Welcome to Nevada
During the night I got up and looked at the night sky--it was about the most incredible thing I'd seen in my life. I grew up in rural Nebraska and thought I'd seen stars. Well, the Death Valley night sky made those nights look like I'd been on a Manhattan rooftop: it really seemed like there were more stars than sky. And the quiet was overwhelming. I'll just say, if you want to directly experience the utter smallness of your own existence, walk around Death Valley in the middle of the night.
Ludwig may not go from 0 to 60 in six seconds, but he can sleep up to four and cook them breakfast
After eating we went back to the real campground and got a freshly-vacated spot.
Death Valley is surprisingly cold in the spring. This was late March and there was plenty of snow on the mountains. At night it got into the upper 30s, and daytime highs were in the low 60s.
Aramagosa Range from Mesquite Springs Campground
After securing a campsite, the first stop of the day was Ubehebe Crater, a 777ft-deep bowl created a couple thousand years ago when pent-up underground water boiled and burst forth like soup from underneath soup-skin. It's not an impact crater like a meteor would make.
Melissa at Ubehebe Crater
The wind around the crater was furious, with sustained winds probably over 50mph. It was almost hard to stand up sometimes. I guess it's because it's located at the very North end of the valley and all the prevailing winds get channelled into the narrow chasm that is Death Valley.
Once we were below the rim, the winds stopped. The trail was a zig-zag on very loose, coarse gravel. On the way down we passed by a big stone intrusion, made out of some other kind of rock that was strong enough to withstand the blast that made the crater.
I also wondered how many cars had rolled out of the precarious parking lot and down into the crater.
The next stop was The Racetrack, about 30 miles away on a horribly washboarded gravel road.
(to be continued...)
1 comment:
I love to see your family's (Ludwig included) trips! Glad to see (on your other blog) that you guys are getting settled in. I do miss you but life moves on I suppose! ;o)
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