Follow along with the joyful life events and travels of David Galson and Diane Kile in their 2018 Winnebago View 24J camper. We include brief trip notes and thoughts, and lots of photos.
Tuesday, January 1, 2008
07Dec28 Death Valley National Park
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We leave the Mojave Desert and cross the Pinto Mountains, Sheep Hole Mountains, Clipper Mountains, traverse along the Avawatz Mountains and the Kingston range, cross more than one dry lake bed, and finally drop into Death Valley. We’ve traveled up the eastern side of southern California and successfully avoided all interstates and stayed out of the reach of the LA Basin and its far reaching crowds.
We hike the Golden Canyon to Gower Gulch trail – excellent introduction to the park – just south of Furnace Creek on the Bad Water road. We stretched this 4 mile loop hike into an all day enterprise – with lots of explorations into side canyons and a leisurely lunch siesta on the pass just below Zabrinskie Point. The Golden Canyon trail leads you up out of the badlands into a mud canyon, then up the slopes of Zabrinskie Point, then down again following another drainage with a totally different look and feel.
We explored two abandoned (and fairly shallow ) mines along the banks of Gower Gulch. The floor was sand, but the ceilings glistened from the reflection of our flashlight beams on the quartz and other crystalline rocks in the thick veins. What ever the miners were looking for is gone, but the aura and mystery of the enterprise remains. The mud caked canyon bottoms and walls are a testament to the depth and furry of the rainstorm run-off that annually carves each of these canyons just a little bit deeper.
The best campgrounds are at Furnace creek – in the oasis or across the highway – up high at the Texas Spring tents only site. A simple camper fits in easily here as long as you don’t use your generator. The campsite at Stovepipe Wells is to be avoided. Emigrant and Wildrose are more remote and are preferable as long as you plan your itinerary to take advantage of the terrain near those more outlying campsites.
Nights are in the low 20’s but our plumbing systems keep working if we keep the camper at 50 degrees during the night.
Great hike into Fall Canyon. Drive to Titus Canyon trail head – 2 miles up gravel road off the Scotty’s Castle Road 15 miles north of Stovepipe wells. Park at the mouth of the Titus Canyon, but follow the nondescript trail, marked simply by a hiker icon besides the outhouse – not into Titus Canyon, but across the alluvial fan adjacent to the road and up into the next canyon to the north – Fall Canyon.
As we entered Fall Canyon, the walls twist and rise to thousands of feet above our heads. At places the bottom narrows to 10 feet wide. Where the canyon is narrowest, the rock is the hardest – with sedimentary and other sand and mud stones giving way to granite. As the canyon narrow, the cobbles underfoot change size as well. The faster spring currents scouring the bottom cleaner the fast it goes. This season, the canyon is dry- but the geology and sediments tell a vivid tale.
I get the strong impression I am a fish headed up river. Although there is no water now, I am seeing the river’s bottom and banks as surely as the fish must. As I move easily though the air – and am only vaguely aware of it as a fluid I am passing through, so must the fish when passing through water. As the air is transparent to me, so must the water be to the fish. We skirt the faster outer bends of the river cutting corners to save distance from our hike – as the fish moving upstream must seek out slower current to ease their challenge. The walls are often deeply undercut at the bottom of the canyon walls. Even the mid-day sun rarely reaches this far into the slot. We wonder why it is so tiring to trudge along in the gravel, and soon realize we are also walking steadily up hill, a perception lost in the tumble and unworldly angles at which everything comes together here. After about 1.5 hours of distracted hiking we come to the first dry falls – an insurmountable 16’ smooth granite overfall with rounded walls too far apart for traditional jamb and crack climbing – even for my 6 foot frame. We backtrack down canyon and find an out of place pile of dissimilar colored rocks which upon more careful scrutiny are strategically piled again the wall to form a stepping stool to reach the first of 4 or five bucket holds which allow us to climb out of the river bottom through a crack in the rocks and up unto the steep bank above. A climber’s trail leads along the steep canyon wall above the gorge and bypasses the fall – and after climbing down a gravel littered sloping ledge we are back in the upper canyon now. The river bottom is even narrower here – with fish bowl smooth fine gravel sand as the only material underfoot. Every 10 feet the canyon swirls first left, then right, and ever upward reaching eventually to another dry falls we are told 4 miles further in. It is 1:30pm and I must turn around – but I make a commitment to start earlier next visit, and push my exploration even further into this mysterious and wonderful place.
We stay a night at Emigrant campsite – a small tents only, lightly developed patch off the highway on the way west out of Death Valley on the way to Panamint Springs, and then take an abbreviated hike on Wildrose peak just above the abandoned charcoal kilns. This area deserves a long full day hike as well. We dawdle about the kilns – all are in pretty good shape. The acoustics inside are too hard to resist and I take out the clarinet and play for a bit – for the birds, and the wind, and the magic of the place. Diane sits uphill and above the kilns and listens to the impromptu concert – with the eerie music sounding like it is rising from the bottom of a well. Here there is snow on the ground, and ice frozen beneath the larger pinions.
Click here for more details about Death Valley
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1 comment:
I like the picture inline method.
Lovely pictures again!
Casp
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