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A Gift For
Ted
It started
with an email from our friend Ted. He inquired
about our Thanksgiving travel plans. They would be in the Volcanic Tablelands.
Could we connect? Ted added that he'd been searching around on Google Earth and
spotted a primitive road in a canyon. It was not on the topo for the area.
Would it go? Could it provide a quiet secluded campsite along with canyons to
explore? That's what they'd be checking out on Friday.
We left
before dawn on Friday morning, grabbed a store bought breakfast in Lee Vining,
and continued south toward Bishop on highway 6. We left pavement and soon found
the trace of a road running up the canyon just as Ted and Google Earth
described. There were no recent tire tracks.
"I guess
they are not here yet," I said to the Lady. "There may be another way
in from a road to the north. Let's look around that area, get the lay of the
land, and maybe the Teds will show up."
We drove in
the road to the north a few miles and found a side road that led down into the
canyon. It did intersect the road in the wash. On our route in I also noticed
one new set of tracks. The truck had a wider stance than our rig and was
running BFG All Terrains.
The road was
rough with a couple of tight turns in the narrowing canyon bottom. We found a
wide spot that offered an opportunity to turn around.
"Let's
head out, " I suggested to the Lady. "And drive toward Bishop until
we get cell service and see if we got a response from Ted to the message we
sent early this morning."
It was a beautiful
warm morning as we drove out the canyon route - to check it out and maybe
intersect the Teds on their way in. We stopped at the intersection with the
main road and swept the canyon road free of tracks so we could see if anyone
drove in after us. We set a track trap to catch Ted.
We were on
the outskirts of Bishop before we got cell service. No message so we headed
back to check the trap. We were almost back when a truck appeared on the
horizon coming our direction.
"That's
the Teds!" the Lady exclaimed. "Why do you think they're coming this
way?"
We all
pulled to the side of the road to say howdy.
"Thirty
feet!" Ted cried. "If you had driven thirty more feet you would have
seen our camp!"
"Thirty
more feet up the canyon road? You guys were already up there?" I asked for
confirmation.
"Thirty
more feet!" Ted confirmed. "We watched you drive away and I was setting
up to film you coming up canyon."
The Lady
added, "And you packed up to catch us?"
"We
sure did!" Ted and Donna said in unison.
"Oh
dear!" the Lady and I said together.
I gave Ted a
hug. "Ted, you are a great guy and I figure we just gave you a gift - a
good story to tell about us for a long time!"
The road
ended where we set up camp with the Teds. We were all anxious to explore up the
canyon. A canyon we quickly named "The Canyon of Columns." The lava
flows had cooled and split into columns. They towered above us.
The middle
section of one column was gone. What held the top piece in place?
In several
places the columns formed a fan pattern.
We arrived
back at camp from our hike at dark. Dinner, stories, and star gazing rounded
out a nice night.
Up before
dawn, the Lady kicked me out of the camper for her morning fussing. It includes
brewing us Peets coffee so I cannot ever complain.
Ted was up also so we wandered down canyon to
yesterday's errant turn around point.
"Thirty
feet!" Ted reminded me and shook his head.
"A
gift, Ted," I said. "A gift."
The columns
are spectacular as they rise straight and true out of the wash.
Ted remarked
that the only thing missing was a statue of a Roman god atop a pedestal.
I could smell the coffee as soon as she opened the camper door. The Lady
joined us. Ted
headed back and the Lady and I explored a side canyon that was cut into welded
volcanic ash.
Donna joined
us as we wandered. Camp was almost in sunlight when we returned.
We said our
goodbyes to the Teds mid morning. I was due in Lone Pine at one pm to meet a musician
from the Los Angeles area and do a minor adjustment for him. Everyone was on time and by two pm we headed east, back
to Death Valley.
Our plans
were loose but the Lady has been going through our dog eared copy of Hiking Death Valley and making
note of new hikes she wants to do. We decided to pull into Hole In The Wall
because of its convenience and also because the Lady was feeling ill.
We popped
the top and the Lady immediately crawled up into the bunk and curled up. She
had a fever and respiratory congestion. I was recovering from a bad case of the
flu, the first in years. Now it looked like it was the Lady's turn.
At times like this I remember the
John Cleese character in Monty Python and the Holy Grail "Stand and
fight! It's only a flesh wound!"
"You're
getting the flu," I said. "It may be best that we return home."
"No!"
she whispered hoarsely. "It's only a touch of a cold. You'll see it the
morning. I want to hike Sidewinder Canyon tomorrow!"
She was hot
to the touch and coughing. I covered her up with the comforter and she was
instantly asleep. I quietly made dinner for me, cleaned everything up , and went
for a short walk in the night.
It was a
warm night. We slept with the windows open. The overnight low was 60°. The Lady
slept like death.
John Cleese
said she was better in the morning. We headed to the trailhead for Sidewinder Canyon.
Sidewinder
Canyon is cut into a massive alluvial fan. Recent uplift of the Black Mountains
caused a new round of erosion into this deep bed of fanglomerate.
Several deep
narrow slots enter the main canyon. These slots are what we came to explore.
Hiking Death
Valley, Bird and Hike, and the Park - handout for the hike are available at the
Visitors Center - all number the slots differently. We first entered the only
slot in the north canyon wall. It was narrow with a steep gradient.
We climbed
all the way up and out for the view.
We retreated
back down the slot to the main canyon.
We explored
a slot into the south wall. It was narrow and climbed with several short pour
overs until ending in an amphitheater. It was amazing terrain.
One broad
side canyon quickly narrowed into two forks. We wandered up the first and then
moved to the next.
It was hard
to believe this little crack to the right of slickenside was the
entrance. We left the packs. It was a crawl, then a four foot climb up, and
then an unimaginably tight squeeze, followed by another crawl. This was fun.
The Lady's "touch of a cold" was cured.
This was a
very narrow slot. A short ways up the roof squeezed together. Not a hint of
sunlight entered. It was pitch black.
A flash
photo.
I wanted to
return into this chamber and try photos with just light from headlamps. It
turned out there was so much more to see in other slots that no time remained
to return.
This was an
otherworldly landscape.
We returned
to the main canyon. We again encountered another hiker - "Stuart the Staff
Man" because of his long bamboo hiking staff. Coming up canyon was
"Carl the Kid" just arriving to explore. He fell in line behind the
Lady and me.
"What's
your name?" the Lady asked. The Lady has a gift with questions and conversation.
In the course of the next couple of hours we learned just about all there was
to know about "Carl the Kid." I should add, although he said he goes
on hikes for solitude, "Carl the Kid" likes to talk. He was pleasant
company and it was insightful to learn about a gifted young man in the
computer/internet field who makes enough money to take weeks off at a time to
see what is out there. He lives in his Sprinter van. Carl has a deep love and
concern for our blue planet. It was refreshing to meet a young person who deeply cares
about natural processes and our affects.
Of course, Carl knew nothing about keeping up
with the Lady. He gave it his best shot as we entered the next slot.
This canyon
had the longest continuous narrow slot, just over a shoulder width wide.
We climbed
all the way to the end and topped out on the ridge after some very challenging
terrain.
After taking
in the views and discovering there was no easier way down, we back tracked and
down climbed into the narrow slot we had ascended.
After
exiting again into the main canyon we turned up canyon. Sidewinder Canyon now
had wondrous narrows of its own.
Sidewinder
finally climbs out of the fanglomerate and the narrows are carved out of
bedrock. We stopped at a high pour over and turned around.
We had one
more slot to explore. This was the most impressive slot and is not for the
faint of heart.
In the dark
depths of this slot we found two natural arches.
This canyon
kept going.
I caught up with Carl. He had removed his pack at a constriction in the canyon
and placed it next to the Lady's. Where was the Lady? I heard strange grunts.
"Where
are you and what do those grunts mean?" I asked.
"Down here! You
have to crawl!" she answered.
It was around 20 feet of crawling and slithering. The canyon beyond was darker. We came
upon a pour over capped with a huge chock stone.
"I'm
going to continue," Carl said as he worked his way up. His grunts were
similar to the Lady's when she crawls and slithers.
We checked
the time. Even if we turned around now, it would be close to dark when we reached the
trailhead down canyon. We said our goodbyes to Carl the Kid.
We took our
time at the trailhead, stashed the packs in the camper, changed shoes and
clothes. When we saw Carl exit the canyon in the distance, we knew he was safe.
We started the truck, hit the headlights, drove out to pavement, and turned
north on Badwater Road.
"I told
you I'd be fine!" the Lady smiled from the passenger seat. "I loved
Sidewinder Canyon! Didn't you?"
"Yes, I
loved Sidewinder Canyon too," I answered. "It is an amazing place.
I'm convinced this is the place to come if either of us are ill. A visit here
will cure damn near anything. Look at you!"
"A
touch of a cold," the Lady said. "Only a flesh wound."
What were we
up to? Where would we head next?
Our
adventure continues Part Two. Please Click Here
To quote the Black Night: "Okay, we'll call it a draw." A worthy adversary indeed -- well done, my Lady!
ReplyDeleteThank you Dan!
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