Day 411: Hagerman Fossil Beds NM and Minidoka NHS

Today we visited Hageman, Idaho to visit the visitor center for Hagerman Fossil Beds National Monument.  The Monument includes a portion of the Oregon Trail, so the visitor center had an Oregon Trail dress-up station:

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Hagerman Fossil Beds are of the Pliocene Epoch, so they’re quite recent, relatively speaking:

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The visitor center also houses an interim exhibit for Minidoka NHS.  Like Manzanar and Heart Mountain, both of which we’ve visited (here and here), Minidoka is one of ten sites in the US where nearly 11,000 Americans were imprisoned during World War II for being of Japanese descent:

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The kids completed workbooks and received Junior Ranger badges for Hagerman Fossil Beds NM and Minidoka NHS:

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Continuing North and West, we are overnighting at a gas station in John Day, Oregon.  See the trip map for driving details.

Day 410: Craters of the Moon National Monument

Today we reluctantly left our amazing Shabbos camping location at Magic Reservoir and drove North and East to Craters of the Moon National Monument.  The monument preserves a number of lava flows, the youngest of which are about 2,000 years old.  We first visited the spatter cones:

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Looking down into the spatter cone:

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The terrain is other-worldly, and was used for lunar surface training for the Apollo astronauts:

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We hiked up to view a couple larger cinder cones:

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Pumice is highly aerated, so it’s much lighter than you might expect.  Some pumice even floats!

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Looking into another spatter cone:

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Next we drove out to the trailhead for a lava cave:

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We explored a short section.  The kids are off to the left exploring a tight little side passage:

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In the visitor center parking lot, Trish befriended our neighbor:

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The kids completed their Junior Ranger books and received their patches:

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While Trish made a late lunch, I took the kids to another trailhead for a short hike:

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It’s easy to imagine the lava flowing across the land:

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Eventually, wind-borne soils settle into crevasses and plants begin to grow:

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This 3” long praying mantis blended right in:

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After leaving the monument, we drove South and West to overnight at a truck stop in Bliss, Idaho.  See the trip map for driving details.

Update: The kids produced a podcast for today’s adventure:

Day 408: Low Density Housing at Magic Reservoir

We got off to a late start this morning and drove North, crossing into Idaho and stopping in Twin Falls for diesel and groceries.  Thanks to a post on Technomadia, we decided to overnight at Magic Reservoir.  I can’t say we’re disappointed with the location:  

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Not only do we have lakefront parking, but the weather here is blessedly cooler than what we’ve experienced since arriving in Las Vegas three weeks ago.  The forecast calls for lows in the high 40s, and highs in the high 70s tomorrow.  And this looks like an ideal PPG location to boot!  Maybe on Sunday….

Good Shabbos from Magic Reservoir, Idaho!  See the trip map for today’s drive and our current location.

Day 407: Flat Out at the Bonneville Flats

We left Great Basin National Park this morning and drove North to visit the Bonneville Salt Flats:

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The Salt Flats are submerged beneath an inch of water over the winter.  In the summer this water evaporates and leaves a smooth surface which is perfect for setting land speed records.  The flats are over 46 square miles in size:

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‘We got the truck up to 75MPH, which felt plenty fast.  Hard to believe vehicles have been driven here in excess of 600MPH.

We also verified that the truck’s “ESC off” mode works, though it does take a bit of doing to do a doughnut in a one-ton truck.

We also took the kids for a slow ride in the bed of the pickup:

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Lightning was moving in, so we got off the flats and back to the RV:

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From the flats, we continued West and North to overnight behind a casino in Wells, Nevada.  See the trip map for driving details.

UPDATE: The kids produced a podcast for today’s adventure:

Day 406: Great Basin National Park

Today the kids did some cookie decorating in the RV:

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Trish made mini apple pies:

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Meanwhile, I decided to ride to the summit of the road up Wheeler Peak.  The ride starts in town at 5,318 feet and ends 15.6 miles later at 10,163 feet, a vertical gain of 4,845 feet.  Outside Magazine listed this ride as one of the five best North American hill climbs.  The climb is longer and as steep as the Tour de France’s Hors Categorie climb of Col d’Izoard.

I left at 11am, and the first half of the climb was really hot.  Eventually, I climbed past 8,000 feet, and the temperature dropped considerably.  Up here, it’s already Autumn:

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Looking at the switchbacks in the foreground and the start point, the town of Baker, in the background:

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The higher I went, the deeper into Autumn I travelled:

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At last I reached the summit, nearly one vertical mile above my start point.  The climb had more vertical than Whitney Portal but less than Horseshoe Meadows:

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Wheeler Peak in the background:

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I suffered two flats on the way down, but it was still a great ride!

Back at the visitor center, the kids received their Junior Ranger badges:

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We watched the Park’s excellent video in the modern visitor center:

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It was a little late to drive on to a new location, so we settled into a great dispersed camping spot I found on BLM land:

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As I write this I can hear the swiftly flowing stream a few feet from the RV as well as a host of crickets.  Good night from Great Basin National Park!

UPDATE: The kids produced a podcast for today’s adventure: