Death Valley – Brief Visit and iPhone Photos

My son and I made a trip into Death Valley from Lone Pine, thinking we might return for more serious photography, but the distance and the timing difficulty steered us away from that idea.

Yet it was good to see Badwater Basin with the shallow lake created by the recent heavy rains.  It appears that this unusual event attracted others, too.  there were lots of people, more than I had seen there in previous visits, in the park.

Badwater Basin
Long Walk

The road to Devil’s Golf Course was closed, requiring a long walk to see that feature.

Death Valley Salt
Death Valley Salt 2
Brown and White

Shallow water covers the salt that appears brown and the salt protruding above the water is white.

Death Valley Salt 3

The salt is showing indications of forming geometrical patterns typical of this salt as it dries.  The heavy rains have destroyed or muted such patterns.

Salt Walker
Rugged Salt

We stopped a little short of the turn in the road, which goes by the traditional Devil’s Golf Course, but this rugged salt is what we would expect to see there.  The rains have muted some of the sharp features that I recall from previous visits.

The Long Walk Back
Beer and Pizza Time

Back in Lone Pine, we had Pizza and Beer for dinner.  This IPA seemed a fitting choice after our time in Death Valley.

Until next time,

Ken

 

Death Valley’s Racetrack

There is a remote playa in Death Valley National Park nicknamed “The Racetrack“.  On this broad, flat, mud playa rocks move and leave trails in the mud.  I visited The Racetrack with two of my sons in March, 2013.  At that time no one knew how the rocks moved and no one had ever seen them move.  I often wondered why someone had not put up video cameras to monitor the playa and observe the movement.  I suppose the remoteness of the area, the lack of continuous power for a camera system and park regulations had prevented this.  But, eventually, researchers did just that and finally discovered the secret of how the rocks moved in December, 2013, two years after the study began.

The most prevailing theory of how the rocks moved, prior to that research, was that strong winds moved these heavy rocks across the playa, when it was wet, since the mud is very slippery after a rain.  This seemed like a stretch, but winds can be very strong in the wide open valley where the playa is located.

The details of the experiment that revealed the secret of the rocks’ movement can be found on the NPS website.

The experiment also revealed why there are track with no rocks at their ends.  Previously, everyone thought that rocks had been removed by visitors from such tracks.  Be sure to  visit the NPS website via the link above to read about this experiment and the discovery of the real way the rocks move.  This might serve to illustrate that scientific theories are not always correct and have to be verified by actual experimentation and observation.  So whenever you hear those famous words “scientific consensus is that…”, please bear in mind that until there is actual proof, a theory or consensus of thought is just speculation.

One of the rocks and its trail left in the playa at Death Valley’s Racetrack.
A large rock and its trail on the playa at Death Valley’s Racetrack.
Another view of rocks and their trails in the playa at Death Valley’s Racetrack.
A long exposure night image of intersecting trails of moving rocks on the playa at Death Valley’s Racetrack.

If you visit this area, please heed the warning on the NPS website, regarding the long drive to get here, safety precautions and do not venture onto the playa when it is muddy.  We saw evidence of people disregarding these warnings and prohibitions.  There were footprints and tire trails, obviously made when it was muddy, in the playa.  These defacing scars will last for a very long time in the desert, ruining the natural appeal of this area.

Thanks for reading,

Ken