Death Valley is HOT

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Right now, visitors are flocking to Death Valley National Park to experience the forecasted EXTREME heat.

Death Valley is projected to set a verified world record for the hottest temperature ever reliably recorded, with Furnace Creek expected to reach 131 degrees with a low temperature at night of 101 degrees.

I’ve been to Death Valley a few times. It’s an otherworldly and mysterious experience. It’s a whole mind/body connection, the kind of heat that permeates down to a soulful, cellular level. Along with the magnificent silence, there’s really nothing to compare to desert heat.

Ten thousand years ago, Badwater Basin, the lowest point in North America, was once a hundred-mile long lake. It’s now a vast expanse of salty ground.

When you visit Death Vally, make sure you stop at Artists Palette, a technicolor, kaleidoscopic display of multicolored rock in that makes you feel you’re at an art exhibit.

Of course, as with the rest of our country, there were Indigenous People here before us.

The Timbisha Shoshone Indians lived there for centuries before the first white man entered the valley. They hunted and followed seasonal migrations to harvest pinyon pine nuts and mesquite beans. To them, the land provided everything they needed and many areas were, and are, considered to be sacred places.

I always thank the first people when I camp or hike, no matter where I am.

The shamanic ground markings of Death Valley tend to be found in the more remote parts of this already remote region – probably the reason why any trace of them survives at all. They are ritual and magical features left by long-ago shamans, probably of the ancestral Pima and Shoshone peoples, and they are fragile, so much so that their precise locations are not advertised.

They take various forms – ritual pathways, shrines, vision quest beds, scraped ground markings, strange sinuous lines, and weird patterns of rocks.

Vision quest beds are remote, subtly-marked locations where an Indian brave or shaman would go to spend a solitary vigil seeking a vision – a personal spiritual gift. He would go without food or sleep for perhaps three or four days and nights until the vision came. If it came at all, it would most commonly be in the form of what we would call an auditory hallucination: he would hear a chant or song.

Ritual pathways are probably the rarest of the shamanic features. a loose group of boulders.

The most enigmatic of all the shamanic relics in the valley are markings etched into the hard, sunbaked ground (‘intaglios’) or laid out with small rocks on the surface of the ground (‘petroforms’). Such features are collectively known as ‘geoglyphs’. Both types in Death Valley mainly show meandering, abstract patterns, but a few seem to depict mythical creatures. (Curated from https://www.ancient-origins.net)

If you make it to Death Valley, no matter what season, take more water than you think you’ll need to stay well hydrated!

8 thoughts on “Death Valley is HOT

  1. It’s crazy that anyone wants to experience that hot of heat on purpose. Used to work in a factory once that the inside temp would reach 115-120° and stepping out into the 90° outside temp to smoke a cigarette made you feel like you was in air conditioning.

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      • I hear ya there, I’m a lowlander in the southern part of illinois, so when I think heat I also think of the humidity like we get here to fo with it. Kinda like here yesterday, google said it was 96 but with the humidity it was a heat index of 117. Its gonna be the same way on our trip wedensday, 2 hour one way in a van with no a/c.

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  2. I travelled across Death Valley in an air conditioned rental car. At one point, for a break, I got out of the car for some fresh air. I got straight back in the car and put the air con back on. I likened the atmosphere out there to that enjoyed by a baking potato! Nice post.

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    • Thank you! Personally I think AC makes the heat worse on your body, the extreme temp differences take a toll. I like the baked potato heat for a while, not to live in it! I first drove through Death Valley with my mom decades ago. We couldn’t use the AC cos the car was already overheating and we could only go about 20 miles at a time. Finally, we had to find a pay phone (not cell in those days) and call a tow truck to take it to some crazy town and get the radiator fixed. We thought it was a great adventure though.

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