Mountain trip

Post a picture or Youtube of something interesting, no peaches or muffins please.

Moderator: dromia

Forum rules
If your post is vaguely 'Not Work Safe' please include NWS in the Subject field.
Message
Author
User avatar
rufrdr
Posts: 557
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 8:38 am
Location: Willow Spring North Carolina
Contact:

Mountain trip

#1 Post by rufrdr »

My wife and I took a trip to Lone Pine California last weekend along with two other couples. Our goals were to visit the Alabama hills which is the site of many, many movies and TV shows since the 30s; Manzanar, the internment camp for Japanese Americans who lived on the west coast during WW2; and Cerro Gordo, a mining ghost town high in the mountains.

Here are some pictures of the trip:

Lone Pine has an excellent movie museum dedicated to the filming that was conducted in the area around the town.

Image
A prop musket made from an 1873 Trapdoor rifle
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image
Image

"Everybody dies...the thing is, to die well"

Jack Harper
User avatar
rufrdr
Posts: 557
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 8:38 am
Location: Willow Spring North Carolina
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#2 Post by rufrdr »

Image
Image
Image
Image
The Gunga Din rope bridge was stretched between these two rocks. It looks much higher in the movie!
Image
Image

"Everybody dies...the thing is, to die well"

Jack Harper
User avatar
rufrdr
Posts: 557
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 8:38 am
Location: Willow Spring North Carolina
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#3 Post by rufrdr »

Image
On the way up to Cerro Gordo looking back down to the Owens valley and the vast salt mining operation on the valley floor. Mt Whitney is somewhere over on the far mountain range

Image
Our group near the hotel which was the location for several murders in the card room over the years. There are still some bullet scars in the walls and floor.

Image
Looking into the hotel. We got a tour of several of the buildings by the town caretaker

Image

Image

Image
One of the cable winding stations (long abandoned) on a hill as we drove up to the town. The ore was run by cable car from the mine to the valley floor. There is cable laying all across the mountains from the system which eventually collapsed once it was abandoned pre WW2.

Image

The wife and I walked the last mile up to the town, the others drove. We gained over a thousand feet in one mile. I was puffing near the end. Snow on the ground at 8,000ft.
Image

"Everybody dies...the thing is, to die well"

Jack Harper
User avatar
rufrdr
Posts: 557
Joined: Sun Jan 08, 2012 8:38 am
Location: Willow Spring North Carolina
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#4 Post by rufrdr »

Image
The front gate for Manzanar internment camp

Image
Guard huts for the front gate

Image
The cemetery for the camp. Only about 6 graves remain, the rest were relocated.

I have a friend who was interned with his family at Manzanar during the war. He entered the camp as a two year old in 1942 so he remembers nothing of the place. Manzanar is quite the blot on the reputation of the U.S. government. It now has a very interesting museum and several recreated barracks. There are also permanent structures made by the camp members such as the reservoir and gardens that have the names of the men who constructed them impressed into the concrete. A very interesting place and worth your time if you are in the area.
Image

"Everybody dies...the thing is, to die well"

Jack Harper
Christel
Site Admin
Posts: 17524
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2010 7:52 pm
Location: Wind Swept Denmark
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#5 Post by Christel »

Excellent rufrdr, as usual you have posted pictures of an excellent landscape and interesting history. Thank you.

I knew about the Manzanar and the Japanese American Internment Camps, a knee jerk reaction from the American Government at the time to say the least.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Manzanar

Your binoculars, are they Steiner?
User avatar
ovenpaa
Posts: 24689
Joined: Fri Nov 05, 2010 8:27 pm
Location: Årbjerg, Morsø DK
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#6 Post by ovenpaa »

Stunning pictures as ever, what was the temperature on the day of your visit?
/d

Du lytter aldrig til de ord jeg siger. Du ser mig kun for det tøj jeg har paa ...

Shed Journal
User avatar
Alpha1
Posts: 8622
Joined: Fri Nov 12, 2010 8:27 pm
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#7 Post by Alpha1 »

Thanks a very interesting post.
25Pdr

Re: Mountain trip

#8 Post by 25Pdr »

Thanks again rfrdr, great photos.

This years Vacation is USA for the sixth time, Las Vegas a few days then 10 Days Anaheim CA and back to Las Vegas to fly home in order to get direct flight to Glasgow. Going in October to avoid heat though.

The drive along the I15 is quite enjoyable, wont be doing any adventure stuff like you do though.

Family will want to do Disney/Universal etc. :cry: Again. I've seen them, still, musn't complain, will have to plan some other exciting stuff, lots to see. Any recommendations?
johngarnett
Full-Bore UK Supporter
Posts: 776
Joined: Mon Dec 06, 2010 1:28 pm
Home club or Range: Cornwall RC @ Millpool; Duchy Shooting Assn @ Zelah
Location: Cornwall
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#9 Post by johngarnett »

Stunning pictures of an incredible landscape. Thank you very much

JohnG (who thought Cornwall was stunning!!)
User avatar
redcat
Full-Bore UK Supporter
Posts: 1382
Joined: Fri Jan 16, 2015 11:42 am
Home club or Range: Teesdale P&R Club.
Contact:

Re: Mountain trip

#10 Post by redcat »

Great photo tour - thanks for sharing. I never get tired of visiting the US, there's always something interesting around the next corner. I understand that a vast number of Americans don't have a passport as they feel they have plenty to see at home. I know why.

Redcat
If you think you are a person of some importance, try ordering someone else's dog around.
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 3 guests