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Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

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Page 1: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Gigi TravelsBodie, Ancient Bristlecone

forest,and Mt. Whitney

August 2008

Page 2: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Bodie is a ghost town that is being held in a state of arrested decay. That means they are constantly doing repairs to keep the buildings from falling over but keeping all of the buildings looking like the town had been abandoned 30 years ago.

Page 3: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Bodie, CA was a gold mining town that popped up after gold was discovered here in 1859. Many of the buildings are still standing.

Page 4: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Here’s the old schoolhouse complete with desks. It was 1st grade through grade 8 in one room and the teacher lived upstairs.

Page 5: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

The mortician left several caskets behind. Of course, many of them were for children because nutrition and health care weren’t as good as we have today so many children never made it to adulthood.

Page 6: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Some of the buildings are propped up to keep them from falling over and others,like the bank only have the brickwork still standing.

Page 7: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

There was even an old gas station. Bodie was fun with a lot to see including the cemetery with the old tombstones.

Page 8: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008
Page 9: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

What is now over 10,000 feet above sea level was once the ocean floor!

Page 10: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Most 1st year cones on the Bristlecone pines are purple but some trees have green cones.

Page 11: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

The genetic differences also make some trees grow twisted and others straight.

Page 12: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Some of these logs are from trees that died over 7000 years ago. Because the trees grow so slowly their wood is too hard for insects or rot to decompose them quickly.

Page 13: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Somewhere in this grove of trees is the oldest living thing on the planet. It is a Bristlecone pine that is over 4600 years old and still growing very slowly because of the short growing season at this elevation and the poor soil.

Page 14: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008
Page 15: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

The lower part of the trail had lots of trees as we started our climb.

That’s me riding in

Mrs. McKay’s

backpack. I wanted to walk

but I couldn’t keep up.

Page 16: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

To lessen our chances of getting altitude sickness we camped the first night at the base of this waterfall at 10,000 feet in elevation. I took the picture of Mr. McKay when he went to check out the falls. Pretty good huh.

Page 17: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

We’re above the tree line now and this is looking back at Mirror Lake.

Page 18: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

This is trail camp at 12,000 feet above sea level.

Page 19: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Here I am with my friend, resting in front of our tent before we

attempt the final assent tomorrow. So far we’ve been lucky, no altitude sickness and good weather. Two days ago an afternoon thunder storm dropped 4

inches of hail on this camp.

Page 20: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

We didn’t have to worry about bears getting our food at this elevation but the marmots got anything not in a bear canister.

Page 21: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

We made it up the 97 switchbacks to the saddle and are going on the back side of the mountain for the final 2 miles to the top.

No fires allowed? The nearest stick of wood is at least 5 miles from here unless you burn the sign.

Page 22: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

The only deaths on this trail have

been from lighting strikes during fast

developing afternoon storms.

Page 23: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Here’s what part of the

trail looks like on the back side of the

mountain. I took this picture of

Mrs. McKay along the trail.

Page 24: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

The view is nice but slip and it’s a fast 1500 foot drop to the valley floor.

Page 25: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

My friend and I made it to the top of Mt. Whitney, the highest point in the continuous 48 states, and signed the log book before resting and eating lunch.

Page 26: Gigi Travels Bodie, Ancient Bristlecone forest,and Mt. Whitney August 2008

Next year I think we’ll climb Half Dome!