e-levity
Well-Known Member
In August remnants of hurricane Hillary made it to Death Valley and dumped 2.2” of rain in 36 hours (the average annual total is only 2.1”). Flood runoff caused lots of erosion in normally dry canyons and washes and covered many roads with debris. This led to road closures, and as a result of the crazy US government shutdown cleanup has been paused. But as the saying goes “every cloud (hurricane) has a silver lining”. Some roads closed to vehicles eventually opened to hikers and cyclists
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We waited until daytime high temperatures cooled to less than 90F and headed there for a few days with our Tero X 6 ebikes. Here are some pics from Day 1. We rode from our Furnace Creek campground to Badwater Basin and then up and over Artist Drive, 42 miles, 3100 ft, of blissfu riding with no cars or RVs! We only saw two other bikers over 3+ hours.
Great news!
Alone in a shady Badwater Basin.
Salt flats are in the distance, Telescope Peak (11,000 ft) in the background.
A view back from the salt flat -
bikes are on the lower left
white sign on the upper right is sea level (282 ft above)
view from Artist Drive
we had the road to ourselves
We waited until daytime high temperatures cooled to less than 90F and headed there for a few days with our Tero X 6 ebikes. Here are some pics from Day 1. We rode from our Furnace Creek campground to Badwater Basin and then up and over Artist Drive, 42 miles, 3100 ft, of blissfu riding with no cars or RVs! We only saw two other bikers over 3+ hours.
Great news!
Alone in a shady Badwater Basin.
Salt flats are in the distance, Telescope Peak (11,000 ft) in the background.
A view back from the salt flat -
bikes are on the lower left
white sign on the upper right is sea level (282 ft above)
view from Artist Drive
we had the road to ourselves
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