North meets South annually in my life. I migrate. As beautiful as Alaska is in the winter, like the birds and the whales, I prefer to head for warmer climes when the days get shorter.
For years I worked in Death Valley National Park in the winter. People used to tell me, “Wow, you go from one extreme to the other! But I didn’t see it that way.
Sure, there are big differences. In some years I was moving from a park that contained the highest point in North America, Denali, to a park that held the lowest point, the Badwater Basin. But I was actually avoiding the extremes through my travels- escaping the cold of winter in Alaska and dodging the heat of summer in Death Valley.
The predominant colors were different, it’s true – shades of green in Denali and shades of brown in the desert. But the landscapes were surprisingly similar.
In fact, there were far more similarities than there were differences. North meets South, sharing many of the same attributes. When I first applied for a job in Death Valley, an Alaskan friend told me that I’d find it more like home than anywhere else in the lower 48. He was right.
Immense, open panoramas abound in both. The vastness cannot be described, it needs to be experienced. They are landscapes that make you aware of your own insignificance. Death Valley is the largest park in the contiguous United States. Denali is even bigger. In most places, these landscapes seem endless because there are few to no trees. When I worked in Denali, I lived at the Toklat Road Camp, 50 miles into the park. I was surrounded by alpine tundra, not trees.
There are parallels in many of the geological features. Both contain rugged mountain ranges divided by wide valleys. Alluvial fans and glacial outwash plains look surprisingly similar. The raw, naked geology is exciting. The stories that the rocks tell are so much easier to understand in barren landscapes like these.
One aspect that delights me is that both parks are filled with countless nameless canyons to explore. These landscapes invite you to wander.
Sometimes you find similar treasures as you explore these canyons. Did these horns come from Death Valley or Denali?
One way North meets South is through the commonalities of their wildflowers. Both Denali and Death Valley can have phenomenal flower seasons. And plants in both parks use similar adaptations to survive in their harsh environments.
Both Denali and Death Valley pose extremely difficult challenges for the plants and animals that live there. Although one place is scorching hot and the other bitterly cold, they share an element that amplifies the effects of both extremes – wind.
In both places, the growing season is short but intense. In both, you’ll also find that a lot of flowers grow low to the ground. Belly flowers. They often grow closely in mounds or in mats covering the ground, working together to avoid the drying effects of the relentless wind.
Many plants in both places are covered with fine hairs, which keep Denali’s flowers a little warmer and protect Death Valley’s from the harsh sun.
The biggest draw for me personally is that both Denali and Death Valley are incredibly wild, something I’m aching for on tame, benevolent Orcas Island this winter. There is something about the harshness of those landscapes that speaks to my soul. And of course, they’re also both awe-inspiringly beautiful.
Thank you, Amy, for this week’s Lens-Artists Photo Challenge, East Meets West (or North Meets South).
I LOVED this piece. It expressed your love of both places.
Thanks, Vicki!
I see a ranger talk coming out of this!
I always wanted to do an evening program at Death Valley doing a compare and contrast but never quite got around to it. You can tell, Huh?
GREAT selections. I’m a landscape guy, so they are my faves. LOVE the wide format banner shot.
Thanks, John!
I think your understanding of nature and the land exceeds that of anyone else I know Dianne. I always love your posts – they’re beautiful and I always learn something. We spent a week in Denali in the national park and loved it but were truly socked in much of the week. I guess now I must go see Death Valley!
Yes, you should. I’m thinking late March or early April would be the best time for wildflowers this year. It isn’t a superbloom and there’s nothing special going on in the Valley because you need the big rain to fall in October or November for that, but the January rains should bring good mid-elevation flowers. That’s my prediction. Just don’t go in summer!
I love how you’ve highlighted the similarities between the two places in this piece, rather than the differences. The flowers in particular are surprisingly alike – I couldn’t say which was which!
Thanks, Sarah! It was fun picking out parallels and look-alikes!
Wonderful photos and a great response to the challenge. I also learnt about the wildflower season in Death Valley
Thank you. I’m so glad you liked it!
Always breathtakingly beautiful from you, Dianne. I love your comparisons and photography. The likenesses are apparent.
Thanks, Ann-Christine. They are, aren’t they?
My husband and I just wrote posts about our recent time in Death Valley – our first time going there in winter. What a difference! It’s a wonderful season for that park.
Wonderful photos and a great response to the challenge. I also learnt about the wildflower season in Death Valley