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Searching for Uncle Erv
I love the
long grade on highway 190 dropping down into the broad depths of Panamint
Valley. For years there have been two coyotes in Panamint Valley making a
living looking cute for the tourists. Now there are three. If you see cars
ahead pulled off to the side, slow way down. A tourist or a coyote is going to
jump out in front of your vehicle. Guaranteed. As we passed I narrowly missed
sending two coyotes to song dog heaven. Thank god I didn't or the videos would
be viral on YouTube still.
We pulled in
to our favorite spot near the old cars when shadows were long.
The angled
sun highlighted every crease and fold on the landscape.
We grabbed a
bag of blue corn chips and a jar of lime mango salsa and sat and took it all
in. Problem is we hardly eat stuff like this. It filled us up, ruined our
appetite for a proper dinner, and had us feeling like fat ticks on a hound.
"We got to walk!" I announced to the Lady.
"We got to walk!" I announced to the Lady.
"Thank
you!" was her immediate reply.
Off we went
at dusk, north on Lake Hill Road. The half moon was waning so it rises late.
With a skiff of thin clouds overhead, the stars were muted. What I'm getting at
is that it got dark, real dark.
"How
far you want to go? the Lady asked after a couple miles of walking.
"Well,
at least past the Lake Hills but not as far as the spot we like near the end of
the road."
We walk
every night without light aid when possible. It does wonders developing our
night vision but, most importantly, it does not disturb the night world
surrounding us. So, I'd say we're good at it. It certainly was not like us to
lose the truck.
We turned
around after two and a half or three miles. Now, occasionally, far in the
distance a tiny light would trace out the route of 190 across the valley, or
highlight the curves on the descent down Father Crawley grade to the west. We
walked quietly, happily, hand in hand; a wonderful night.
And we
walked.
"Don't
you think we should be back to the truck by now?" the Lady asked.
"Why,"
I replied. "Do you think we should be back?" I could feel her eyes
into me.
And we
walked.
"I
would have thought we'd be back to the truck by now, don't you?" the Lady
asked.
"Do you
think it possible we could have missed the truck? Have you been looking for it?
I've been looking. No way we could have walked past it." I replied.
"I've
been looking for it," the Lady assured. "Could we have missed
it?"
And we
walked.
"Could
we have missed it?" the Lady started another round. "We have been
walking a long time. Should 190 be so close now?"
"I
don't think, even in this darkness, that we could miss a white truck with a
white camper on it along the road. I just don't." I explained to the Lady.
"Is your headlamp back in the camper like mine?"
"Of
course," she answered. "We were just going to walk off the
chips."
"Those
chips just might be the death of us," I added. "I really hoped I'd
make it to 65."
And we
walked.
And we
laughed.
We were
hardly concerned and we found the situation funny. Our laughs were genuine. All
the usual games starting, something must be wrong, could we be lost in the
night?
"Okay,"
the Lady asked. "If we missed the truck, what should we do?"
"Good
question for the 'what if' game," I said and nodded."
"Don't
nod your head when I can't see you nod in this darkness."
"Then
how did you know I nodded it?" I asked.
"Because
I know you. Now go on!"
"First
off, we are not going to convince ourselves we are past the truck and need to
turn around. We could do a needless back and forth all night long - have we
gone too far, not far enough?. We'd both rather just crawl into the
camper."
"I'm
with you on that," the Lady added.
I continued.
"If we really lost the truck, we need a starting point where we are sure it
is behind us. Only sure point for us right now is out to 190 and pavement. We
then know for sure it is behind us. We turn around and carefully search until
we come upon it. That would only take half the night. Maybe leave time for a
quick round of Tease The Geezer? Ready to begin the search!"
"Let's go!"
the Lady said into the night sky.
We continued
another five feet and there was the truck.
"Well I
think I'm hungry enough for a little soup now," the Lady said as she
climbed in and turned on a light. "How 'bout you?"
We ate, sat
out in the quiet night, and watched airplanes and car lights make lines in the
dark. We turned in. The Lady made a bathroom run outside in the middle of the
night. She crawled back into the bunk.
"The
moon's out so its past midnight," she reported. "Happy
birthday!" she snuggled tight against me and kissed my cheek.
"Guess
what!" I whispered.
"Yes, I
know," she said. "This is the first time in my life I've been in bed
with a 65 year old man."
"How's
it feel?" I inquired.
"I'll
love doing it for a whole year." She was again tight against me and fast
asleep.
Morning
chores were quick, efficient, and we were on our way.
We found one
small pull out along the road. Packs, boots, ready, set, go.
A trace of
an old road marked the route up the wash. First thing of interest was evidence
of three separate gates along the road.
I have no
excuse for not noticing it sooner, especially with all our explorations inside
the Park. The description is in the pages of our dog eared copy of Hiking Death Valley. And, on top
of that, I had read it many times. It never registered. I follow Andrew's blog
- Exploring and Informing. I read his post about the Greene Denner Drake Mill.
His information is straight out of Hiking Death Valley -
"What
is known for sure is that at different times it was owned by men named Thad
Greene, then Erwin Denner, then John Drake and that it probably processed small
amounts of gold for local mines after the giant Journigan's Mill closed just
down the canyon"
"Erwin
Denner," I said aloud. "That's Uncle Erv!"
Mom was very
fond of and close to many of her first cousins. Although, more properly, they
were my first cousins once removed, we kids always called them aunts and uncles.
Uncle Erv was a fixture at holiday family gatherings. In answer to my question
about the scars on Erv's face, my parents explained that Erv had been a Seabee
and "got shot up at Guadalcanal."
That went
right over a young boy's head; I sure
wished I knew more of the story now. Uncle Erv was an electrician. In our
family albums are photos of Erv, always in a pair of work coveralls, beside
large old equipment trucks. On the doors it read, "Ventura Electric,"
his business. He had a big house on a corner in Ojai.
Later in
life he became a desert rat.
I learned
about two important things from Uncle Erv - Chuckwallas and Alzheimer's. My Dad
took me out to Essex in the Mojave desert a couple of times. Erv wanted Dad to
help with building his place out there. Dad was always helping family and
friends that way. On a visit to Erv's mine, Erv spotted a chuckwalla, grabbed
it by the tail and began my education. Somewhere in the albums is an old black
and white of Erv in his coveralls with that chuckwalla laid out on his thigh. I
last saw Erv at a family reunion in Deadwood, South Dakota in the late
seventies. Erv was right there in front
of me, but Uncle Erv was not there, my introduction to Alzheimer's.
I have no
knowledge or details of Erv's association with this mill site, but both of us
wanted to search. Maybe there'd be a bit of evidence that we might recognize.
It'd make a great birthday - searching for Uncle Erv.
We arrived.
The place
had electricity.
And stuff on
the shelves.
The room in
the back had a surprise.
My Dad was a
plumber. I wonder if he helped with this. Outside was an interesting place for
the refrigerator and water heater.
Two springs above
the site were tapped for water supplies.
We returned
and explored the mill site.
Body parts
from this large truck were near the mill. I wonder if the big diesel was
harvested for use as the power plant.
We relaxed
in the warm sun. It was a beautiful day.
Vehicles and
parts litter the area.
There is not
a single bullet hole in anything.
The center
piece is the 1946 Pontiac.
I don't
remember Erv driving a big Pontiac. I wish I did. I wonder if my older brothers
do. I have the vin if anyone knows how to track ownership of vintage cars.
The VIN plate on the firewall shows this is a 1946 Pontiac Streamliner built in Pontiac, MI with the straight eight cylinder engine.
The VIN plate on the firewall shows this is a 1946 Pontiac Streamliner built in Pontiac, MI with the straight eight cylinder engine.
We found no
direct evidence of Uncle Erv, no little tidbit we could say, "That was
Erv!" Nevertheless, the place brought so many memories and stories of Erv
streaming back in.
One last
tidbit about Uncle Erv. In the 1970's Essex voted
against making improvements that would enable television reception. It made
national news and, of course, Johnny Carson had fun with it on his
Tonight Show on NBC. It was a fun topic, so much so that Mr. Carson decided to
bus the whole town of Essex into Hollywood so they could see his show
firsthand. On March 25, 1977 we all had to stay up late because Uncle Erv was
going to be on the Tonight Show. Yup, Erv was on the Tonight Show.
We headed
down canyon, but not without a "Bye, Uncle Erv!" over our shoulders.
Our
adventure continues Part Three. please Click Here
Desert rat blood in your veins... no wonder you like DVNP
ReplyDeleteThanks for sharing, great photos!
ReplyDelete