Note: It's a good thing we have Sundays and the regular going-to-church thing because it kind of zeros out my weeks, like an odometer in a car, so that I can count back and figure out what day it is at the moment. Time really blurs when you're not in a routine-ruled lifestyle.
Husband, hoping for dark skies and photos, was more interested in Death Valley than I was. I usually don't really care where we go and just follow along. (My motto: "Wherever. Whatever. Just don't scare me.") We camped unhooked and unplugged for four nights there and it was surprisingly awesome. The second day we were there, I think the park received at least half its annual rainfall, so flash floods abounded.
Tip: If you plan to visit this unique park, bring your own groceries. A quart of milk in their little store runs about $4. The cheapest meal at the cafe was a $15 hamburger which tasted quite good, as hamburgers go.
We had planned to stay two days, but stretched it to four, so we utilized an 80-mile round-trip drive to tiny Beatty, NV, just outside the park, to do more sightseeing, find a grocery store, and to stop and see a ghost town (called Rhyolite) along the way. I can't explain the reason for its odd name (which sounds like an energy drink) but we learned the town sprang to life due to a gold and silver mine in the early 1900s and died not long thereafter, leaving ghostly shells of buildings once filled with life and hope.
Beatty, being a typical Nevada town, sported a big, flashy casino, even though the town's only grocery store consisted of a few aisles in the Family Dollar store. But it had an enormous nut and candy store unlike anything I have ever seen. (Enter at your own risk.) I chose the almond coconut brittle and Husband went with gummy bears and fudge.
Back in Death Valley.
Lowest elevation on the continent. Not the prettiest spot, just worth noting. There's a LOT of salt mixed into that sandy grit behind me. |
I did not enhance the colors in this picture. This is what it was and explains its name. |
From a viewpoint called Dante's Point. See the distant snowy mountains in the clouds? |
We did another Walmart night in Bakersfield, CA, before arriving at a campground near Sequoia National Park, in trees and next to a raging little river. (Note: Before you pay extra for that riverfront site, think about how loud water can be.)
Those white things on the river bank were sandbags. This formerly parched state was quite waterlogged. Dare we hope the drought is over? |
Sequoia trees are shorter than Redwoods, but their total mass is greater. We paid our respects to the biggest tree on earth -- the very grand old, "General Sherman".
Next -- Yosemite and a BIG score.
I got a kick out the references to "the husband"! Haha
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