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Dry Camping in Death Valley - December 2023
At 9 AM on December 6, 2023, I trundled down to the Furnace Creek Campground
  entrance kiosk and asked if anyone with a full hookup RV site had 
vacated their  spot. As of that time, I had no luck there. After a cold 
night without heat in my  coach, there was no way I was going to spend 
second night living  like a cave dweller in a dry camping site. In 
December there are too few hours  of sunlight to fully charge my house 
batteries. With laggardly solar battery power it  seemed that my only 
option was to "pick up stakes" and head back one day early  for Panamint
 Springs.
 If
 given the option to have power or sewer, I will select  electrical 
power every time. I can always cut back on sewer usage, but the lack  of
 electrical power at the Furnace Creek dry campsites was for me is a 
bridge too far. Yes, there are RVs that have  1,000 watts or more of 
solar panels and 200+ amp-hours of lithium-ion batteries  onboard, but 
mine is not yet one of them. As of that mid morning moment, my  rig had 
about ten amp-hours of battery power remaining. That was not nearly 
enough to see me  through another cold desert night.
If
 given the option to have power or sewer, I will select  electrical 
power every time. I can always cut back on sewer usage, but the lack  of
 electrical power at the Furnace Creek dry campsites was for me is a 
bridge too far. Yes, there are RVs that have  1,000 watts or more of 
solar panels and 200+ amp-hours of lithium-ion batteries  onboard, but 
mine is not yet one of them. As of that mid morning moment, my  rig had 
about ten amp-hours of battery power remaining. That was not nearly 
enough to see me  through another cold desert night.
Rather than booking out for Panamint  Springs, I decided to take a drive
 and see the sights. Before leaving the  campground, I swung my truck 
back around and asked the ranger at the kiosk if  anyone had vacated a 
full hookup since 9 AM. Yes, indeed, someone had abandoned  their prime 
RV site and left it vacant for me. After paying for my new site, I  
headed off to Zabriskie  Point to climb the
 hill and see the sights in Death Valley. Best seen at  sunset, 
Zabriskie Point is spectacular at any time of day. The slowly melting 
mud stone hills  look like something out of a Salvador Dali painting. 
They are colorful and surrealistic to say the  least.
While returning from Zabriskie Point to Furnace Creek, I hung a left on  Badwater Road.
 It is seventeen miles to Badwater, itself. At 282 feet below  mean sea 
level, that place is touted as the lowest elevation location in North  
America. Normally, it is a white salt flat that stretches across the 
breadth of  lower Death Valley. Once in 2005 and now again since August 
2023, it has  returned to its ancient glory as Lake Manly. With no 
discernible wind, the  shallow lake water reflects anything on its 
horizon. Having visited Badwater once before, I had no desire to cover 
my shoes  and truck cab with untold amounts of sticky salt material. 
Instead, I drove another quarter mile along  the highway, which  stretches toward Shoshone and intersects with Interstate I-15 at Baker, California.
  When I stopped along the highway at the lower foot of shallow Lake 
Manly, the  view north across the full length of the lake was sublime.
stretches toward Shoshone and intersects with Interstate I-15 at Baker, California.
  When I stopped along the highway at the lower foot of shallow Lake 
Manly, the  view north across the full length of the lake was sublime.
 
The return trip to Furnace Creek has an altitude gain of exactly 282 
feet,  meaning that at the junction with Highway 190, you are once again
 at mean sea  level. On that return trip, one can make several side 
trips. The first opportunity is at Devil's Golf Course, which  is not to
 be confused with the Devil's Cornfield,
 at  the opposite end of Death Valley. Early travelers throughout the 
Western United  States were obsessed with naming any large, solitary 
rock formation "Church  Rock" and almost anything hot and dry "Devils Whatever."
 Other
 than the Devil's Golf Course there are two notable side trips available
 on the Badwater Road. The  first is a cutoff to the right called 
Natural Bridge Road, as the name implies,  the road leads to a hiking 
trail that in turn leads to  Natural Bridge. Some  might call it a stone arch, but they would be wrong, Any stone
 arch that spans  even a dry watercourse is called a natural bridge. 
Good luck climbing up and  crossing Natural Bridge. It spans a canyon 
from wall to wall and is both  thirty-five feet thick and thirty-five 
feet from the canyon floor to the underside of  the arch. Although the 
round trip hike is only one mile, there is no water available and  very 
little shade during the middle of the day. The National Park Service 
recommends not making the hike after 10 AM during the hot season.
Other
 than the Devil's Golf Course there are two notable side trips available
 on the Badwater Road. The  first is a cutoff to the right called 
Natural Bridge Road, as the name implies,  the road leads to a hiking 
trail that in turn leads to  Natural Bridge. Some  might call it a stone arch, but they would be wrong, Any stone
 arch that spans  even a dry watercourse is called a natural bridge. 
Good luck climbing up and  crossing Natural Bridge. It spans a canyon 
from wall to wall and is both  thirty-five feet thick and thirty-five 
feet from the canyon floor to the underside of  the arch. Although the 
round trip hike is only one mile, there is no water available and  very 
little shade during the middle of the day. The National Park Service 
recommends not making the hike after 10 AM during the hot season.
The second  side trip is  Artist's Drive, which is a loop road through a
 series of hills and gullies that  may spring to life with color, but 
only on the right day at the
 right time.  Otherwise the hills have a dull green or dull red hue to 
them. Good luck to you  if you arrive on a day when the  Artist's Palette
 comes to life. The road itself  is one way only, so once you start, you
 are committed to looping up, over,  around, and through a sinuous 
ribbon of asphalt to the very end, which is once  again at Badwater 
Road. If you have never taken Artist's Drive, I recommend  taking it, 
just so you can check it off your bucket list. If you take the trip  
again on your next visit to Death Valley, count yourself as an optimist.
 I say  that because the odds are about one thousand to one that you 
will see the same dull green and red  hills you saw on your last visit.
 
After returning to my campsite, I closed the 
slide-outs on my RV, hooked it  up to my truck and traveled two hundred 
yards to my “new” full hookup site. No longer feeling like a 49er lost in time, I prepared for one more night at  Furnace  Creek Campground in Death Valley.  Only this time, I had electric lights and two space heaters to warm my bones. Unlike the  lost emigrants of 1849
 Death Valley, there was to be no brush lean-to or cave dwelling for  
me. It was almost 174 years to the day that the original lost families 
made  their way out of Death Valley to civilization, better known as Los Angeles.
Creek Campground in Death Valley.  Only this time, I had electric lights and two space heaters to warm my bones. Unlike the  lost emigrants of 1849
 Death Valley, there was to be no brush lean-to or cave dwelling for  
me. It was almost 174 years to the day that the original lost families 
made  their way out of Death Valley to civilization, better known as Los Angeles. 
The following day, I would travel back over Towne Pass to Panamint Springs Resort, where  I would spend two more nights. After that, I would take my own quick trip back to  civilization, better known as Los Angeles.
 
This is Part Three of a Seven Part  article. To read Part Four, Click HERE. To return to  Part One, click HERE.

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