In October we went to Death Valley to celebrate my 23rd birthday. This was the first time I was able to spend my birthday with Nathan in four years! It was a big deal for us.
We both drove our vehicles - I took my jeep and Nathan took his truck. Death Valley has a lot of off-roading trails and we both wanted to be able to take our rigs. We brought two-way handheld radios so we could talk the whole time.
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The entrance to the park. |
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Campsite #1 |
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Nathan bbq'd some hot dogs for us. |
Our first campsite was seriously perfect. We were surrounded by mountains, and not much else. We slept pretty well in our tent, too (aside from the desert fox that decided to investigate and wake us up. he was such a cute lil guy!). A huge thunderstorm rolled in that night, but we didn't get rained on at all. The thunder woke us up and we could see the lightning dancing on top of the mountains, but the storm never reached us. It was so peaceful here.
The next day we packed up camp and tackled Lippincott road, which runs up through the mountains we had camped underneath and into Death Valley. It took us two hours and we both had to use 4wd. The trail was so narrow in some spots and the drop was so sheer down the side of the mountain... it was scary! But so so so much fun. The view at the top was absolutely spectacular. Once again, we didn't see a single soul and we had the whole mountain to ourselves.
Lippincott Road pops out at the Racetrack, which is a cool playa where rocks MOVE across the desert floor. Seriously, they move on their own. You can read about it here. Unfortunately for us, the Racetrack was completely flooded from all the rains that had been hitting the park recently. So, no cool alien rocks for us. It was still beautiful, though.
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Flooded Racetrack |
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Flooded Racetrack |
Along Racetrack Road is the famous Teakettle Junction. We didn't add a teakettle to the collection, but I enjoyed reading the ones there. Here were a few of our favorites:
From there, we continued down the road to Scotty's Castle. I don't have any pictures of Scotty's castle, but it was built in the early 1900s and is pretty cool! Scotty was an asshole, though. He was a con man to the bone. He would sell gold ore from a mine in Colorado and say it came from his land on Death Valley. He would then sell that land for millions of dollars to prospective buyers and miners. We didn't tour the castle because it looked like it was going to rain and there were flash flood warnings out.
Instead, we headed to Beatty, NV to grab some lunch. We ate at this cool bar/grill with tons of signs and dollar bills all over the ceiling (those are my fave!). While we were there, we both got alerts on our phones for flash flooding expected in the area. We struck up a conversation with the bartender, who advised us to stay in town and get a hotel. He even offered for us to stay in his extra room (which was really nice) but we opted to press on. We headed back towards the park.
We wanted to drive Titus Canyon in the morning so we looked for some high ground to camp for the night. We didn't even bother setting up our tent - we just camped out in the jeep. Good thing we did, because the weather got ROUGH. It stormed and rained and we even got hailed on!! It was dime-sized hail! Thankfully we didn't get washed away. In the morning we set out for the canyon.
That wraps up days 1 and 2 of our adventure... next post will be days 3 and 4!
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