Monday, Oct 28
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Sand Dunes near Stovepipe Wells |
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Trees??? |
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Bottle House in Rhyolite |
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Bottle House with other glass/cement art |
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Old Merchantile building |
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Old truck |
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rhyolite more views |
It was a down, down, downward drive to Death
Valley National Park…going from 4000 feet to sea level or below. The drive took us through Grapevine canyon; I will call it a drive through canyon. It was a pretty neat drive. We stopped at Scotty’s Castle and shot some
pictures but it was not to open for another hour and we didn’t wish to pay the
$30 to see the inside. Also, we weren’t
100% sure that it would really open in 1 hour and we were the only people
there.
Scotty’s Castle was a oasis in this canyon with palm trees and a very
neat structure.
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Rhyolite |
Our travels took us to a volcanic crater called
Ubehebe Crater…6 miles in all directions of very little growth and what
appeared to be gravel…like a parking lot with varying elevations. Somehow we lucked out and the normal 90
degree days that existed this time of year were not present. The cold front that moved in gave us high winds and 70+ degree weather…perfect temperatures
with a reasonable 50 degree night.
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Why is this 1906 stone building falling apart? |
Next stop was Stovepipe Wells village for an ice
cream and walking on Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes…except it was so windy that we couldn’t go far. The wind was carrying sand with it and we
needed to protect our eyeballs from the sand.
Rhyolite was our next stop...a brief trip up and down another pass and out of Death Valley National Park. A ghost town in Nevada. I have to
say that this site was a little bit disappointing. The bottle house was pretty neat and the
Goldfield Open Air Museum had some interesting sculptures but I was expecting more buildings and in better condition.
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View of Rhyolite |
Next, in this action packed day we headed back into Death Valley National Park (yup, up and over the
pass again). We had hoped to be able to
overnight in Rhyolite but that was not allowed.
So we decided to book into one of the campgrounds in Death Valley.
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Goldwell Open Air Museum |
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Goldwell Open Air Museum |
My first choice would have been Mesquite
Spring but that was too far back into the park.
We took a look at all the furnace creek area campsites and settled on
Texas Spring as that one had the least
amount of occupants in it and plenty of open spaces to choose from. There were no trees or anything between
sites…think parking lotbut for tonight that was okay.
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Stone Spiral |
Death Valley has some inspiring scenery. The weather for our visit is a perfect 70 something degrees
compared to the 90 degrees of last weekJ
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Wild West views - Rhyolite area |
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