Started the day with the breakfast buffet at the Excalibur, because who doesn't want sushi, macaroni and cheese, crab legs, meatloaf, and hot chicken wings for breakfast. We did find some actual, ordinary breakfast-type food in this menagerie...and more importantly we found coffee which allowed us to properly start our day. After eating, we wandered around the Excalibur and the adjacent Luxor dropping a dollar here or there on penny slots we thought looked cool. Kitty Glitter being my favorite and the Four Deadly Chinese Beasts being Mom's favorite. She also loved the CSI slot machine because you could pick whether you wanted to play Miami, NY, or Las Vegas. Of course she bet on Gary Sinise.
After zipping up our suitcases and taking about 10 wrong turns dragging our luggage behind us, trying to get from our room to the correct parking lot, we were on our way to the desert. Just on the edge of town driving through largely unfinished neighborhoods of luxury homes the same color as the dirt around them,we pit-stopped for giant icy drinks and extra water. "We might need some extra water," we said. We had no idea......
A few hours later we were at the entrance to Death Valley National Park, one of the most barren and beautiful places I have ever been. People kept saying to me before I left on this trip, "Why would you want to go there?" Mom answered as we drove through the rainbow pallet of rocks above, below and all around us, "Look at this! Why WOULDN'T you want to come here!?"
I became obsessed with watching the temperature readings from outside our car rise, degree by degree. 105, 108, 112...We agreed we wouldn't really get stressed unless it got up to 115...115, 119, 120, 121, 122, and topping out at 123. We did get out and hike up a hill when it was around 120. We had to see the view. Zabriskie Point. I have never felt anything like it. As soon as I stepped out of the car it felt like my skin was burning. We walked up to the point with water, and hats, and white shirts...and determination. We walked back down thirsty, flaking, and humbled, all in about 15 minutes.
We continued to drive most of the day through Death Valley. There is really no way to describe what we were seeing and feeling, physically, mentally...in every way. Rocks of red, white, black, grey, green, yellow, orange; the bluest sky and whitest clouds; dust, salt and sand blowing and spinning and rising and falling; high mountains striped and spotted with layers of color; rain falling from clouds and not hitting the ground below. Of note also are the things we did not see. No animals of any kind; not a bird, or a lizard, or a beetle...nothing. No plant over about a foot tall, and those were rare. Nothing living.
Our last Death Valley NP stop was Badwater Basin, the lowest place on the continent at almost 300 feet below sea level. From there we headed to the "resort" where we would stay the night, Panamint Springs. (Sidenote: This vacation has made me reexamine the word "resort.") The only way I can describe it is as the most nowhere that was somewhere I have now been. No phones or Internet. All electricity from generators. Gas for $6 a gallon. But...150 different kinds of beer, incredible fried potatoes cooked by a man I am pretty much convinced was hiding from the law, and the greatest night sky I have ever seen.
Later I will add a long list of the constellations, planets, etc that we saw. But for now just know, it was truly a blanket of stars that I slept under this night.
(My best photos are on my camera and I will add them in here when I get home. I have been taking some with my phone and uploading them to Facebook. )