Showing posts with label Reno. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Reno. Show all posts

Monday, May 21, 2018

Road Trip - Reno to Bend, OR 05-20-18

First I'll say HAPPY BIRTHDAY to the KoKo dog who turned four years old today May 20th.  He and his Froggie are spending two weeks with Nancy Ota and Bud.  Many Thanks!

Don't know what was wrong last night, but I could not post on my blog and lost what I had typed.  So, here is a morning try...... 
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A very late start to the day as I was just so tired I felt I needed to sleep some more and it worked!  I felt much better and enjoyed the day which showed how much open country there is in NE California and SE Oregon.   Today's drive was 430 miles and a lot of the time I felt like I was the last woman on Earth!  Not a lot of cars/trucks on the road and almost no activity in the small communities along the way.  So, today's pictures are sort of a flip book (do they still make those?) with few captions.  As you flip through them you'll be riding along with me.


Just north of Reno (a city changed beyond all recognition from a decade ago) I saw what I thought was a dry lake bed, but when I was down on a level with it I realized that this was the color of the water.  I saw several huge lakes that looked the same.  Minerals in the water??  Anyone know? 

This is still 395 with minimum traffic.  Could it be because it was Sunday?




Sometimes as the miles roll by I spot something mysterious - no time to stop and check it out. 

Here it is in context. 

And then the entrance to something rolls by.   Mysterious. 

Wild trees in bloom, don't think they are fruit bearing. 

Wonderful clouds.  No traffic. 



Another lake. 

Looks stormy ahead. 

Flowers?  Minerals? 

Of course, I am looking through the windshield. 

Almost like a mirage this rest stop appears.   The "chimneys" are venting for the no-flush toilets.  The solar panel must be for the outside light as there was none inside. 

There is a wonderful fragrance in the air on this trip.  It is the sagebrush blooming - there are many different varieties of sage, here is one in bloom. 

And many.


Nobody on the road but me.


Another mysterious appearance.

It appears to be made of wood. 

Blink and I miss it.   What do they do out here? 

Roadside blooms. 

And suddenly water in the roadside ditch.  I saw two ducks swimming. 


And it goes on and on and on.

I turned NW on highway 31 which goes along the east side of Summer Lake with 150 miles of gas left.  By the time I found a gas station at Silver Lake I was down to 43 miles and it was about 45 to the next town, La Pine.  My SCalifornia brain told me surely there will be gas stations in 150 miles.  Not.  

Bend is not the cow town I remember from my childhood.  I am staying at a Hampton Inn which is lovely and had a great dinner at Pastini Pastaria restaurant close by.  It is in the Old Mill District right on the Deschutes River, a lovely place with walking paths, ducks and geese on the water, and very impressive landscaping.   What happened to the cow town?  

More on this day in some future post.  Heading for I-5, or I will never get to Washington. 
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Saturday, May 19, 2018

More Road Trip - Nevada Art Museum, Reno 05-19-18

Here are a few pictures from the museum.
Nevada Art Museum from the parking lot.

And along the side.  See the sculpture to the right?

It is this stone and wire assembly, a little larger than life size, I think. 

Wide corridors open onto the floor to roof atrium on the right.  Classroom on the left. 

This is in the classroom and I think it is a bench, but too low for me to try.  And what if it isn't a bench?  

Hanging in the atrium is this reflecting sphere.  Down below the crew is setting up tables for the special event this evening. 

These two aboriginal paints intrigued me. 



Different values of red are very subtle.  All of the white lines are composed of mostly uniform dots. 


I really like this one, but don't understand why.

Some of the dots are very regular and somewhat evenly spaced. 

And others are downright sloppy,  Intent?  Or did he get tired?

An enormous gallery with this huge pieced of multiple squares.  Not much else in the gallery. 
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Road Trip - Bishop to Reno, NV 05-19-18

I didn't get very far today only a little over 200 miles, but it was a good day   I took a swing through the June Lake Loop just north of Mammoth Lakes because my friend Liz camps there every year.  To find the exact spot I called her on my cell and she talked me through.  It was fun to take this "trip" with her as she pointed out things I might not have noticed.  Then back onto Hwy 395 north, admiring the snow capped mountains and even the non-snow capped ones.   I haven't driven north of Bishop for quite a few years and things have certainly changed.  There is much more civilization along the way with small towns now grown to medium towns and a new perimeter freeway around Carson City and on the east side of Reno.  No longer a need to drive right through the middle of town.  I did drive the business route through Carson City and found it rather sad as many businesses have gone away due to the lack of traffic, I expect.  Gardinerville has grown so much I didn't recognize a thing and the highway becomes a freeway just to the north.  

I was feeling a little at sea and OLD because things are so different and I remembered that Beth told me that the Reno Art Museum was worth a visit.  I enjoyed it very much, but told the desk person when I left that they need to provide more benches for old ladies who can't stand for hours at a time.  Nice gift shop,  They were setting up for a special event tonight so several galleries were closed, but they have some great paintings, sculpture, and photography.  It is a large building with great high ceilings and wide corridors.  By the time I was finished looking it was about 4:30pm and I decided not to drive on, booking a room at Holiday Inn Express in Reno.  It is a much larger facility than a lot of HIEs I have stayed previously.  The check-in was cold and a little snippy and once again I couldn't have a room on the first floor, but it isn't quite in the middle of the second floor - thank heavens.  

I took a rest and watched a BBC rerun of the wedding.  Very elaborate and lots of fanfare, I enjoyed it more than if I had sat through the entire thing.  I wish them well, I think they will have a hard life together.   Waaaay too much spotlight for me.  

Here are pictures from today. 
Motel room - just like a million others!

Leaving Bishop still following along the east slope of the Sierra. 

Mountain tops were covered with clouds, wonder if they had more snow. 

Lots of cloudy skies, but no rain along my route.

This is not an Interstate highway, so there are bikers and guys parked where the fishing is good. 

This mountain stands alone.  Maybe it is Mammoth. 

TREES!  You may have noticed there are many in the previous pictures.  These are mostly Ponderosa pines which appear at certain elevations.  I think it is more than 4000 feet. 


From the Silverlake Campground that Liz loves one can see this waterfall, high on the mountain.  the house is an old one that the owner is renovating in hopes of having a B&B some day. 

This is the Silverlake campground with the mountains towering overhead. 

When I drove on north on the June Lake Loop I realized I should have used the facilities, so I stopped at this campground along the stream.  Notice it is almost unoccupied?  There are no hook ups!  I think the majority of campers enjoy the amenities of their RVs and trailers.





And there is no brilliant waterfall coming down the mountain - this is the sunny side and the snow is long gone. 

Nice clean, flush bathroom.  Ahhhh. 

Where the Tioga Road turns off to Yosemite (the pass is still closed by snow) there is a Mobil station that has a restaurant of some fame.  I don't know if it is the same chef as a decade or so ago, but the food it excellent if pricey.  They don't serve continuously - lunch today didn't open until 11am.  But I'm pretty sure they serve breakfast early in the morning.  Check it out. 

This is the view from the patio out over the Owens Valley.  

Just beyond the turnoff is the tiny village of Lee Vining.  I have stayed there on occasion, it is really just a wide spot in the road with motels and restaurants and fishing supplies and tourist stuff.  

At the end of the town there is a highway advisory sign that usually would give road conditions.  But here they are warning of deer.  I didn't see any, but they are more common in the evening. 

This is looking south at Owens Valley, part of the great basin.  Notice the road on the right. 

Along the north side of Owens Lake the road is treacherous due to rock slides.  Notice the cement barrier which stops most of the rocks. 

But they have added heavy duty cyclone fencing and heavy duty cables.  It is a scary place, some of the rocks on the hillside are as big as cars. 

Just a bit further north there is a vista point on the southbound side of the highway.  If you go up about a mile there is an intersection where you can turn around and go back to take a look.  There are explanatory placards explaining the Great Basin and how it was formed. 
Notice that skinny road again, right in the middle.  

There is the "gold standard" - just to prove I was there. 

Some people think stickers are suitable anywhere.  I think it is a disgrace - ugly.

Quite a view.  And that little road?  It is highway 395 - far, far below. 

The Walker River is roaring and splashing right now from snow melt.  But I could not find a clear spot to photograph it.   Guess I should have pulled over, eh? 
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