21, 2017
"Along one of our routes, 50 out of 53 gallons were slashed."
  • Border Angels take water out to Jacumba area

  • A small crowd gathers in the courtyard outside the Border Angels headquarters located at the Sherman Heights Community Center on Island Avenue four blocks south of State Route 94 and five blocks east of Interstate 5. All 60 volunteer slots and ten wait-list spots were filled four days prior for today’s desert water drop. Filling spots was once difficult, but not since Donald Trump was elected.
  • By Siobhan Braun, Aug. 16, 2017
Attendees brought small RVs, or slept in their cars, or set up tent camps.
  • Hippie fest near Jacumba – more to come

  • Though it is best described as a version of Burning Man, organizers stated they didn’t burn anything, nor have any alcohol or drugs (other than some natural, now legal herb). Attendees brought small RVs, or slept in their cars, or set up tent camps.
  • By Ken Harrison, Oct. 16, 2018
Within the van is the cutest pair of ETs you ever saw.
  • "I’ll show you around when my coffee break’s over”

  • If I were ever going to see a UFO, I figured it would be in the desert. Then, last Tuesday while innocently driving through In-Ko-Pah, near Desert Tower, that rock edifice standing lookout over a moonscape of red boulders, wrecked pickups, and broken dreams, I spied a small fleet of flying saucers parked on the side of the road, as if refueling.
  • By Chris Ahrens, Feb. 25, 2019
Jacumba Hotel. The thing that changed Jacumba was the construction of Interstate 8. It just missed Jacumba by two miles, leaving it stranded in the desert. (Robert Burroughs)
  • A quiet street and an old hotel

  • Jacumba is a kind of living ghost town out in southeast San Diego County, on the Mexican border, in what’s called, the Mountain Empire district. It has come through all the typical Western growing pains — a gold and silver rush, the slaughter of local Indians by cattle ranchers, the turmoil of the Mexican Insurrection of 1912.
  • By Steve Sorensen, March 16, 1978
Richard Spencer, Kirk Gilliam. That first night I am directed to my camper shell. I am given a tin can to pee in and shown my sleeping quarters. It’s perfect. Kirk has strung an electric line out, has installed a heater and reading light.
  • How They Ended Up In Jacumba

  • Mexican Jacumé shares at least one quality with U.S. Jacumba: Jacumé is also an end-of-the-road town. It’s 70 miles east of Tijuana along the Mexicali-Tijuana highway, and then 7 miles north on an unmarked dirt road. The town doesn’t appear on most maps. There are no tourists, Mexican or American.
  • By Patrick Daugherty, April 19, 1990
Jacumba residents look forward to a renovated town. But one resident (not pictured) admits, “It’s a little odd that a nudist owns Jacumba.” (Alan Decker)
  • Jacumba trusts Dave Landman, the naked guy

  • “I wasn’t planning on owning a town. Not at this stage of my life. I’m 65 years old,” Landman says. “Our goal is to make Jacumba a tourist destination again. So far, we are having fun with it.”
  • By Siobhan Braun, May 23, 2012
Old Highway 80 in Jacumba is located less than a mile away from the U.S./Mexico border.
  • Water level appears low at Jacumba Hot Springs

  • Jacumba’s only official census in 2010 put the population at 561, and it doesn’t appear to have changed much since. In fact, the town hasn’t grown significantly since a county visitors guide put the population at 400 inhabitants in 1945. And really, why would it?
  • By Chad Deal, Nov. 16, 2016
Boulder Park sculpture
  • Imagine climbing the 30% grade to reach this outpost

  • The sculptures of Boulder Park have amused and surprised people for more than 80 years. W.T. Ratcliffe, an unemployed engineer during the Depression years, carved the stone sculptures in the 1930s where the natural shapes of the granitic boulders inspired him.
  • By The Canyoneers, May 31, 2017
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