Owen’s Valley

I was sitting in the middle of my class when my mother came and drove me home. She said to me and Sam that we were going to the eastern Sierra Nevada on a UCSB geology field trip. We drove out into the Mojave Desert only to meet with Andy Weice and his college students at a gas station. We kept driving to a state park called Red Rock Canyon. There were red spires of dirt allover the place.DSC03059.jpgWe stopped with the geology vans to find out about the strange hoodoos everywhere. Then, we kept driving off into the night all the way to a place called Alabama Hills. We stayed in the Alabama Hills all night long and in the morning I found cacti everywhere!DSC03070.jpgIn the background you can see the Sierra Nevada and Mount Witney. Andy Weice made us all stand around him while he talked about the geology of the Carrizo Plain.DSC03128.jpgThen, we all drove up to a place where my father takes Cate students every year. You can see Owen’s Lake from there, but Owen’s lake was drained by Los Angeles for water so it looks all white.DSC03132.jpgA fault line that was created in an earthquake that killed at least 15 people in the town of Lone Pine was next on the list. A pleasant little stream ran by, only to be guzzled up by the L.A. aqueduct. DSC03137.jpg We got in the car and drove to a dirt road. Our van isn’t 4-wheeled drive so we had to stop the car when we reached a stream and then we got into one of the UCSB vans. The vans took us to a cinder cone, which we hiked to the top. DSC03142.jpgAndy told us that if we could find a lava bomb, we could take it home. The lava bombs can be as big as a recycling bin or as small as a dime. We found quite a few.DSC03144.jpgFrom there, we drove of on the valley floor, which is covered in rainbows.DSC03148.jpgWe wanted to go to the Bristlecone Pines, but we didn’t have time. We went to a freezing cold lake instead, fringed with yellow and orange trees. There was an island in the lake, so I swam to it and walked around on it.DSC03149.jpgMy brother Sam courageously swam to the island with me.DSC03152.jpgThe fall foliage was unbelievable!DSC03163.jpgThen, we headed for a place called the Bishop Tuff, in the town of Bishop. The Owen’s River meandered at the base, and Andy told us that it had been made by a huge volcano near there. It was super windy on top of the tuff, and the next day there were rainbows everywhere.DSC03167.jpgSam and I found some pumice, a type of floating rock, and Andy Weice taught us about volcanoes. DSC03177.jpgWe drove to a road cut at the base of the tuff that had a fault. The river next to it was a target of the rocks we found.DSC03184.jpgWe then drove to a place called Mammoth Mountain. It is on the flanks of a volcano, but the real estate owners don’t want you to know that. They made the volcano escape route the “Mammoth Senic Drive.” It is a ski resort in the winter, but since it was fall, no snow was there. Instead, there was a thunderstorm. The storm prevented us from going to Devil’s Postpile National Monument. But, Panum Crater was still accessible, so we went there and climbed it to the top. There was a lot of Obsidian on the way.DSC03197.jpgThe view of Mono Lake was wonderful.DSC03198.jpgThen, we went to Mono Lake itself, which has tufa towers, swimming flies, and dead birds.DSC03228.jpgDSC03217.jpgWe drove back to Mammoth Mountain Ski Resort and found that large RVs have names like “Minnie Winnie” and “The Leprechaun.” Then, we went to a lake that had no islands in it so it wasn’t worth swimming in it.DSC03238.jpgThe next day we drove to a place called Manzanar National historic Site. It is the site of a concentration camp used by the USA to control Japanese people during WWII. DSC03241.jpgDSC03245.jpgDSC03249.jpgThen, we went to a place called Fossil Falls, where Owen’s Lake spilled over its banks and carved a gully in the Mojave Desert. DSC03256.jpgDSC03258.jpgOn the way home, we saw Beef-O Brady’s. Good sports, Good food. DSC03269.jpg

 

Pinnacles National Park

I got into the Cate School yukon and sat in the back with the Cate students. I left my school parking lot with Sam and we drove of into the afternoon sky. Mimi and Rosita were in our car as well, and so were their parents. It was October, and our annual Cate School Pinnacles trip was taking place.We stopped after a while in San Luis Obisbo to have dinner. The line there at Chipotle was super long, so we waited and got our food. Sam and I shared a quesadilla. Daddy drove the yukon now, and Anna-lee drove the other one. When we finally entered the National park of Pinnacles, our campground was in the middle of a bunch of RVs. 4 raccoons stole anna-lee’s food, but that didn’t matter. The next morning, we drove through the pines and chaparral where we stopped at Bear Gulch. Since we wanted to rock climb, we took our climbing gear. Our group split into two groups, one going one way and one going the other. We were to meet up at the summit of the mountain. We noticed a group of little kids with harnesses, so we raced them to the climbing spot, but those kids were part of a YMCA group that had reserved the place for themselves. We left the climbing gear in the bushes and hiked across the hillside. Strange rocks spires that looked like upside-down hats penetrated the sky as we trekked over the mountain. We came to a place where there were many switchbacks. We scanned the cliffs for the endangered California Condor. Near the top, we met with the other group and Sam played with his Cate student friend.DSC02971.jpg

The other group decided to turn back to the top of the mountain with us to eat our lunch. They took the wrong trail, and had found a tarantula! We sat at the top and ate our lunch.DSC02973.jpg

The other group moved on, and my group walked on a trail that required railings and stairs to access. debated over wether or not to take the normal route or walk over to the other road into the park, which does not connect with the one we used. DSC02977.jpg

We also found a man tracking condors.DSC02980.jpg

Once we got to the turnoff, our group debated over wether or not to take the normal route or walk over to the other road into the park, which does not connect with the one we used. Mimi, Rosita, a Cate student, and Chris all walked on the normal trail, while the rest of us trotted down the hill. Once more, there were strange rocks.DSC02982.jpgAt the bottom of the hill, we crossed the road and looked at the mountains from the classic Pinnacles viewpoint.DSC02983.jpgSomeone noticed 4 black dots hovering high above the pinnacles. We looked at them through the binoculars, and they were condors! We made our way through another canyon. DSC02984.jpgOn the canyon walls was an unidentified type of succulent!DSC02989.jpgWe entered a cave so dark that we needed flashlights. when we came out, I spied 3 more condors. Anna-lee took us back to the campground. I was upset we didn’t get to go on the ranger-led walk to the barker dam. Later the next day, Daddy took us all to the climbing spot. There was no one their to mess up our climb. I couldn’t reach the top because I was’t tall enough.DSC02994.jpgDSC03009.jpgDSC03020 (1).jpgI went with Mimi, Sam and Rosita back to the car via the Barker Dam and the Bear Gulch Cave.DSC03046.jpgChris saw a badger on a rock run into a hole, and I found a pool filled with cyanobacteria and a log to walk over it with.DSC03050.jpgDSC03055.jpgThen, we drove back home, and it was raining.