Exploring Death Valley: Largest, Hottest, Driest and Lowest National Park in USA


We went on a road trip to Death Valley in a Genesis G80. I was surprised how few services were available in the area. I read four guidebooks but not one seemed to HIGHLIGHT enough how you need to bring plenty of water or buy some at your hotel or at a gas station. HIKE EARLY! The sun is very strong! There is a ranger station but there is no cell service. We used our car GPS to get from location to location although the paper map from the ranger station was very helpful as well.
What was our plan?Start your journey at Furnace Creek Visitor Center and talk with the rangers from the National Park Service about what to see. You can buy your parking pass here as well. Ubehebe Crater: Ubehebe Crater is a large volcanic crater 600 feet deep and half a mile across. We hiked around part of it. It was steep up at first but then fairly flat. We saw a family hike down into the crater. It looked very challenging to hike back up in the moving terrain. AND YES! You can see me hula-hooping at the crater in the video!

We took photos at Golden Canyon Trailhead. Maybe another time we will hike here.

BADWATER BASIN is 282 feet below sea level. This was a definite highlight for our group! The lowest point in North America is a surreal landscape of vast salt flats. The salt flats here cover nearly 200 square miles (518 square km), and are composed mostly of sodium chloride (table salt), along with calcite, gypsum, and borax.

On Day Two, we started at Rhyolite a historic gold mining town and Goldwell Open Air Museum. This video is just about our time there:

The Mesquite Flat Sand Dunes were amazing! For dunes to exist there must be a source of sand, prevailing winds to move the sand, and a place for the sand to collect. The eroded canyons and washes provide plenty of sand, the wind seems to always blow (especially in the springtime), but there are only a few areas in the park where the sand is “trapped” by geographic features such as mountains.

The view from Zabriskie Point was spectacular!

We went up to Dantes View for sunset. It was about 30 degrees colder as we sent up the steep hill and the sun began to fade. It is 5,575 ft (1,699 m) above Badwater Basin. You can bring your telescope because Death Valley National Park is an International Dark Sky Park.

Thank you to Julie, Eva and Alessio for going on a road trip with me in a Genesis G80. We had a blast!
BEST ROAD TRIP EVER: 2021 Genesis G80 3.5T Prestige

The post Exploring Death Valley: Largest, Hottest, Driest and Lowest National Park in USA appeared first on We Said Go Travel.
We Said Go Travel
We Said Go Travel is a global community of over sixteen hundred writers with articles from every continent.
Stories are shared with photos and video from a perspective of the transformative power of travel. We Said Go Travel has hosted live and online events as well as travel writing contests around the world. ...more
- Lisa Niver's profile
- 57 followers
