Four-Wheeling Thompson Canyon and Stony Canyon in Death Valley National Park
On December 8, 2023 at 10 AM, Don and Natala Goodman
were at my door, ready for a four-wheeling adventure. We headed out on
the Panamint Valley Road to Minietta Road.
There, we took a left turn on an unsigned portion of the road that
leads to the very heart of the Panamint Valley. Less than a mile from
the highway, we paused and exited my vehicle. When there are no
military planes flying over, the loudest sounds in Panamint Valley are the braying of a lonesome burro or the rustling of the breeze. Today, it was the silence and desolation that impressed the three of us.
Returning to the Panamint Valley Road, we crossed the highway and took
Minietta Road west, up and over some hills. The road is rough and
rocky, so the going was slow. Once we crested the hills, we could see Thompson Canyon
ahead of us. The portion we could see featured a wide and deep alluvial
fan. On a previous visit, I had traveled up Thompson Canyon Road
towards Minnietta Mine, which is an abandoned miner’s cabin on a nearby
hill. The mine’s name has two N’s, but the road name has only one N.
At the bottom of the first hill, we transitioned on to Nadeau Road, which was as rough
as Minietta Road. The name Nadeau is rich within the history of Death
Valley and the entire Mojave Desert. It was French-Canadian pioneer Remi Nadeau who first used mule teams to haul supplies, ore, and bullion to and from the Cerro Gordo
silver mine and other mines nearby. Nadeau Road, or Nadeau Trail as it
is also known, still exists as a 28-mile-long part of America’s
national system of trails. Nadeau’s concept was to use twenty or more
mules to haul heavily laden wooden wagons over inhospitable trails
throughout the desert and adjacent mountain passes. His pioneering work
continues its lineage in the laundry product known as Twenty Mule Team Borax and the historic radio and television show Death Valley Days.
As we entered Nadeau Road, Don Goodman, the airplane pilot pointed out a faded orange
windsock by the side of the road. He had identified a wide spot in
that road that served as a remote landing strip. With no airplanes in
sight, we rocked on down the road. I had hoped to find a wreck of a car
that I had found on a previous trip, but navigating in the desert can
be tricky. One trail can look just like another. The wreck, which we
did not find on this trip consisted of a sports car that had blown a
tire in extravagant fashion, flipped over many times and came to rest
as a flattened heap of rusty metal and rubber. Could it possibly been
going so fast as to wreck right on that spot? With its total
devastation, I assumed that it had crashed on Panamint Valley Road and
been hauled here, to its final resting place.
Traveling on at a very slow pace, the trail consisted of stones, varying in size form
pebbles to boulders. To the north, we observed rock abutments that
once held a mining road leading out of our lost valley. With their size
and fitment, they looked a bit like the stone abutments of Machu Pichu
in Peru. The scene appeared long abandoned and the road which they once
supported had washed away in several places. The fitment of the shaped
boulders still intrigues me.
With the Nadeau Trail being so much easier to traverse, why would
anyone take the time and effort to support a dirt road up a steep
incline out of Stony Canyon, which was the place where we now found
ourselves? After reviewing the area on Google Maps, the rock revetments
are even more mysterious. The road that they once supported paralleled
the track we were on, but reconnected to Minietta Road closer to our
point of entry. Someone had spent a huge amount of time and effort to
create a road that was much more difficult to drive and maintain.
On we traveled into what one might call the valley of the shadow of
death. The going was so rough that Don had to exit the cab of my truck
and move sharp rocks from our path. Often leaning out the passenger
side window, he would call out “Left” or “right” to miss the most
severe obstacles. As we progressed, the rocky terrain became almost
devoid of any soil. Boulders and rocks rounded by their journey from
the upper canyons to the lower valley were everywhere. After traversing
two small washouts, we came across a washout that was too deep to
transit.
Stopping for a picnic lunch, we marveled at the mountain and desert
scenery. Don walked up the road beyond the washout and discovered an
earthwork with wooden cribbing. Apparently, it was designed to load
ore into wagons for the transit
away from the local mines. Looking back on the scene now, I wonder if
it was one of Remi Nadeau’s original wagon-loading points. Later, after
consulting a map, we discovered that we had stopped only five hard
miles in from where we had departed the pavement of Panamint Valley
Road.
A few people with shovels and the desire to move some rocks and sand
could reopen that stretch of Nadeau Road, but we were not prepared to
take on that task. Looking at maps from the comfort of my home office, I
now realize that Nadeau Road connects back to Panamint Valley Road a
few miles beyond the washout. It also connects further on to Highway
190 Near Panamint Springs. In fact, the portion of Highway 190 between
Panamint Springs and Panamint Valley Road is also identified as Nadeau
Trail. My hope is that some volunteers from local off-road clubs will
caravan to that washout and reopen one of the truly historic roads
within Death Valley National Park.
After
returning to our base camp at Panamint Springs Resort, we rested and
met again early in the evening. Don and Natala had offered to take me
to dinner at the Panamint Springs Restaurant & Bar. In all my
recent visits to Panamint Springs, either the pandemic or lack of
someone to share a meal with had kept me away from the restaurant. How
good could a roadhouse originally built in the 1930’s be as a place to
dine? I was soon to find out.
As we settled into our table by a roaring fire, I perused the menu.
Natala ordered the Cardiac Arrest Burger and Don had another selection.
I ordered the half-rack of spare ribs, fries, and coleslaw, for $31.50.
While waiting for our dinner, I explored the bar area. There, I
discovered a massive redwood bar designed by renowned American
architect Hugh Newell Jacobsen (1929-2021).
It consisted of a single slab of California Coastal Redwood, which was
over four inches thick and at least twenty feet long. The root structure
from the same tree trunk became the support for the iconic bar.
Jacobsen had owned property in the nearby mining town of Darwin, California.
The bar arrived sometime in the early 1990’s, but the story became
clouded by the passage of time and changes in the resort’s ownership.
It is a work of art unlike anything else I have ever seen. If you pass
through Panamint Springs, you must visit the restaurant and sit at that
amazing bar.
Never judge a book by its cover and never misjudge a bar & grill
in the middle of nowhere. The fries were sublime, and the ribs were a
culinary perfection. According to the menu, the ribs pair well with a Pedroncelli Sonoma Petite Sarah. Next time I am at Panamint Springs, I will certainly order that pairing.
This is Part Five of a Seven Part article. To read Part Six, Click HERE. To return to Part One, click HERE.
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