View allAll Photos Tagged twobunchpalms
Aerial photograph of Desert Hot Springs and the Mission Creek Strand of the San Andreas Fault (from about 8 o'clock to 2 o'clock), Riverside County, California. Included in this view to the east-southeast are: Two Bunch Palms (near center of image), the Little San Bernardino Mountains (upper left), and Sky Valley (upper right).
Aerial photograph of Desert Hot Springs and the Mission Creek Strand of the San Andreas Fault Zone (from about 10 o'clock to about 4 o'clock), Coachella Valley, Riverside County, California. Included in this view to the south-southwest is the Banning Strand of the San Andreas Fault (in upper-right part of image) and Two Bunch Palms (on right side).
Aerial photograph of Desert Hot Springs and the Mission Creek Strand of the San Andreas Fault Zone (from bottom-right to about half way up the left side of image), Coachella Valley, Riverside County, California. Included in this view to the north-northwest is Two Bunch Palms (on left side).
Aerial photograph of Two Bunch Palms (foreground) and the Mission Creek Strand of the San Andreas Fault Zone, Desert Hot Springs, Riverside County, California. In this view to the northwest, location of the fault is indicated by a vegetation lineament.
Aerial photograph of Desert Hot Springs and the Mission Creek strand (marked with 'MCF' notes) of the San Andreas fault zone, Riverside County, California. View to the east.
Aerial photograph of the Mission Creek strand of the San Andreas fault (between notes, above), Desert Hot Springs, Riverside County, California. Bold curved lines in lower left are bushes planted as wind (and visual) breaks. View to the northwest.
Despite this decorative clock, time seems to stand still at Two Bunch Palms Spa, located in the sun-baked Coachella Valley town of Desert Hot Springs, about 110 miles due east of Los Angeles.
Mt. San Jacinto provides a dramatic backdrop for the view from the restaurant at Two Bunch Palms. The restaurant was said to have been built as a casino for Al Capone's desert hideaway. The grass-roof huts in the foreground are used for the mud bath treatments made famous in the 1992 movie, "The Player."
Because of its private setting and isolated location, Two Bunch Palms Resort has been a favorite with Hollywood royalty for decades. The resort is known for its natural mineral hot springs—and as the alleged hideout of notorious Prohibition-era gangster Al Capone. Two Bunch Palms was also the location for several key scenes in Robert Altman's 1992 film, “The Player.” (That's Mt. San Jacinto in the background)
At Two Bunch Palms.
And, yes, I took my SLR into the pool to get these shots. You'd think I would have learned from my kayak accident.
Another day at the official #mlvyv #liquipel #coachella #twobunchpalms #poolparty
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