Desert tortoise standing on rocky outcrop with wooden Maxine Predicts sign and students holding weather charts below

Desert Tortoise Predicts Spring

At a Glance

  • Mojave Maxine, a desert tortoise at The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens, ends her winter brumation when spring nears.
  • Students in San Bernardino, Riverside, and Imperial Counties guess her emergence date for a class trip prize.
  • Why it matters: Locals track her exit as a seasonal signal, much like Punxsutawney Phil on the East Coast.

Mojave Maxine, the celebrity desert tortoise at The Living Desert Zoo and Gardens in Palm Desert, is stirring anticipation as January progresses. Fans watch her burrow, knowing she could emerge at any moment to signal the arrival of desert spring.

How Maxine Predicts the Season

Unlike paparazzi targets, Maxine wears no clothes and grants no interviews. Instead, she keeps a webbed foot pressed to the sandy floor of her burrow, sensing subtle temperature shifts. When conditions feel right, she ends her cold-weather brumation and trundles into view.

Past exits show a pattern:

  • Late January emergence: recorded multiple times
  • Early February: also common
  • Brumation start: late November

The tortoise’s internal calendar rivals Punxsutawney Phil’s shadow-based forecast on the opposite coast.

Student Contest Draws Three Counties

Each year The Living Desert invites K-12 students to submit their best guess for Maxine’s emergence date. Entries arrive from:

  • San Bernardino County
  • Riverside County
  • Imperial County
Students create colorful art panels celebrating Maxine's emergence date with drawings and digital art arranged in yearly sect

The winning student earns more than bragging rights. Their entire class receives a zoo field trip to meet a live tortoise up close. Teachers use the contest to weave biology, meteorology, and local wildlife into lesson plans.

Tracking Tips for Desert Fans

Observers monitor daytime highs, soil warmth, and sunlight hours, but Maxine alone decides when spring has arrived. Zoo keepers post updates on her burrow cam and social feeds once movement is detected.

Key signs to watch:

  • Consistent daytime temps above 70°F
  • Soil temperature rise at burrow entrance
  • Maxine’s first peek outside, often mid-morning

When she finally emerges, the zoo celebrates with a small ceremony and announces the contest winner within days.

Key Takeaways

Mojave Maxine’s emergence remains a beloved desert ritual. Her timing hints at spring’s arrival, while the student contest links classrooms to local wildlife. Check The Living Desert’s alerts-and keep your own calendar ready-for the moment she leaves her burrow and ushers in a new season.

Author

  • My name is Amanda S. Bennett, and I am a Los Angeles–based journalist covering local news and breaking developments that directly impact our communities.

    Amanda S. Bennett covers housing and urban development for News of Los Angeles, reporting on how policy, density, and displacement shape LA neighborhoods. A Cal State Long Beach journalism grad, she’s known for data-driven investigations grounded in on-the-street reporting.

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