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Category: California

27 November 2017

Chasing the light at Alabama Hills Lone Pine California

November 12-16, 2017

fall tree boulders Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills BLM Lone Pine California
My last visit to Alabama Hills during late winter, the Sierras wore a blanket of white providing a stark backdrop to the ever changing light and colors of the sculptural granite boulders below.  This fall visit to meet a friend and make photos brought the first snow on the Eastern Sierras for the coming winter.

After a few days camping at Kelso Dunes I spent one night near Fossil Falls, a convenient place to disperse camp for free on the way to Alabama Hills.  In the morning I continued to Lone Pine, California which took me past the almost dried up Owens Lake, basically a salt flat.  Met a friend at the Eastern Sierras multi-agency visitor center.  Then we headed to a camp at Alabama Hills in a different location than where I’ve stayed before.

Eastern Sierras Mount Whitney sundog Alabama Hills CaliforniaSaw a sundog over the mountains indicating ice crystals in the clouds and telling me cold weather would be coming soon.

Gaelyn boulder Alabama Hills BLM Lone Pine CaliforniaYet I found a sun warmed rock to sit on, looking for shapes and faces in the boulders.  (Thanks for the photo Tom.)

rock dragon Alabama Hills BLM Lone Pine CaliforniaI see a dragon in this one.  What do you see?

Sunset wasn’t very exciting so we retreated to Tom’s RV where he made dinner and we chatted the evening away.

morning light Lone Peak Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaWoke up early for sunrise but wasn’t all that impressed.  I’d been hoping for first light to brilliantly glow on the Sierras but there was too much cloud on the eastern horizon.

sunset rays Lone Pine Peak Alabama Hills BLM Lone Pine CaliforniaAnd by sunset not a cloud in the sky as the sun sank behind Lone Pine Peak.  Oh well.  Ya’ get what you get.

sunrise Alabama Hills Lone Pine California

early light Mount Whitney Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaThe next morning a cloudy and colorful sunrise brought some light to the new day causing Mount Whitney to glow a bit.

early light Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaAs the shadows receded toward me lightening the landscape I began to warm up and removed a layer.

trees Eastern Sierras Whitney Portal Road Inyo National Forest CaliforniaAfter breakfast Tom took off for his coastal California home and I drove up the Whitney Portal Road.

creek Mount Whitney Lone Pine campground Inyo National Forest CaliforniaOnce in the Inyo National Forest camping is allowed only in campgrounds like the Lone Pine which I drove through and was open for free during winter with about 35 medium-sized sites and maybe open bathrooms.

View North Owens Valley Whitney Portal Road Inyo National Forest CaliforniaI continued up the curvy Portal Road a few more miles to a nice wide pull off right before the pavement turned to gravel.  Lucky me even found a signal so I took care of some business and had lunch with a view of the valley below.  I love when that happens.

boulders Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaWhen returning to the bouldery BLM of Alabama Hills I stayed a little closer to the highway and found a nice camp with a signal and some views too.  There are many options for parking either near the boulders or in the open where I prefer and none are usually very level.

sun setting & sundog Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaAs the sun dropped to the mountainous horizon another sundog appeared in swift and wispy clouds but the sunset proved uneventful.  Me thinks there is a change in weather coming.

morning light Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills Lone Pine California

boulders morning light Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaYet morning clouds to the east limited the direct sun on the Sierras to the west.

boulders morning light Eastern Sierras lenticular clouds Alabama Hills Lone Pine California

17b trees boulders morning light Mount Whitney Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaMountains have a mind of their own sometimes creating lenticular clouds almost in imitation of their shape.

morning light Mount Whitney Eastern Sierras Alabama Hills Lone Pine California

boulders clouds Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaRolling and moving clouds put on quite a morning show that continued to build all day.

trees boulders Eastern Sierras low clouds sunset Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaEventually the clouds dropped over the mountain peaks until Whitney was out of sight.  I watched the weather online and saw that possible wind and wet was on it’s way which meant I would be leaving soon too.

double rainbow Alabama Hills BLM Lone Pine CaliforniaIt rained softly in the night and the morning was gray with low clouds.  Definitely time for me to head to warmer weather.  Thank goodness I hung around long enough for the double rainbow show.

Eastern Sierras snow low clouds Alabama Hills Lone Pine CaliforniaAfter some minimal shopping in Lone Pine the clouds lifted enough to expose the first dusting of white on those rugged Sierras and I headed east with a strong side wind on the way to Death Valley.

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Alabama Hills, California, Places I've been, United States camping, photography, rainbow, sunrise, sunset 15 Comments
15 November 2017

Camping at Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve

November 9 & 10, 2017

late light Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaThursday afternoon I pulled into a quiet Kelso Dunes camp area about 10 miles off I40 in Mojave National Preserve.  One SUV parked under the “big” (read only) trees taller than 8-10 feet, two people hanging out in the shade.  They took photos at sunset and were gone.  A family walked out a little ways on the sand laughing and playing and then left.

late light Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaTime change upon entering California, something we don’t do in Arizona.  Sunset before 5pm.  Did seem weird to go to bed at 8pm the first night (Thursday) but I’ve changed the clocks and watch and will adjust.

late light Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaLast light made the dunes look like folded satin.

late light Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaI had the night to myself with the distant call of coyotes but I didn’t hear the dunes sing.  I’ve heard if you slide down them under the right conditions they do “sing”.

unidentified bird creosote bush Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaYet bird song was prevalent at first light flitting in and out of the creosote bush near my window.  All the photos I took are terrible through a dirty window.

Cell signal was rather in and out.  I tried to share the day’s Foto Friday Fun post on Facebook without luck.

Two vehicles and a pair of walkers rushed in briefly for sunrise light.  Which frankly I wasn’t all that impressed with in a cloudless sky.  Slowly the temperature rose and the sun’s warmth felt divine in an almost soundless desert.  The brilliant blue light gave the dunes an almost flat look.

I don’t walk into the dunes.  I prefer to look at them from afar.  Besides not liking sand in my shoes it’s too much work slogging through the soft terrain.  I sat outside in the warm sunshine reading.

Day trippers who had overshot the parking along the Kelso Dunes Road came in, some more cautiously than others on the possibly soft sand.  They don’t stay long.

But it’s Friday on a three-day holiday weekend.  Around noon the peace is broken when three huge 5th-wheels parked in a circle around the big shade trees.  And ran a generator all day.  Oh Joy!  Plus played really excessively loud music for over an hour.  Why can’t they leave the noise behind?  Hang on for a noisy weekend.

sunset Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaThe cloudy sunset reminded me of a Van Gogh painting.  Yet provided no light on the dunes.

sunrise Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaUp in time for a flash of colorful sunrise.

morning light Kelso Dunes Mojave National Preserve CaliforniaAnd morning light gave the dunes a different pattern of shadows.

Then time to roll as I made my way towards Lone Pine to meet a friend with a one night stop along the way at Fossil Falls.

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California, Mojave National Preserve, National Parks and Monuments, Places I've been, United States camping, public lands, sand dunes, sunrise, sunset 8 Comments
24 April 2017

Winter travel wrap up: a love affair with the land

If somebody would pay me to travel and explore I’d just keep on going  because no matter what natural area visited I enjoy a love affair with the land.

Since mid-January the wind blew me to numerous fascinating places in the Southwest.  The truck and camper survived the 2200 mile journey.  I worked on improving the making of photographs.  And I can add at least a couple serious new love affairs with the land from this winter’s journeys including the lush Sonoran Desert, the dramatic Eastern Sierras, and the pastoral Owens Valley.  Plus they all deserve return visits for further explorations.

Sunset from KOFA National Wildlife Refuge camp ArizonaKofa National Wildlife Refuge Arizona

Making a plan versus not making a plan

I didn’t plan to fall in love, but I love making a plan.  Research and reading about places I want to experience, making a list longer than life even though I accept not seeing them all is really part of the fun.  Yet this winter I went from one place to another as the feeling struck, or someone made a suggestion like being set up on a blind date.  This type of courtship took me a while to adjust to, yet over time, and I mean weeks, won me over.  I felt so relaxed and at ease even with the turmoil of our current political state which I kept up with to a point before high blood pressure.  Back to nature for the calm and centering needed.  Where I feel love the most.

Sunset rays Pozo Redondo Mountains Darby Well Road BLM Ajo ArizonaDarby Well Road Sonoran Desert near Ajo Arizona

I did have a plan to visit with friends and attend Blogger-Fest in Quartzsite in January and that instigated a visit to nearby the Kofa National Wildlife Refuge.  Then because a high school friend was wintering in Mesa I spent a few days way too close to the city of Phoenix but at least we got out for a hike on Silly Mountain along with many good laughs.  From there an invitation to visit a friend working in Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument had me headed south towards the border.  I so fell in love with this Sonoran Desert landscape that I spent most of February there.  Then I heard some friends planning an early March visit to Valley of Fire in Nevada and I figured why not as I’d only been there once before.  The winds of chance next blew me to Death Valley National Park, a place I can never visit too often.  But with a weekend coming and map in hand I remembered reading several blog posts about the Alabama Hills, a place I’d never been.  In fact it had been 40+ years since I’d traveled US395 and the Owens Valley.  And dang if I wasn’t hooked again.  Love at first sight with the Eastern Sierras and before I knew it another two weeks had passed by.  As the end of March approached I began to feel a draw back home to Arizona yet made a couple more stops along the way.

Ajo Mountain Drive Organ Pipe Cactus National Monument ArizonaOrgan Pipe Cactus National Monument Arizona

Camper comforts and room for improvement

By far the best investment for the camper was a new 100W solar panel that solved my electric needs which is mostly just lights and the fridge ignition.  I use an inverter plugged into the truck for charging the phone and running the laptop.  I have thought about getting a small generator but they are noisy and not particularly cheap.  Sort of like buying an overpriced diamond to get engaged instead of saving the money for experiences.

Crested organ pipe cactus Darby Well Road BLM Ajo ArizonaI don’t use the fresh water system in this old beast, especially after the first winter when water froze and broke the kitchen faucet.  My bad.  But I have concerns about the rest of the plumbing and am not a plumber.  Just one of the many things that need to be looked at and repaired.  Water in jugs works just fine and a dishpan in the sink saves space in the gray water tank.  The occasional plant that gets watered is happy and so am I.  I am careful not to put food scraps down the sink or outside for critters.  I am picky about drinking water, either buying by the gallons or running through the Britta.  But with conservation I can get by on one gallon a day plus at least that much to drink.

Luckily I have a handy neighbor who rebuilt the two “wings” of rotten wood that overhang the truck bumper on each side by about two feet.  Had to be done in order to remount the protective plastic that half fell off somewhere between Fossil Falls and Barstow on the way to Mojave Trails.  Once the camper comes off the truck he’s going to reinforce a few other areas of old wood.

I’d like to replace the foam on the dinette cushions that are flattened and old.  It’s really the only place to sit inside.  And I need to finish the curtains so I can be rid of those awful metal blinds.

creek sunset crepuscular rays High Sierras Independence campground Independence CaliforniaEastern Sierras Independence California

Experimenting with photography

I definitely have a love affair with photography and am constantly reading and learning how to improve the relationship with my camera.  I honestly tried to carry the tripod around more and use it but it’s a bit heavy to use as a walking stick on longer hikes.  I’ve been using manual (M) for a long time and tried moving back and forth with aperture (A) and shutter (S) priority.  Had fun with sun bursts.  I took more time composing a shot and observing edges to avoid a silly tree branch or such.  Looked at different perspectives and even got down on the ground once in a while. Ugh, not my best position.  Really tried not to overdue the post-processing like I did when first introduced to Lightroom.  Now that I’ve opened a new photography website I actually look at my photos on the screen with a more discriminant eye.  Out of 10s of 1000s of photos only a few make the cut.  All this is sort of like looking at old love affairs and learning from mistakes.

Last light Amargosa Range Badwater Basin Death Valley National Park CaliforniaDeath Valley National Park California

Reflections

The getting there, being there, rinse wash repeat, I love it.  The driving part, I’m getting a little tired of that.  I just don’t ever feel like putting down many miles in a day.  Having said that…

I’ve been traveling alone so long it’s now difficult to relax enough to travel with anyone.  Call it independence, stubborn, unable to make compromises, or maybe all of these.  It’s also a chance to learn about myself and spend time living in the now.  I can barely describe how I feel when traveling solo, in my element, no matter the surrounding natural environment.  I love them all for what they are.  I love them NOW because I’m there.  Yet I’m friendly so have no problem meeting and chatting with people wherever I am.  I’m an ambivert, finding balance with my extrovert and introvert characteristics.

High Sierras Alabama Hills BLM Lone Pine CaliforniaEastern Sierras & Alabama Hills California

I love being able to share the moments on social media.  I’ve seen cell towers everywhere I’ve gone.  They are not obnoxious, intrusive or ugly.  They are just there like we used to have electrical and telephone lines.  I got a signal almost everywhere except the Alabama Hills.  Sure wish I could say that for the North Rim Grand Canyon.

morning light temples San Fransisco peaks North Rim Grand Canyon National Park ArizonaNorth Rim Grand Canyon National Park Arizona

What’s next

Yet another landscape I love, and sleep with, calls me to return.  Yup the North Rim Grand Canyon, the 10th summer I call this place home.  So it’s time to take the camper off the truck for some repairs and to haul the 5th-wheel back to the canyon.  I report for work May 1 but the North Rim doesn’t open to the public until May 15.  And this year begins with limited services due to a major waterline break.

Maybe next winter I’ll put the 5th-wheel in storage and live in the camper while traveling.  I’d love to take a fall journey to the Pacific Northwest where I’ve been trying to return for several years.  Yet I’m sure whatever journey I make there will be a love affair with the land.

 

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Arizona, California, National Parks and Monuments, Places I've been, United States Alabama Hills, Death Valley National Park, KOFA NWR, Organ Pipe Cactus NM, photography, Quartzsite, RV lifestyle, Silly Mt, travel, Valley of Fire State Park 25 Comments
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Hi, I’m Gaelyn, the Geogypsy

I retired after 29 summer seasons as a Park Ranger, traveling solo for 40+ years. My passions include travel, connecting to nature, photography, and sharing stories.

I started exploring US National Parks in 1977 and 20 years later became a seasonal Park Ranger.  I’ve lived full-time in a RV for 30 years working summers and playing winters.  I’m still trying to figure out what I want to be when I grow old, other than grow up.

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