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Zabriskie Point Overlook - 6 members in 12 triplogs have rated this an average 4 ( 1 to 5 best )
12 triplogs
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Mar 17 2025
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 Guides 17
 Routes 297
 Photos 1,808
 Triplogs 276

female
 Joined Mar 11 2002
 Gilbert, AZ
Golden Canyon - Gower Gulch LoopDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Hiking avatar Mar 17 2025
VashtiTriplogs 276
Hiking7.20 Miles 1,303 AEG
Hiking7.20 Miles   3 Hrs   57 Mns   2.16 mph
1,303 ft AEG      37 Mns Break
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
We decided to do this loop counterclockwise, mainly to avoid the crowd of boyscouts that started clockwise at the same time we did. We scored the last spot in the parking lot, but there is also ample parking along the road. There is a pit toilet at the Trailhead.

We started off to the east. The trail goes parallel to the road before heading north into Gower gulch. The views start in the canyon and beyond of the multicolored ridges. We saw some people. This is a very popular hike, but it wasn't over run. We headed through the canyon. And bypassed the direct connector to golden canyon and instead went to zabriskie Point. It is pretty much flat until heading up to zabriskie point which has amazing views. Not a place of solitude since you can park your car in the lot and walk a short distance to the overlook.

After a quick lunch, we departed zabriskie and headed through golden canyon. This is a very pretty area, initially on the ridge. Sadly for us, the "wind event" started resulting in powerful gale force winds. Hiking wasn't super fun as we were getting blown around. And the sand was pelting us, too. Alas, you cannot pick the weather and we headed on. First towards Manly Beacon (what a name!, 🤣🤣🤣 it's the guy's name, but I still think it is hilarious), and then at the base of it and past. After that we headed to the red cathedral. It was very beautiful up there with great views, but the wind made it not fun. We enjoyed the area for a short time and then headed back towards to the Trailhead. The closer we came to the Trailhead, the more people we encountered.

This was an enjoyable hike!

dry Golden Canyon Dry Dry
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Feb 22 2023
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 Guides 10
 Routes 673
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 Triplogs 4,660

67 female
 Joined Nov 17 2008
 phoenix, az
Death Valley - Day 5, CA 
Death Valley - Day 5, CA
 
Hiking avatar Feb 22 2023
trekkin_geckoTriplogs 4,660
Hiking12.70 Miles 2,000 AEG
Hiking12.70 Miles
2,000 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
once the wind died down, we shook the sand out of our belongings and packed up camp

our first hike for the day was at salt creek
the road is closed, so we walked down to the interpretive loop
the boardwalks were washed away, but we were able to walk along the creek
the boys found a pupfish
kind of amazing to see flowing water through there
it's very salty

next we wandered around the harmony borax works and drove through mustard canyon
interesting old mining stuff

a quick stop at the park visitor center and then on to the main hike of the day from zabriskie point
bruce created a loop that included golden canyon, badlands loop and gower gulch loop with an out n back to red cathedral
fantastic views and beautiful terrain going from zabriskie point to the trailhead along badwater road
this hike was in the running for favorite until the uphill canyon gravel in gower gulch
bruce had a recommendation to do the loop counterclockwise for views, but i would do it clockwise for downhill gravel hiking - my feet were just tired of sand and gravel by day 5

another hike on our original list was mount perry from dante's view
we drove to the viewpoint and hiked down a bit to the south for even better views
a nice perspective of the valley from above
quite a bit more snow on wildrose peak that earlier in the week
headed home late afternoon with a stop in kingman

favorites:
1. mosaic canyon
2a. zabriskie loop
2b. ubehebe crater
3. sidewinder canyon
enjoyed everything we did
some unfinished business due to weather
a great trip with five days of hiking regardless
a lot of fun with john and bruce - thanks, guys!
good times :)
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hazhole
  1 archive
Feb 22 2023
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 Guides 1
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68 male
 Joined Mar 16 2008
 chandler,az
Death Valley - Day 5, CA 
Death Valley - Day 5, CA
 
Hiking avatar Feb 22 2023
johnlpTriplogs 5,208
Hiking13.30 Miles 2,150 AEG
Hiking13.30 Miles
2,150 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Day five of our Death Valley tour. We had seven days planned but more wind then rain were in the forecast so we cut the trip short. We got plenty of hiking and sightseeing in regardless.
First hike of the day was to Salt Creek. The area is closed due to a flash flood. We walked the road from the closed gate to the creek. Interesting place. After searching we finally found a pupfish. Hard to believe they can survive a summer there.
Following tourist stops at the Borax Works and Mustard Canyon it was on to Zabriski Point, Golden Canyon, Gowers Gulch and Badlands Loop. Easy to see why this hike is so popular. Not super crowded mid-week after the storm the night before. Very scenic hike.
Final stop was Dante's View. Quite a drive to get there, but the views are worth it. Massive.
Excellent trip with the Eagle and gecko. Thanks for joining me. :)
wildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observationwildflower observation
Wildflowers Observation Isolated
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  1 archive
Feb 22 2023
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 Guides 41
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 Triplogs 2,762

69 male
 Joined Jan 20 2009
 Far NE Phoenix,
Death Valley - Day 5, CA 
Death Valley - Day 5, CA
 
Hiking avatar Feb 22 2023
The_EagleTriplogs 2,762
Hiking13.05 Miles 2,100 AEG
Hiking13.05 Miles   5 Hrs   14 Mns   2.75 mph
2,100 ft AEG      29 Mns Break12 LBS Pack
 
1st trip
Route Scout Route Recorded  on Route Scout | Pop | Map | Popup | MapDEX
Day 5 of a planned 7 days, now cut to 5 days

After the weather the night before, minimal sleep in the car, destruction of tents, forecasted rain, high winds and cold temps, we put our tails between our legs and called this the last day. We would hit as much as we could and then determine if we'd drive all the way home, or partially home.

Salt Creek Trail
3.47 Miles
200 AEG

The road to this short hike is currently closed from previous flooding. This added 2.6 miles RT to the hike. We parked outside the closed gate and made the walk to the TH. The boardwalks and Pit toilet had been destroyed from the flooding, but we were easily able to make our way around. The high point of this hike is -177 feet. Interesting to see a decent flow in salt creek and to find a pup fish!

Harmony Borax Works
.6 Miles
200 AEG

A worthy side trip to see some history

Mustard Canyon Drive

Interesting drive through mustard colored mounds

Zabriskie Point - Golden Canyon - Red Cathedral Gower Gulch Loop
8.31 Miles
1500 AEG

This is another hike that should be on your list. We started from the Zabriskie Point TH,
[ youtube video ]
but you can also start from the Golden Canyon TH below. Recommended direction of travel is CCW. The Golden Canyon and Red Cathedral trails are the highlight. Smooth well laid out trails with breathtaking views.
[ youtube video ]
The Gower Gulch Trail is a steady up, back to Zabriskie Point in a... well...gulch.

20 Mule Team Canyon Drive

More interesting geology

Dante's View South Hike
.67 Miles
160 AEG

The final hike of the trip. 53 degrees when we began the drive up the road to Dante's View, 35 degrees with 40 mph winds when we got out of the car. We dressed up warmer and went out to quickly enjoy the views. We took a partial hike down the Dante's View South Trail.
[ youtube video ]
Dante's View is a must do when in the park. It gives you a great overview of much of the park. Even if you are not a hiker, make it to this view point.
[ youtube video ]

From here we started the 7 hr drive home.
Final Thoughts
This is a BIG national Park. The largest in the lower 48. There is so much to do.
You can get to quite a bit of the cool stuff with a vehicle with decent clearance and tires.
There's a lot more that requires HC 4x4. Do your homework.
Pay attention to where you can and can't legally disperse camp.
Know where you can get water, restrooms, showers and resupply.
Go with a plan and be ready to adjust and have backups. Our plans changed almost daily based on weather and closures.

We hit quite a bit in 5 days and missed at least 3 items we had marked as "Must Do's"

My Favorites (in sorta order, all have unique and redeeming qualities):
Golden Canyon - Red Cathedral - Gower Gulch Loop
Ubehebe Crater
Sidewinder Canyon
Mosaic Canyon
Artist Palette
Dante's View South Hike
Badwater Basin

I had a great time with these 2 misfits. I learned that both Kelly and John plan their entire trips around coffee.

A huge thanks to John for driving and subjecting his brand new vehicle to a sand blasting. :o
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Pupfish
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There is a very fine line between "hobby" and "mental illness."
Dave Barry 🦅
  2 archives
Nov 10 2017
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 Guides 26
 Routes 21
 Photos 562
 Triplogs 1,393

female
 Joined Jan 04 2011
 Las Vegas, NV
Dantes View and PointDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Road Biking avatar Nov 10 2017
autumnstarsTriplogs 1,393
Road Biking40.79 Miles 4,824 AEG
Road Biking40.79 Miles
4,824 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   linked  
Partners none no partners
This was a pretty tough ride. Uphill, with the final 1/4 mi at 15%, all the way from Zabriskie Point to Dante's View.
Relatively easy until the trailer parking, then steeper and steeper. At some points, it felt like it might never end.
We did see a few people on bikes, but they had been dropped off at the top to ride only downhill.

Enjoy a sandwich and the views at the top, then down all the way back.
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Feb 17 2017
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 Guides 27
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69 male
 Joined Jan 23 2008
 Phoenix, AZ
Man Plans God Laughs, CA 
Man Plans God Laughs, CA
 
Hiking avatar Feb 17 2017
AZWanderingBearTriplogs 700
Hiking32.00 Miles 4,300 AEG
Hiking32.00 Miles
4,300 ft AEG
 no routes
1st trip
Man Plans, God Laughs

Death Valley National Park is larger than Connecticut. Thus, a well thought out plan is required if you want to see a lot of the various offerings of the Valley without back tracking and driving even more miles. I’d tweaked my plan for several months to make maximum use of our week-long trip. And then it rained!

Friday morning we set out under cloudy skies. The day’s objective was to see a few sites along the way and overnight in Kingman. Went up through Chino Valley and stopped off at the ruins of the Puntenney Lime Kiln dating back to the late 1800s. Lime is still mined near here, well more accurately limestone. We saw a big cloud of dust a few miles before reaching the kiln. Stopped to chat with some of the quarry workers to discover they had just blasted a section of the quarry wall, but all was now clear for us to explore the area. Preservation efforts have slowed the demise of this historic kiln and we enjoyed poking around for a few minutes.

We drove onto Seligman for lunch and to begin our planned drive along old Route 66 into Kingman. Seligman is nothing if not a little odd. We’d planned on a burger at the Snow Cap, but it was closed for repairs. Westside Lilo’s proved a suitable alternative.

Route 66 winds through the countryside and history far slower than its replacement, I-40, to the south. We stopped at a few of the historic roadside establishments that had pumped gas and comic book images of the west at motorized travelers a half century ago. All had signs and t-shirts adorned with poor attempts at humor and outside was the obligatory collection of ORS (old rusty stuff).

We sped through Kingman and stayed on 66 out to Oatman, going up the very very winding shelf road that is Route 66. Oatman is famous for a couple of things. It was a semi-prosperous mining town back in the day. Clark Gable and Carole Lombard spent their wedding night there in 1939. Today, Oatman is a resurrected ghost town and there are burros, descendants of those used by the prospectors, roaming the streets. You can feed the burros from sacks of burro pellets on sale for $1 at any of the fine tourist trap establishments lining main street.

For me the most interesting part of the Oatman story is that the town is named for Olive Oatman, one of the three children who survived the 1851 Oatman Family massacre northwest of Gila Bend, AZ. Olive and her sister were taken captive by Yavapai (often mistakenly labeled Apaches in various accounts). Olive’s brother was thought dead by the raiders and tossed off the side of the mesa where the incident occurred. Olive and her sister were traded to the Mojave tribe. Olive was later ransomed by white settlers. Her sister had died of starvation along with many Mojave a few years earlier. The Mojave treated Olive well and tattooed her chin in their customary way. Olive became a minor celebrity in her time and some miners in search of a name for their new boom town settled on Oatman. Earlier this year I’d visited the Oatman Massacre site, so visiting the town of Oatman closed that loop for me.

The nice lady at the hotel desk in Kingman recommended a restaurant named Oysters. It offered Mexican fare and seafood and “very large margaritas” according to the helpful clerk. We took her advice. I mean, what could possibly go wrong with that combination? It was crowded, surprisingly good, but there wasn’t an oyster to be found on the property.

Saturday found us stopping off at Chloride, yet another ghost town. Chloride was more authentic than Oatman, as in no t-shirt shops, only more ROS and interesting yard sculptures apparently crafted by the residents. Outside of town up a very rutted trail are some murals by artist Roy Purcell. They are nothing if not unique.

We raced through Las Vegas and only stopped once we hit Beatty. We needed gas and wanted to provision up at Nevada’s largest candy store. We knew they’d have just the right snacks for Death Valley. The whole purpose behind breaking up drive to DV into 2 days was to have time to dramatically enter the Park via Titus Canyon, one of the more impressive 4x4 trails in the Park requiring several hours to complete. A quick call confirmed it was closed -- snow, mud, and a rockslide. I sensed my plan was in grave danger. We stopped off at the Rhyolite ghost town and Goldwell Open Air Art Museum, a very strange little place, under dark skies with a light but steady rain.

Our entry into the Park was instead on pavement (how boring). The skies were lifting with only a slow drizzle. We were greeted with a view of a VERY wet valley floor, standing water evident in the normally dry lake beds. We stopped off at Salt Creek to see the rare pupfish. Sort of odd that our first event in DV required driving through deep standing water, wearing rain gear, and walking along a flowing stream. We drove to Stovepipe Wells for dinner, lodging, and some adjustments to the plan. The rain stopped overnight.

Day 3 found us at the Ranger Station checking road closures. It doesn’t take much water to move a lot of mud in Death Valley. Two days of rain (snow in the higher elevations) made the list of open roads much shorter than the closed list. The people working to open the roads and the rangers apparently don’t communicate. The information was incomplete and sometimes misleading. But we slowly began to realize we were seeing something unique. Rain is rare in DV. We were getting to see the whole area change in front of us.

The day was spent on mostly touristy sights -- the old Borax Works, Badwater (282’ below sea level and crowded), hiking Natural Bridge Canyon and the Golden Canyon/Gower Gulch Loop. We did get to drive Mustard Canyon. It was fun sliding in the mud between the orange dunes. Driving back to Stovepipe Wells for the night we met a Ranger in a muddy truck coming out one of the closed roads. We stopped him and asked a few questions about destinations we hoped to still see. He’d just come from Ubehebe and the paved road to there was passable but muddy. We wanted to get to the Racetrack about 27 miles of dirt beyond Ubehebe. He said he had no idea about the road to the Racetrack. We told him we’d give him a report late tomorrow. He grinned and said good luck.

We geared up early on Day 4 and raced past the Road Closed sign headed towards the northwestern portion of the park. The drive to the Ubehebe Crater was easy and we were the only vehicle on the road. Evidence of the somewhat cleared mudflows were numerous. We bypassed Ubehebe figuring we’d hit it on the way back. We stopped long enough to air down the tires. The dirt track to the Racetrack was wet and sloppy in a few places, total washboard everywhere else. Twenty mph was top speed and that was still jaw jarring. But the scenery was great. There was one set of tracks in front of us. Someone else was out here, so we felt confident. Stopped for the obligatory photos at Tea Kettle Junction. The storm had knocked a few kettles off the sign. MJ tied them back in place and emptied rainwater out of any that needed it.

A few miles later we arrived at the Racetrack. A truck was parked on the trail. A Ranger was there to remind people not to walk or drive on the normally dry playa (lakebed). He was going to camp here for a few days to protect the playa since muddy footprints and tire tracks remain for years and years. The Ranger was the most interesting person we’d met so far in the Park. He loved the backcountry portions of the Park and was a fount of knowledge for us. While we didn’t get to walk out and see the trails of the moving rocks that makes the Racetrack such a unique site, the conversation with this guy was a decent substitute. The tracks were under a few inches of water on the south end of the playa anyway, guarded by a lone seagull standing in the muddy water. We sated ourselves by walking around the edges or the Playa and talking about next time.

Being close, we continued on to the old abandoned Lippincott Mine. The drive up was rough and fun. The mine site offered great views back towards the Racetrack and west into Saline Valley. I noticed 4 vehicles below us slowly making their way through the pass on Lippincott Road. We bumped into them a little while later and had a nice conversation. Was a group of 4 young men doing a few days of offroading in the northwestern portion of the Park.

After a bumpy ride back out, we stopped off at the Ubehebe Crater. MJ went to explore and take some photos while I aired the tires back up for pavement. The wind was so strong it knocked me over as I squatted beside a tire. We wanted to spend more time exploring around the volcanic crater, but the clock, wind and cold drove us back into the truck pretty fast. We moved our base camp to Furnace Creek that night, happy after a day more like our original plan.

On Day 5, we slept in a bit after the very full previous day. After a decent breakfast and checking the status of roads (still closed), we opted to hike Mosaic Canyon. While not as pretty as Golden and the Badlands area, this hike was the most fun. There were numerous slick rock waterfalls to climb which quickly winnowed the crowd trailhead crowd down to the real hikers. One major fall required a bypass trail up and over. And eventually you hit an impressive fall that stops most mortals. We wished Kelly was with us knowing she’d try to find a way up. Sliding down the falls on the way back was just plain fun.

With some day left, we decided to make a run for out to Panamint Springs just because. The winding road is fun to drive as it first climbs and then descends into the little “resort” of Panamint Springs. The road crosses a normally dry lakebed. Instead there was a few inches of muddy water on each side of the road with the wind forming muddy waves. The whole thing was rather surreal. The resort part of it wasn’t a place we would have wanted to stay and they had the highest gas prices we saw in a Park renowned for exorbitant gas prices. We’d thought of trying to hike to Darwin Falls, but we had dinner reservations at Furnace Creek Inn so we turned back. Stopped for gas in Stovepipe Wells, the cheapest in the Park at $2.96. As we wheeled up to the pumps, 4 guys jumped out of their trucks waving and grinning -- our 4 buddies from the previous day at Lippincott. They were fueling their bodies and vehicles before heading home. They’d tried to cross the Panamint Mountain Range near the Tea Kettle Junction after we had last seen them. Deep snow had forced a turn around. Their MaxTrax had saved them at least once. One vehicle had suffered some fender damage. They looked pretty beat up, but were in the afterglow of an epic trip in demanding conditions.

Day 6 was our last full day in the Park and we hoped for some good news on the roads. Nothing had changed. The high country was totally socked in. Even the very benign Twenty Mule Team Road was still closed. We opted to hit the Zabriskie and Dante’s Overlooks, along Amargosa Range the east side of the Park. While at Zabriskie, we hiked the Badlands Loop, a very pretty little hike. Dante’s provided a stunning look down at Badwater (the lowest point in North America at 282 feet below sea level) and then across to Telescope Peak, at 11,043 feet, the highest point in Death Valley National Park. The two locations are less than 18 miles apart.

We hiked around some at Dante’s and then chilled at the overlook just soaking in the amazing views. Our trip was coming to a close. It wasn’t the trip we planned, but that just left a reason to come back. Tomorrow would just be a race back home. But for now the sun was shining and the views were never ending. It rained again that night. Plans are overrated.
 Fauna
 Fauna [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Pupfish
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  5 archives
Feb 28 2016
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 Routes 1
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45 female
 Joined Jan 18 2011
 In the Wild
Zabriskie Point OverlookDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Hiking avatar Feb 28 2016
LucyanTriplogs 1,447
Hiking1.00 Miles 500 AEG
Hiking1.00 Miles
500 ft AEG
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
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Jul 10 2015
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 Guides 3
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43 male
 Joined May 21 2004
 Phoenix, AZ
Zabriskie Point OverlookDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Hiking avatar Jul 10 2015
SunDevil3Triplogs 94
Hiking0.30 Miles 30 AEG
Hiking0.30 Miles      45 Mns   0.40 mph
30 ft AEG5 LBS Pack
 no routesno photosets
1st trip
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Drove up from LA-area and made camp before speeding up to Zabriskie to catch sunset. Sadly, just missed the top edge of sun having slipped below the last ridge and so just enjoyed the failing light and a quick hike around
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"Being unselfish is a natural high, like hiking or paint thinner."
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Nov 02 2014
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 Guides 26
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 Photos 562
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female
 Joined Jan 04 2011
 Las Vegas, NV
Golden Canyon - Gower Gulch LoopDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Hiking avatar Nov 02 2014
autumnstarsTriplogs 1,393
Hiking6.30 Miles 1,103 AEG
Hiking6.30 Miles
1,103 ft AEG
 no routes
Partners none no partners
After stepping out of my car at Dante's View and nearly being blown over, this loop from Zabriskie Point quickly became Plan B. Hiking among the otherworldly badlands formations was fun, and the loop provided a lot of different points of view. And old mines, too :D

First headed down Gower Gulch (clockwise travel). The trail begins as an old mining-related road, but is quickly swallowed up by the wash. Continuing along the wash, there were some nice twists and turns to keep things interesting. The morning light was soft on the runoff-sculpted sediments, bringing out a variety of shades and stripes. As the light intensified, the colors became much more monotonal. It also became hot. Down in a badlands wash with very reflective surfaces all around, I should have expected nothing less.

It was a strange feeling to walk through all this area with absolutely no plants or any other signs of life. Not even a single lizard or fly. So, it was a bit of a shock to come to the old borax mines and their platforms, trails, and tunnels. The strangest thing to see was timbers - how far away did they need to be brought from? Due to elevation and rain shadow, the Black and Funeral Mtns don't even have small trees on their highest peaks. Interesting to explore and imagine what life was like for those who worked these short-lived claims.

After passing the mines, Gower Gulch narrows and the walls get steeper and higher. Twisting and turning through the confines, it felt like a whole different wash. A few small dryfalls, even. Gower Gulch ends somewhat abruptly at a 40-foot dryfall with a view across the valley out toward the Panamint Mtns. There was a lot more snow up there after last night's precipitation. After enjoying the immense scope of the view, I followed the trail around the dryfall and across toward the mouth of Golden Canyon. Hitting the trailhead at Golden Canyon, there was an immediate increase in the number of people on trail with me from zero to 20 or more. The usual assortment of Death Valley winter tourists, most stared at my pack like I was the crazy one. ;)

After a bit of a slog up Golden Canyon with all the tourists, the loop toward Zabriskie Point branched off and I left all other hikers behind. Much of this portion of the trail stayed up out of the washes - a very different perspective than the first half of the loop. The trail traversed right under Manly Beacon, bringing back memories of my first ever trip to Death Valley. Overall, a nice hike on a nice day.

In the future, I would probably start and end at the Golden Canyon trailhead but still hike clockwise. This would get the part of the hike with a ton of people over with first, end your hike with a downhill stretch, and provide a perfect lunch stop at Zabriskie Point if you timed it right.
 Named place
 Named place [ checklist ]
[ checklist ]  Manly Beacon  Panamint Range

dry Golden Canyon Dry Dry
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"Let it ride / Let it roll / Let it go"
 
Jun 03 2012
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 Guides 26
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female
 Joined Jan 04 2011
 Las Vegas, NV
Zabriskie Point OverlookDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Hiking avatar Jun 03 2012
autumnstarsTriplogs 1,393
Hiking0.50 Miles
Hiking0.50 Miles
 no routesno photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
A quick stop on the drive back home to see where we'd been.
The dust/smoke/haze was very thick, making it hard to pick anything out, but we managed.
It was hot and we only saw 2 other people at this normally popular stop.
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"Let it ride / Let it roll / Let it go"
 
Nov 25 2011
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 Guides 26
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 Photos 562
 Triplogs 1,393

female
 Joined Jan 04 2011
 Las Vegas, NV
Zabriskie Point OverlookDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Hiking avatar Nov 25 2011
autumnstarsTriplogs 1,393
Hiking0.50 Miles
Hiking0.50 Miles
 no routesno photosets
Linked   none no linked trail guides
Partners none no partners
Nice hang-out for sunset. The crowds of people were extreme.
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"Let it ride / Let it roll / Let it go"
 
Feb 12 2010
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 Guides 71
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65 male
 Joined May 14 2003
 Ahwatukee, AZ
Death ValleyDeath Valley, CA
Death Valley, CA
Backpack avatar Feb 12 2010
Randal_SchulhauserTriplogs 1,009
Backpack19.00 Miles 1,000 AEG
Backpack19.00 Miles5 Days         
1,000 ft AEG
 
Death Valley February 2010

THE PLAN
Friday 2/12 - 7am rendezvous @ Chez Schulhauser. Furnace Creek Ranch cabin. Hank & Joe @ 7pm for dinner.

Saturday 2/13 - Trail Canyon day hike. Ghost towns and mining relics. Camp in Trail Canyon. Camping restrictions? Camp fire restrictions?

Sunday 2/14 - Eureka Singing dunes hiking. Scotty's Castle. Camp @ Eureka Dunes Dry Camp.

Monday 2/15 - The Racetrack. Homestake Dry Camp

Tuesday 2/16 - head home?

Mike -> 3x breakfast
Randal -> 3x dinner

Lunch will be hiking snacks


THE EXECUTION

This was a trek at least 6 months in the making, having had my first "taste" of Death Valley when we skirted the Panamints on our return from climbing Mount Whitney (see [ photoset ] and [ photoset ] ). Letty's recent triplog, photos, [ photoset ] and insightful PM's only made us drool in anticipation. My 25th work anniversary year is rewarded with a 1 week bonus vacation and I earmarked it for this trek. Well 1391 road miles, 19 hiking miles, 616 photos and 5 days later, here's the scoop...

Day 1 - Friday February 12th, 2010
Day starts with a 7am phone call from Mike Mattes. He's lost in the twisted maze of Ahwatukee trying to find my house. I guide him on the cell phone to my doorstep, load up his modified Jeep Wrangler and we are off! We decide to avoid rush hour traffic by looping south towards Gila Bend and up to Wickenburg via Vulture Mine Road. Plan seem to be working fine as we pull onto US93 heading northwest towards Las Vegas NV without any traffic delays. We pass the anomalous forest of Joshua Trees. A sudden "PING" sound punctuates the air and I ask "What's that?". At the same time we pass a sign indicating Wikieup 41 miles, Mike says, "That's my low gas indicator and we have 30 miles driving range left". Yikes! Drastically dropping our speed and with a few uphill anxious moments, Mike is able to guide the sputtering Jeep into the first gas station sighted in Wikieup. We pump 14.9 gallons into the Jeep's 15 gallon tank. Let's just say that increased vigilance to our half tank rule on unknown routes has been invoked... To help settle Mike's nerves, we grab a burger from the "Eat at Joe's BBQ". I make a couple of cell calls checking up on my Dad (released from hospital earlier that day having had a cardiac procedure the day before). He picked up the phone at home so he's mobile and I'd call it a "best case" scenario. Back on the road we soon join some traffic at Boulder Dam. My first visit to the area so I went into "tourist mode". I hopped out of the Jeep and walked most of the way while Mike did the stop-and-go thing through the traffic jam. Quick comment - the new arch bridge looks like it will be a design engineering masterpiece. Know many others will think it is a pox on the landscape (and John McCain was on the local radio declaring it "A bridge to nowhere"), but I think "it works"... Onto Vegas and an exit via US95. Believe it or not, but this is my first "non-airport layover" visit to Vegas. I'm surprised by the snowy peaks, local ski resorts, and preponderance of Joshua Trees. With PM warnings of $4 per gallon gas in DVNP, we gas up at the intersection of NV373 and US95. Interesting business combination of gas station and brothel (I'll hold onto the Cherry Patch II photos for future blackmailing...). We soon pull into the Furnace Creek Ranch parking lot at "ground minus 200" in Death Valley National Park. Suddenly our $226 per night room seems like a bargain as multiple people are turned away at the reception desk due to "No Vacancy". We pull up to our room in the 900 block and see Hank and Joe in the parking lot. Hank starts to give us the "data dump" on multiple closures in the park due to flooding. West Side Road is closed so there's no access to Trail Canyon, Racetrack Valley Road is closed so there's no access to the Racetrack, no data on Eureka Dunes. Over dinner we hear some alternate plans pitched - Marble Canyon on Saturday and hold off on Trail Canyon until Monday with fingers crossed that West Side Road will be dried and opened. Sounds like a plan!

Day 2 - Saturday February 13th, 2010
6am wake-up call to room 936 in Furnace Creek Ranch. $12.95 removed from our pockets by the Xanterra Pirates to attend the breakfast buffet. Mike and I arrive at the morning rendezvous spot at 7:35am and we're given a hard time for being 5 minutes late... Hank and Joe lead the way towards Stovepipe Wells and the doubletrack heading towards Marble Canyon. As we bounce our way towards the TH, I'm scouting out an unexpected sight - Mesquite Dunes. We soon bend into a gap in the mountain wall which surprisingly continues to an inner basin area. The trail splits to the south for Cottonwood Canyon Road whereas the trail heading west is Marble Canyon Road. You even have a street sign indicating this remote intersection! A barrier sign marks the end of our 4WD trek and we hop out to start our hike. First narrows, the chokestone, second narrows, and third narrows as described in our Digonnet's "Hiking Death Valley" https://amazon.com/Hiking-Death-Valley- ... ikearizona. I begin to doubt Digonnet's claim that "Marble Canyon is blessed with more petroglyph sites than any other canyon in the park". As I blurt that out Mike points out our first rock art panel. We break for lunch about 3.25 miles up canyon before the fourth narrows. A little exploration after lunch and we head back to the trailhead. Mike and I opt for a late afternoon visit to Mesquite Dunes - an unexpected delight even with the human population explosion scurrying like ants over multiple anthills. This is like a trip to the beach! We meet up with Joe and Hank again to be guided to our evening camp in Echo Canyon. A traditional camp dinner of dogs and beans with some beverages of choice and Mike and I retreat to our tents calling it an early star-filled night...

Day 3 - Sunday February 14th, 2010
Up at mornings' first light and Mike prepares a hot camp breakfast. We soon pack up our Echo Canyon Camp in anticipation of setting up in Trail Canyon later that day. Zabriskie Point is the first destination to catch some morning light off Manly Beacon. A music video shoot is in progress attracting a curious crowd. Can't say I recognized the musician... A second stop in Furnace Creek for gasoline and Valentine's Day phone calls back home to our wives. Zero cell phone coverage in Death Valley, so a pay phone at the General Store is our only option. We check out the Borax Museum - a treasure trove of local history. With conflicting reports about Racetrack Valley Road closure, we head Mike's Jeep up towards the Grapevine/Scotty's Castle area. Signage along the route warns us of the road closure, but the barriers are all open. Racetrack Valley Road has some washouts, but no issue for the lifted Jeep. Death Valley is always full of surprises - lava and cinder fields around Ubehebe Crater, a Joshua Tree forest near Tin Mountain Gap, and eclectic Teakettle Junction. Top it all off with a walk on the moon at Racetrack Playa. The playa has dried out so no risk of muddy footprints. I find the spot for Hommage de Shellye Poster https://amazon.com/gp/product/088150789 ... ikearizona. I crisscross the playa multiple times - I'm stunned... With the sun starting to get low we hit the road towards West Side Road and Trail Canyon. We arrive at the intersection of Badwater Road and West Side Road to have our fears realized - the road closure barrier is still up! With our planned Monday morning 7:30am rendezvous with Hank and Joe at our Trail Canyon Camp now a washout, Mike and I head over to Furnace Creek Ranch to deliver the news and leave Joe's radio at the front desk with Raul. Always have a back-up plan. Ours is re-establish Camp Echo Canyon in the Funeral Mountains and go explore the upper canyon ghost towns and Lee mining district. Ravioli and a French loaf console our disappointment...

Day 4 - Monday February 15th, 2010
Mike cooks up some chocolate chip pancakes and bacon to start the day. A prickly pear vodka and O.J. to open the eyes. We leave our tents up at Camp Echo Canyon and head up towards Inyo Mine and ghost town https://mojavedesert.net/mining-history/inyo/ . We explore multiple satellite mines and continue up the 4WD path to the Lee mining district. We locate the drag cable to the Furnace Mine site. The pristine mining relics and smelting furnace was worth the steep climb up to the Furnace Mine site. After a late lunch we head into town for a couple of trivial supplies (paper towels and Doritos) and the Keane Wonder Mine site https://www.ghosttowns.com/states/ca/keane.html . A late afternoon trek into Golden Canyon and beyond to Manly Beacon and an aborted climb to Zabriskie Point https://www.americansouthwest.net/calif ... l-map.html . Heading back to Camp Echo Canyon we catch the Eye-of-the-Needle sunset shadow. Evening camp meal of chili and dogs and it's time to call it a night.

Day 5 - Tuesday February 16th, 2010
We have a return route plotted from Furnace Creek to Badwater to Shoshone to Mohave National Park to Joshua Tree National Park dumping onto the I-10 for a straight shot east to Phoenix. After gassing up in Furnace Creek, we capture plenty of reflection images off the flooded saltflats near Badwater. As we exit DVNP near Shoshone, I'm feeling satisfied that our Plan "B" delivered just as much as our Plan "A" promised. Mother Nature wreck our DVNP trek? Never! On CA127 towards Baker we "discover" the Dumont Dunes. Cross over the I-15 and into the Mohave National Preserve https://www.nps.gov/moja/index.htm . The Lava Beds and Kelso Dunes are interesting, but slightly imperfect bordered by hydro right-of-ways and railroad mainlines. An old section of Route 66 comprises part of the connection between Mohave and Joshua Tree. Commercial table salt operations are a curious sight. At Twenty-Nine Palms we enter Joshua Tree National Park https://www.nps.gov/jotr/index.htm . There's plenty of eye candy here from the whimsical (Skull Rock) to the fascinating (Joshua Tree forests). Onto the I-10 and I take over the driving chores until we reach our Valley homes.

Final Thoughts
Racetrack Playa was by far my Death Valley highlight. The diversity of DVNP attractions is the big takeaway. And the pristine appearance (nary a piece of trash found anywhere in the park) a pleasant bonus. And a trivia factoid - a GPS can't record an elevation below sea level. I'm sure Mohave National Preserve has some hidden attractions, but we didn't get any hint during our traverse. Joshua Tree National Park has a smorgasbord of potential and it will get a return visit some day soon!

Helpful Death Valley Backroads Map contained in this Forum thread => [ Death Valley travel alert ] :)

Thanks again to Hank and Joe for their help with some of the planning logistics. And special thanks to Mike for being my "ride". His Jeep [ photo ] certainly has backcountry capability beyond my F-150! :D
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average hiking speed 2.45 mph

WARNING! Hiking and outdoor related sports can be dangerous. Be responsible and prepare for the trip. Study the area you are entering and plan accordingly. Dress for the current and unexpected weather changes. Take plenty of water. Never go alone. Make an itinerary with your plan(s), route(s), destination(s) and expected return time. Give your itinerary to trusted family and/or friends.

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