Tuesday, March 8, 2016

Lone Pine part IV

On our last day in Lone Pine we headed up into the mountains to visit the mining ghost town of Cerro Gordo.  The town currently has one resident who keeps an eye on the place and gives wonderful personal tours of the buildings and grounds of anyone who makes the trek to the 8,000 ft high town.


The most recent owners, Mike and Jody Patterson have died and the town is maintained by the permanent caretaker and volunteer helpers.  There is hope that the town will receive state or federal protection soon in order to arrest further decay of the structures.  

When we visited a recent snow fall was melting off but it was still cool in the sun and cold in the shade!  The road is mostly graded and anything but a low clearance roadster should be able to make the trip given dry roads.  There are some rough spots that will need to taken slowly.  A high clearance 4WD vehicle is the best bet as the loose dirt on the road can be a bit slippery.


A delightful wind sculpture at our hotel in Lone Pine

Starting out on the road to Cerro Gordo from the Owens valley floor









A lengthy cable car system stretched from the town to the valley floor.  This cable car system carried ore down to the valley where it would be shipped out.  Seen on the ridge is one of the cable winding towers.  There is cable laying all along the road to the town, the remains of the cable system, left where it fell when it all collapsed sometime in the 50s after years of disuse.

Looking across the valley to the Sierras

I don't like sheer drops and this road had some.  At this point we parked Rough Rider and walked the last mile to Cerro Gordo.  We climbed over 1,000 ft in that mile stroll.  The rest of the party drove on up to the town.

The Jeep is down that road aways

Almost to the town!
Yay, snow!

The town church in what used to be a car repair garage.  The church I grew up with in Forest Hills Pa.  was in a former bus garage so there seems to be a connection between vehicles and churches!

Looking towards the American hotel.  When the Pattersons were alive the hotel was operated as a bed and breakfast.  Now it is in poor enough condition that the second floor is off limits

Inside the hotel.  About this time the battery started giving out in my camera.



The cardroom, the scene of several shootings over the decades pre 1900.

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the caretaker's house and another house beside it that is available for rental can be seen here

The town caretaker is on the right




The long metal building is the bunkhouse that is also available for rent to large groups.  It is popular with scout troops in the summer.

Earlier I had a picture of a stuck and broken rock bit...this is what would have put that pit into the rock!

8,200 ft.

We're at the exact midpoint between the highest (Mt. Whitney) and the lowest (Badwater basin) points in California!    We have been to Badwater basin but not Mt. Whitney but we did see it on our trip!


Sunday, March 6, 2016

Lone Pine Part III

After leaving the scenic rock area and the movie trail we headed to Manzanar War Relocation Camp, a polite term for a domestic concentration camp.  Manzanar was one of many such camps in the west and southwest where Japanese American citizens as well as Japanese citizens living in the U.S. were interned during the war.  Another such camp in Crystal City Tx contained 'enemy' aliens of Japanese, German, and Italian origin along with their American spouses and children.  None of the camps were vacation spots by any stretch of the imagination.

The oral histories left by residents of Manzanar tell of the incessant wind, heat in the summer and chilling cold in the winter, and the fine dust, as fine as flour, that got into everything and coated everyone and everything with a tan layer of dust.


Our visit to Manzanar was particularly interesting due to having a friend who as in the camp as a small child along with his family.

There is a very interesting museum in the former gym and community building where a moving and informative film plays several times a day.  Will a time come again in this country where our government will feel compelled to imprison large numbers of citizens for no legitimate reason?

The weather had been sunny but cool until Manzanar and then turned overcast and somber during our visit there, appropriate for the camp and the stories to be learned there.


Outside of the camp perimeter on highway 395.  A guard tower stands watch over the camp.


Bundu Trek co-driver reads the story of Manzanar


The gate guard huts at the original entrance to the camp.

One of several re-created barracks used to tell the story of the camp and its residents.  the concrete pads mark the sites of buildings once more permanent than the wood barracks




The mueum is in the large white building, formerly the community center and gym

The residents built a pleasure park with flowing water and many green plants and trees.  When the camp closed the plants died and the water courses filled with blowing sand.  In 2008 the children and grandchildren of the camp residents located and excavated the remains of the park




The trekkers explore the remains of the pleasure park

Looking towards the camp reservoir built by the camp residents in 1943.  They left their names and initials in the wet concrete, which may still be seen today

the camp cemetery where 5 who died at the camp are buried.  Others were removed when the camp closed.





Some of the memorials left for the dead.  The first to die at the camp were the single elderly men.  They had no family or friends to give them a reason to live.
There is still a whole lot of nothing all around the camp.

Friday, March 4, 2016

Lone Pine Part II

The next morning we loaded up and headed to the Alabama hills, the site of many movie and TV productions.  


There are two sightseeing loops trekkers may follow: the movie trail which takes you to the site of some of the before mention movie shoots, and the trail that takes you to interesting rock formations.  

We did both!   Either loop can be done by a street vehicle except possibly if it is raining or snowing.


Headed up to the Alabama Hills

"Movie Flats"


My Jeep chick

The better half of the trek group!



The bullfrog rock

"Gunga Din" filming location

 Some of "Tremors" was filmed right here.  If you haven't seen the movie you are missing a good time.

The group looking for the "Tremors" site


"There it is!"


Yet another twisted rock drill bit.  I've seen 3 or 4 others on our desert outings.  Something like that could've resulted in injury to the driller.  See my post about Big Bear for  two more stuck rock bits:  http://bundutrekusa.blogspot.com/2014/11/big-bear-labor-day-weekend-trip.html

This may be the actual 'lone pine' that the town is named for

Some rock climbers were active in the area practicing their skill

The rope bridge in "Gunga Din" was stretched between these two rocks.  Through good camera angles the bridge looked to be hundreds of feet in the air!


Our lunch spot

One of the several natural rock arches to be found in the area.


The famous Mobius arch