I've passed by this 'sea'. I invite you to visit, if you've ever wanted to directly experience what southern California might be like post-humans.
A multitude of enterprising resorts quietly decaying in the harsh inland sun. The only sound is that of hot wind gently peeling paint off so many little abandoned liquor stores and gas stations in between.
Nobody swims. The fish don't live, and the errant fowl take off just as quickly as they land. This time capsule of the 1960s smells like death, and its strangely yellow dust is concerning even if you didn't know how much fertilizer runoff was dumped in there by surrounding date farms.
If a person IS strangely into all of that stuff then I actually recommend the annual Fallout New Vegas festival they hold in Goodsprings Nevada, instead.
The lake was a runoff for the colorado river back when farmers over used water and the leftover was dumped ino that "lake". The lake in its current state is too saline and dried up to ecologically be stable. The buildup of farm chems over the year cause dust in problems in socal when winds picked it up.
Well, when you put it that way using a part of the country we already ruined to try and help us not ruin any more of it, it sounds like a damn good idea
Fun fact, the beach is made entirely out of barnacles and it smells like someone ate 10 pounds of salmon and then ripped ass straight up your nose. Don't go in the water, you'll die!
The entire thing is a lesson in the hubris of man. It was created as a major ecological impact of a failed engineering project. It's being destroyed by irrigation.
Looks like we have our next Discovery channel reality TV show. Which cast member finds a bomb in today's episode? Tune in to Lithium Blast at 9 o'clock central to find out!
There's a cool old documentary about the place called Plagues and Pleasures on the Salton Sea, narrated by John Waters. It goes into the history of the place and shows a little of how dilapidated and decayed it now is (well, now was, when it came out in 2006).
It tries to livin up the modern day stuff by showing some of the "colorful" characters who lived there. I have to imagine there was a lot not being said, and I'm sure 20 years of further decay have not made it the friendliest and funnest place to be.
In the last year or so I heard about how the water level is dropping due to drought which is concentrating all the pollutants in the lake. It's also becoming l so saline that the few species living in the lake are dying and washing up on shore. Then the high winds are blowing around extra salty sand combined with dead carcass particles so it's actually a breathing hazard to be around. This is also combined with the runoff of pesticides from the farms to the north that also polite the water. So it sounds like a great place to hang out!
It's been like that for decades. I was there about twenty years ago, the stench was gag inducing, and there's no getting used to it. The banks in every spot I visited were made up of rotting marine life 12 - 18 inches deep.