Saturday 31 May 2014

Death Valley National Park, California


No research prepared me for Death Valley.

The access through the passes falling into the desolate vast valleys below sea level are remarkable drives.

The scenic beauty hits you around every bend. 

We could not get enough and have dropped in lots of photos to share this fantastic day with us.





Pass on the Golf! temperatures getting to 120 degrees F!


Death Valley National Park: Artist Drive









Artist Drive, Death Valley National Park 
The temperature kept leaping up as we drove along the Artist Drive. We were stunned by the spectacular color in the rock formation. Greens, pinks, purples, mustards, blacks, browns, blues.
Beyond belief. 
A wondrous place.

















Death Valley National Park: Zabriskie Point


Iconic Zabriskie Point in Death Valley National Park.
Fred taking the most spectacular set of photos of the point and its surrounding Badlands. Nothing seems to move or fly, its eerily silent, scorchingly hot, tumble dryer feeling. Beautiful, beautiful, beautiful.









Coping with 115 degree F heat at Zabriskie Point




Roadrunner, Death Valley National Park

As one heads into Death Valley from the west the first stop is the Panamint Springs Resort. 

Fred and I stopped here to pick up coffee for our breakfast picnic. I was already scanning the bush around the camp spot  - after all their sign told me too..

Fred came back after chatting to the waitress and she had told him the roadrunners are early morning birds and it was already close to 9am.

Well, got my bird of the trip! 

The Roadrunner is my only target bird for the west. It has been on my radar for 4 weeks and then it quietly sneaked past me. Fred rushed off for his camera and managed to snap a few pictures before the bird disappeared. Awesome. 

Running as they do!



How cool is this bird! Rock star of the desert.

cautiously watching Fred and his huge lens.




Friday 30 May 2014

Trainspotting




I was sitting on a hill this afternoon surrounded by trainspotters from Canada and Germany. They were so excited to watch the trains coming through the Tehachapi Loop which is unique in the world and an engineering marvel. As was Fred! In fact even I had fun….

Completed in the 1870's the line at the Loop climbs in a spiral over itself. It is a California Historical Landmark and the most heavily trafficked single track in the US.

The numbers: about 50 freight trains a day climb from 400' in the west and crest the summit at 4025' and then drop into Mojave at 2700'.


Tehachapi Loop
Aerial of the Tehachapi Loop thanks to Google Maps.

Wednesday 28 May 2014

Encountering Giants


On the road through the Sequoia National Forest.
Within a few hundred miles we have driven a desert road and now a forest road….
This Sequoia beauty is 1500 years old and 245' tall
 Lyrical sounding names -  Ponderosa Pines, Sugar Pines, Incense Cedars, White Firs coexist with these giant Sequoias. I even glimpsed my first chipmunk for the trip, cute Alvin….






Wolf lichen adding vibrant color on the bark of a White Fir

Filtered light in the forest.

Exposed roots of a Sequoia that fell in the 1800's.
PS: I was in a coffee shop in Reno, and Alvin was looking down at me from the lintel. Asked him to join us and took a quick photo - what attitude.