Our plan for Thursday was to head out on Hwy 136 towards Death Valley, then turn south at Panamint Springs and pass by Trona Pinnacles before getting back onto US 395 for the drive home.
On our way out of the Alabama Hills Cafe after breakfast we spotted the Moon setting over the Sierras.
Our first stop after leaving Lone Pine was the DWP access spot to Owens Lake outside of Keeler. Much better views than part we saw on Tuesday afternoon.
The next planned stop was to be the Father Crowley Scenic Overlook in Death Valley. We had no intention of staying very long, but I've always been a firm believer in stopping at every scenic overlook just to see what's there.
For many years I've been wanting to go to the canyon in Death Valley known as "Star Wars Canyon" to get pictures of the fighter planes flying below the rim of the canyon. For some reason I always thought that the spot was not very accessible. I was wrong.
So, there I am at "Star Wars Canyon" when almost right away a pair of German Air Force Eurofighter Typhoons come screaming by, and I've still got a wide angle lens on the camera. For those of you who know cameras, I had a 10-24mm zoom on a crop-sensor (APS-C) camera. To make things even worse, I had left the Nikon with the big lens (that is perfect for this sort of thing) at home, and the camera was a mirrorless one, which suck for tracking moving objects. For those of you who don't know cameras or don't understand those last two sentences - think of the saying "You don't bring a knife to a gunfight". Anyway, none of that was going to stop me from taking a few pictures.
A few of the aviation nerds/enthusiasts that were hanging out there had air traffic control scanners, and when I heard that there were a pair of F/A-18s in the area and headed south, I switched over to my 55-200mm zoom and waited. A while. So much for the "5-minute stop" thing. Then things got weird again, in a way that at least the photography enthusiasts reading this will understand. When I use my Nikon at the zoo and other places to track moving animals and birds, or at air shows, I'm using a fixed-length lens, not a zoom. I do that quite often, so it's kind of second nature to track a moving object with the camera. So, there I am at "Star Wars Canyon", at least with what should be a somewhat more appropriate lens, when the the F/A-18's show up. And I get so excited seeing them that I revert back to "muscle memory" and completely forget that I can zoom the damn lens. It was set at its widest setting, and that is where it stayed. At least I could crop a bit for web display without losing too much resolution.
These guys were loaded for bear. It was a blast to watch. When the weather cools off again this fall I plan to make a trip out there just to spend a whole day there . . . with the right camera too.
All in all we had a great trip. We never did get to Bristlecone Pines or the hike to Mt. Whitney Lake due to the weather. We got threatened with "calling the cops" at Club Fed. We decided not drive the steep road up to Cerro Gordo after all, because the rear axle of the X spent the entire trip squashed up against the Timbren bump stops, and I wasn't sure how they would react to long steep climbs. A call to Greg at PRG may be in my near future. We did find some really good restaurants in Lone Pine, which I wasn't expecting. The Merry Go Round, Seasons, and the Alabama Hills Cafe are all places I can recommend.