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seanquinn  > Travel > Expedition to Death Valley
It is a land of extremes. Hottest, driest, lowest: A superlative desert of streaming sand dunes, snow-capped mountains, multicolored rock layers, water-fluted canyons and 3 million acres of stone wilderness. Home to the Timbisha Shoshone and to plants and animals unique to the harshest deserts. A place of legend and a place of trial. Death Valley.

Our trip into the Valley of Death started on March 23rd. It was going to be a trial for us and the new rig (Toyota FJ Cruiser picked up 2 weeks earlier). We had to prepare to be totally self-sufficient for the duration of your trip. For 5 days, we moved about this remote, starkingly beautiful part of California. We logged over 500 miles of travel in the park, driving on everything from smooth paved roads to rocky, rutted-out steep trails on the sides of mountains. We never camped in the same spot twice, always wanting to explore a different area of the park. It was the first time we tried this expedition style of traveling/camping and we fell in love with it. We returned back to civilization in Lone Pine, CA on the 27th, where we decided to stay the night and get a good meal before heading back home to San Diego in the morning.
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seanquinn > New friends we met on the trail...we shared many stories, jokes, and laughs around the campfire
seanquinn > Desert under the stars
seanquinn > Lots of contrasting colors between the vegetation in the Badlands and the surrounding mountain ranges.
seanquinn > Driving on the 45 mile West Side road along the Badlands, the lowest elevation in the U.S. Also frequently the hottest, only about 90 today. Snow covered Telescope Peak in the background.
seanquinn > After filling up with gas in Furnace Creek, we left and drove back up into the Funeral Mountains, on the eastern side of Death Valley. Here we are relaxing off the Chloride Cliffs trail at a sopt called Monarch Canyon. Kerri relaxing in the shade.
seanquinn > Enjoying the solitude and stillness, no one around for miles and miles.
seanquinn > Free as a bird
seanquinn > Picture from the Chloride Cliffs, about 5000 feet above the Death Valley floor
seanquinn > Old, rusting mining equipment can be found in lots of areas in Death Valley
New friends we met on the trail...we shared many stories, jokes, and laughs around the campfire
 > New friends we met on the trail...we shared many stories, jokes, and laughs around the campfire
New friends we met on the trail...we shared many stories, jokes, and laughs around the campfire
Camera: Canon (Canon Powershot Sd200) |
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