Southern Death ValleyLed by Ken and Diane Sears: October 9 & 10, 1999 The first week of October, 1999, was the hottest on record, with local temperatures in the 100+ range, so a weekend in southern Death Valley with the Sears and some other nice people seemed like the perfect thing to do. We met at the Mad Greek’s parking lot in Baker Ken announced early-on that he’d been to Ballarat the week before and had been told that Goler Wash (aka Coyote Canyon Road) was washed out and impassable without winches and lockers; we would therefore have to forego the transit through the Panamints from Death Valley to Panamint Valley. Our first stop was at Sheep Creek Spring, where we
checked out the cabin Then to Saratoga Spring Then to West Side Road and the long drive up Butte
Valley to Warm Springs, where we camped. This area has some neat mining
equipment The potluck, presumably for happy hour only, provided all the food we needed for dinner. Joan brought some veggies with dips and some terrific rollups, both ham and cream cheese; the Sears did a 7-layer bean dip, I did my quesadilla thing, the guys brought other goodies, and best of all, Allan and Ding, provided us with a lovely spaghetti main course with tossed salad. We enjoyed a fine campfire in the delightfully cool evening and slept soundly under the stars in the clear, dark, moonless night. Allan’s Pathfinder had a flat tire when we got up,
so we pulled it, found a sidewall puncture using soapy water, and repaired
it with Allan’s Safety Seal kit. Up to Butte Valley where we did our morning
loosening-up hike to Arrastre Spring Then Anvil Spring Cabin and on to Greater View Cabin
where we met hearing-impaired John After a pleasant lunch at the cabin, About a mile down the trail we met a young couple, Linda and David Moreno, who were taking a short-cut from Death Valley to Fresno in a rented, stock, Ford Expedition. They had seen the dotted line across the mountains on the AAA map and figured they’d try it for their first off-highway experience. Linda was not pleased when I told her that the road was impassable and she would have to go back out. She had not enjoyed the last couple miles of their experience. They decided, wisely, to stay with us. So now we had a driver on her first 4wd trip in a gigantic chunk of rented Detroit Iron to keep us company on a reportedly impassable road! Ken led us to the Barker Cabin We made one last stop at the Newman Mine (see
Jan, 2003 update) headquarters
shack Ken and I agreed on the lines to take on each
rockfall, and then we all moved rocks to fill in as many of the “pits”
as we could. I spotted for Ken, who was first. We both spotted Linda,
occasionally giving her conflicting directions. It took us the better part of an hour to work through the rockfalls, but we made it without a scratch. Linda was a real trooper, followed directions perfectly, and the rocks never laid a glove on her rented monster. At 4:30 we stopped near Ballorat for self-congratulation, good-bys, and a cooler. It was a great trip, Sears!
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