On a Roll
Since there’s not much grass in the dessert, Ellie is making the most of our campground lawn . . .
Jun 26
Since there’s not much grass in the dessert, Ellie is making the most of our campground lawn . . .
Jun 25
I guess this is #2 in my “The People You Meet” series . . .
The Georgian (US, not Soviet) in Site #60 owns and operates several mines, a few of which are in this area. He camps here for a month at a time and works his local silver mine.
He showed me ore samples from 4 of his mines — 2 silver and 2 gold. In the photo below, he said that the ore on the lower left produced 2,000 ounces of silver per ton while the ore on the upper left produces over 6,000.
The two samples on the left are from gold mines.
It just looked like colored rocks to me, but I’m not in the business.
Anyway, he said some folks from Beverly Hills are interested in buying one of his silver mines.
He also said he locates sunken treasure and was planning a trip to England to check out a site.
Who knows?
Jun 13
Jan and I spent Saturday morning at Manzanar. Here is what we saw . . .
For further information . . . www.densho.org.
May 30
On Thursday afternoon we drove down to Lone Pine (about an hour away) to check out the “Movie Flats” in the Alabama Hills.
On the drive there we passed Manzanar which was a Japanese internment camp during World War II. It’s now a national historic site which we’re definitely going to visit during our stay in Bishop.
At the start of the Movie Flats Road there’s a plaque that says:
“Since 1920, hundreds of movies and TV episodes, including Gunga Din, How the West Was Won, Khyber Rifles, Bengal Lancers and High Sierra, along with The Lone Ranger and Bonanza, with such stars as Tom Mix, Hopalong Cassidy, Roy Rogers, Gary Cooper, Gene Autrey, Glenn Ford, Humphrey Bogart, and John Wayne, have been filmed in these rugged Alabama Hills with their majestic Sierra Nevada background.
Plaque dedicated by Roy Rogers, whose first starring feature was filmed here in 1938.”
What a great place to film! Mountains, foothills, desert, valley, weird rocks, . . .
To get to Movie Flats we drove down Whitney Portal Road which leads to (wait for it) Whitney Portal (elevation 7,800 feet) the jumping off point for Mount Whitney (14,500 feet) climbers. Whitney Portal is on our To See list.
Here are some photos from the trip:
This is a movie of us driving to the valley floor . . .
May 23
Then you’ll love Mule Days.
This Saturday Jan & I drove into Bishop at about 9am to get a spot for the 10am Mule Days parade.
Not much of a crowd at first so we just wandered around, but when the parade started, people came out of the woodwork.
We stayed for about an hour and took these videos (narrated by the parade master of ceremonies) . . .