But Oh! The Colors – Death Valley Rocks!

Golden/gower Loop, Death Valley National Park

The very first time I saw Death Valley the first thought that popped into my head was “Boy, but this is a barren landscape!” But right on the heels of that thought came a second, this one attached to a sense of wonder – But Oh! The colors!

Death Valley
I called this viewpoint “Better than Zabriskie”. It was my personal meditation spot. Only a ten-minute walk from the road and less than half a mile from world-famous and hopelessly crowded Zabriskie Point, I found it while exploring a little wrinkle in the landscape and was the only one that knew it was there. A great place for solitude on a busy holiday weekend!

So this week I’d like to share a different kind of rock art with you, Mother Nature’s masterpieces. I’m going to get a little artsy-fartsy and share some abstract photography, portraits of those fantastic colors, patterns and texture that can be found in every corner of the national park.

Death Valley National Park
A glimpse of the Last Chance Range

I’m convinced that every color of the rainbow can be found somewhere in Death Valley’s rocks. I’m so convinced that when I was a ranger there, I played a little game as an icebreaker, to slow my visitors down on my Nameless Canyon hikes and sharpen their powers of observation. I picked up a random assortment of paint sample chips at the hardware store. I included lots of variety – purples, blues, yellows, pinks, browns, tans, greys – no two colors exactly the same. It was a big box hardware store. I got LOTS of paint chips.

Artist's Drive Formation
Pinks and greens and yellows…

Then I cut them all to a uniform size and put them in a bag. Each hiker had to blindly thrust their hand in the bag and pull out three paint chips, then find its EXACT match in the landscape we traveled through.

Zabriskie Point
It’s not only the colors, it’s the patterns and textures that make Death Valley’s rocks so fascinating.

There was a lot of eye-rolling and exclamations of “I’ll never find THIS color!” I did end up removing 2 or 3 shades of blue and one particular red chip. True black was a surprisingly difficult color to find. But nearly every time, each hiker would eventually find all 3 of their colors, no matter what they picked out of the bag.

Ubehebe Crater
Orange is the predominant color at Ubehebe Crater. Although the crater was formed by volcanic action, this orange rock, surprisingly enough, is sedimentary.

Some areas are more colorful than others, world famous for their colors, it’s true. But even the hills that look a uniform baked brown from the road reveal their loveliness in the layers and shades you will find if you get a little closer.

Kit Fox Hills. Death Valley National Park
The shimmery glow of “candle drippings” in the Kit Fox Hills. Candle drippings are mineral runoff on the canyon walls that sometimes builds up into elaborate patterns, Mother Nature’s tapestries.

When you delve deeper, all those colors, layers and patterns reveal a plethora of geologic events and eras. If only the rocks could talk, what stories they could tell!

Mosaic Canyon
Noonday Dolomite, the “marble” that makes Mosaic Canyon such a fun hike!

So it doesn’t matter if it hasn’t rained all year. It doesn’t matter if it’s a poor flower year, or the wrong season. You can visit this national park and still see a brilliant display of color, because Death Valley rocks!

Death Valley National Park
Crazy swirly mountainside in the Funeral Mountains

Thank you, Ann-Christine, for bringing us this week’s Lens-Artist’s Photo Challenge, “You Pick It”.  Also thanks to Tina for the art inspiration and Amy for the desert rocks inspiration.

Monarch Canyon, Death Valley National Park
Beautiful warped and twisted stone from Monarch Canyon in the Funeral Mountains

 

 

This Road is #1!

Mendocino Coast

I recently drove Highway 1 in California, from Morro Bay to the Oregon border. I have got to say, hats off to the California Department of Transportation. Engineering this road was quite a feat, but it seems to me maintaining it is even more amazing.

Highway 1 is definitely one of the most beautiful drives in the country, but its very existence is quite precarious. And after a stormy winter like this one….

Mendocino Coast

In a lot of places it was a one lane road, where part of the road was devastated. There were four major closures on the highway, where both lanes were damaged too badly for any kind of an easy fix. If you saw where this road goes, you would be amazed that it is only four places.

Highway One hugs the coast, a fine line between the cliffs and the sea. It travels through an incredibly dynamic landscape, a land in flux.

The San Andreas Fault runs here. This part of California is trying to move to Alaska! And tectonics, although a big game-changer, is not the major force affecting this road. It’s erosion. Water.

One lane of the highway eaten away by the surf just north of here on the Sonoma Coast

Think about it. Steep cliffs, unconsolidated soils, a heck of a lot of rain. That means mudslides. Practically everywhere, all that water and soil is trying to take a trip to the beach. Hills are slumping, attempting to erase the road, a horizontal ribbon in this vertical landscape. Not only mudslides. Rock slides, too.

The mudslides are countless, and responsible for most of the closures, but the force that really amazed me was water coming from the other direction. The sea. Waves crashing against the cliffs. Powerful. Constant. Relentless. It’s truly awe-inspiring. Eating away the ground from underneath the highway continuously, little by little. The wild and mighty Pacific.

A few miles south of the Lost Coast

In some places where the road is down to one lane, you can see there is nothing left where the other lane once ran. It is amazing to me that this road still exists at all.

Highway 1 is an incredible road, one of the most beautiful and craziest roads you will ever travel. Do travel it. Soon, while you still can.

Interesting flowers, here, too!