Welcome to Central Nevada

When I reached the northernmost point of my scenic road (when I got east of Tohakum Peak) I decided it wasn’t going to be very scenic any more and decided I’d turn around.  This is a 4-shot panorama after I went over the last hill, looking north, which made up my mind for me.  This covers a little over 180 degrees of viewing:

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Nixon, Nevada (and south)

After reaching the northernmost part of the scenic road I was on east of Pyramid Lake I turned around and headed south towards Interstate 80.  This route would take be back through the little town of Nixon (a friend of mine is a huge fan of Richard Nixon so I dedicate this post to him).  Usually towns have a sign showing their name, population and elevation but Nixon didn’t have any coming in from any direction.  The population appears to be plenty big enough – I’ve seen towns with a population as low as 9 which rated a sign…

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A local (tribal) police officer stopped while I was pulled off the side of the road to text these to my friend and I assured him everything was alright and that I was just a simple tourist who didn’t want to engage in distracted driving.

While in town I also spotted these vehicles inside a fence – and I hope they can stay there!

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I drove further south on Route 447 and saw these things:

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This is a 3-shot panorama – left to right:

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And Nevada has the neatest “Historic Marker” signs I have ever seen:

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When I got to the dreaded interstate I was delighted to find a Pilot truck stop (for which I have a loyalty card) and I was able to gas up for 2.909, well below the 3.25+ I was expecting to pay in Sparks.

Fallon, Nevada

After I drove scenic road #1 for the day (northeast of Sparks, near Pyramid Lake) I dropped down south of Interstate 80 and tackled scenic road #2, Nevada Route 50, or at least a small part of it.  A friend of mine had told me about this road but I never knew exactly where it was.  Turns out that Highway 50 crosses the United States from West Sacramento, California to Ocean City, Maryland.  The portion which runs through central Nevada is called the “Loneliest Road in America”.

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(Photo credit: Newsweek.com)

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(Photo credit: doityourselfrv.vom)

I drove a small part of the road as far as Fallon, NV and decided that was enough.  I love to drive but I really didn’t want to drive over 300 miles across central Nevada for 5 1/2 hours and then turn around and do it again.  Plus I was anxious to get home and post today’s photos, and update the status on the wildfire I spotted this morning.

Fallon itself is a cute little town.  Here are some shots taken on their Maine Street (yes, the ‘e’ is included at no additional cost to you!):

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This sign painted on the side of a building caught my eye:

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Note that the painter took some editorial liberty and changed the ‘r’ in YOUR to lower case…

I looked at some photos online and found this one as well:

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(Photo credit: icollector.com)

A little ways east of Fallon I found this place:

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A friend suggested I run some hot laps with my Altima but this is a dirt track and I just had my car washed this morning, otherwise…..

 

Evans Fire – Update – Sunday evening

Earlier this afternoon I posted a picture while parked by the side of the road.  When I left Sparks, Nevada about 9 o’clock this morning I was driving north to head towards a big lake northeast of town.  I saw something I wanted to stop and take a picture of and when I turned around to go back I noticed smoke rising from a mountainous area southwest of Reno.  Here is the picture I posted, plus one from the same time taken with the digital camera:

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I took those photos at 943 this morning.  According to the local news, that fire started around 8 o’clock this morning and has been named the Evans Fire (it is in or near Evans Canyon).  Here are some more shots taken with the digital camera about 10 minutes later.  My guess is that this fire was at least 40 miles away as the crow flies, but then I’m not that familiar with the area.  It is probably more than that, and I don’t think it is all that close to Reno.

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I went and did some other things throughout the day but when I headed home I was in town just off Interstate 80 next to the Nugget Casino and took this photo at 425pm local time.

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It looked much better to me, but the InciWeb website I use to monitor wildfire status said that as of about an hour before I took that last photo it was at 60 acres and was only 5% contained.

This is how it starts…

I took this photo shortly after 930 this morning, looking back towards Reno.

This is now the Evans Fire (at or near Evans Canyon) Southwest of Reno, Nevada. A news report 2 hours ago had it at 20 acres and an hour ago at 35-80. I don’t know how official either of those reports are.

I am posting this with my phone while parked by the side of the road (Shawn) and will post better pictures taken with the digital camera later today when I get home.

UPDATE:  442pm Pacific Time – Corrected location to Evans Canyon, not Ranch.  Fire started approximately 8am local time.  As of an hour and 20 minutes ago, InciWeb website has it at 60 acres and only 5% contained.  I will be making a new post with additional photos shortly.

Sunday update

Oops – I initially titled this post Saturday update.  For me now, every day is Saturday!

I am now in Sparks, Nevada – just outside of Reno.  I am leaving shortly for two scenic drives which should only take a few hours.  The internet connection here is excellent and my photos are uploading very quickly.  I got caught up on sleep last night so when I get back to the house this afternoon I will post some of my picture backlog.

Monday I plan to go down and drive a lap around Lake Tahoe, which isn’t far from here.  Traffic may be heavy due to the upcoming July 4th holiday but hopefully I’ll get back in time to post even more before I head to San Rafael, just north of San Francisco, on Tuesday.  I’ll be there a whole week and have LOTS planned.

Hetch Hetchy Reservoir

Friday I drove back to Yosemite National Park one last time, with the intention of seeing three things I hadn’t been to yet.  One was the Ahwahnee Hotel (which now has a different name due to legal issues) which is the largest hotel in the Yosemite Valley.  The main reason I wanted to see it was that the lobby and interior was the inspiration for the set constructed for the original movie “The Shining,” starring Jack Nicholson and Shelley Duvall.  When I visited the two hotels (one in Oregon and the other in Colorado) which had been used for exterior scenes last year I did some research before posting those photos to the blog and thought I had read that the Ahwahnee had burned, but it is quite intact.  Well, because of a later than expected start Friday, and noticeably more traffic in the Park, I decided not to go and may post pictures I can find online later.

The second thing I wanted to do was exit the Park on Route 140 and drive south, through the little town of El Portal and continue down to Mariposa.  Well, El Portal was not exactly what I had been led to believe it was (a quaint little mountain town) and I only drove about 12 miles south before deciding that the scenery was not unlike something I could see in the mountains of North Carolina, so I turned around and went back into the Park.

Item 3 – I then turned left and exited the Park on the road I had been using most of the week and drove a short distance where I turned right on the road to Hetch Hetchy, a 16-mile road which ends at the reservoir.  About 2/3 of the way up that road I entered the Park again (my mother would say “make up your mind, are you in or out??”) and was rewarded with some magnificent scenery.  While the forest along much of the road up to Hetch Hetchy had burned years ago the reservoir area itself was worth the trip.

The reservoir was created by the construction of the O’Shaughnessy Dam, named for the engineer who designed it and supervised it’s construction, and sadly died just 12 days before the public dedication. After the devastating earthquake in 1906 which destroyed the water system in San Francisco (along with much of the city) a plan was devised, after heated debate with conservationists who wanted to preserve the natural beauty of the valley, to construct this dam and create a reservoir to provide water to the San Francisco Bay area.

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It took 20 years to design and build a series of pipes and tunnels to transport water from here, west to San Francisco – a distance of 167 miles.  The system was designed to transport the water completely by the force of gravity, and no pumps are utilized!

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Some of the water is released downstream by a series of gates, located to the right of the dam as seen in the photo above.

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This, then, creates a series of small waterfalls on the “dry” side of the dam.

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Though the bulk of the water released through the dam is by way of a large jet of water which crashes against a rock wall before falling into what is now the Touloumne River, headed for the coast.

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The dam itself creates the huge Hetch Hetchy Reservoir.

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And although it is hard to spot in the photo above there are normally two waterfalls a little left of the center of the photo above (only one the day I was there).  The one which is flowing is the Wapama Fall, down near the water’s surface.

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Earlier in the year, when there is more snowmelt, there is a much higher fall, the Tueeulala, which drops from the top of the high point just left of Wapama Fall, but there was no water falling from there on Friday.

After walking across the dam I went through a short tunnel…

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… and got to see another perspective of the reservoir.

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This was a great way to finish my time on Yosemite.

 

Travel Day

No photo.

Today (Saturday) is a travel day when I leave where I have been staying all week in Sonora, California and head up towards Reno, Nevada.  Although Reno is northeast of Sonora I am actually driving north on the continuation of Route 49 and will turn east when I get further north than Reno and loop back.  Route 49 is the “Gold Rush Trail”.

Sonora is in the heart of Gold Rush country.  Gold was discovered in this area back in 1849 and triggered a huge influx of people who hoped to literally strike it rich.  In fact, many of the businesses in the Sonora area include the term “Mother Lode” in their name.  The area is rich (pun intended) in gold mining history.  The people who came to this area became known as “49ers” (because of the discovery year) and the Trail was designated as California Route 49.  I now know why the San Francisco 49ers football team is called that, and why gold is part of their team’s color scheme.

Today I will be heading north of Sonora through the towns of Angels Camp, San Andreas (don’t ever try to blame anything on the people who live there, as they’ll say it’s never their fault.  Get it??  San Andreas??  Fault??) and Jackson, which I have been through already, and continue on through Plymouth, Placerville, Auburn and Nevada City before arching over to the east to where the road ends in little Vinton.  I will then double back a short ways and take another scenic road south to the dreaded interstate west of Reno and head east into Nevada.

Although I have plans to do several things while I’m up in that area for three days I will hopefully have some time (and a faster internet connection) to try and get caught up on some picture posting.

Calaveras Big Trees State Park

Last Sunday, my first full day in this area, I decided to forego returning to Yosemite National Park because it was so crazy the day before (the 3rd Saturday in June) and instead drove on two of the beautiful scenic roads north of where I am staying in Sonora.  There are actually three such roads, Routes 88, 4 and 108, each about 80 miles in length.  I would drive all three at least twice during the coming week, and will post pictures of some of the beautiful things I saw in subsequent posts.

This post focuses on one destination which is located along Route 4, just north of the little town of Arnold, California.  Although I had just been to see some Giant Sequoias a week ago when I was staying in Visalia, this Park was still impressive.

This is what’s left of the Discovery Tree, a Giant Sequoia which fell in 1853 – and took 3 weeks to cut up and remove (with the technology available at that time).  The cut surface, where the man is standing, is so big it once served as a dance floor!

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Here is a portion of the trunk.  If you look closely you’ll see a young child on the far right.

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And believe it or not, this is all the bigger a cone of a Giant Sequoia is:

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According to the information in the Visitor Center, these cones only grow to be 1.5 to 3 inches in length.  Unlike most pine cones, these are “closed” and require intense heat from a fire to open and release the seeds inside.

On the other hand (actually still in my left hand but you know what I mean – Eric) this is the cone of a Sugar Pine which can grow to 22 inches in length:

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El Capitan – Morning Pictures

These were taken Monday and Wednesday mornings using my smartphone camera.

The “nose” of El Capitan faces south so the southwest exposure is shaded in the morning:

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As I move further east along the one-way road leading in to the Valley I start to see more of the southeast exposure (to the right of the “nose” from this vantage point).  It was also hard to position myself to get clear shots looking through the trees.

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You will see slightly closer, slightly fuller views of the southeast exposure in the early afternoon pictures in the next post.