OAUSA Net - May 26, 2016 - Panamint City Adventure
Posted: Wed May 25, 2016 9:49 pm
The net this week will deal with an adventure to Panamint City. The pictures below will be used for reference during the net. The area is now in Death Valley and managed by the National Park Service, who says this about it:
Some of the most fascinating points of interest along the way to Panamint City will also be included in the discussion.
1. Ballarat plaque contribution by the groups who like to share history with everyone. Theft of these plaques have become a problem, help report vandalism and theft so that they continue to provide a looking glass into the past.
2. The ghosts of the desert...until they bray at the moon and you are zipped up tight in your sleeping bag late at night and it is echoes through the canyon like some eerie sound effect from a horror movie.
3. Remnants of another time...they say the Manson family left graffiti on some of these artifacts.
4. Ballarat Jail as seen from the driver's seat of the old Power Wagon.
5. I would think staying in this jail during any of the extreme weather conditions of the desert would be reason enough to stay out of trouble.
6. The General Store during a get together that just happened to be going on during our visit. You may only find one or two cans of beans and weenies, some Ramien and a propane canister...so, hopefully they have what you "need" but I doubt it.
7. Chris Wicht's Camp and trailhead parking as seen from above.
8. This place is supernatural at night when you wake up and look across it with all the snags seeming to reach up at the star studded sky.
9. A living museum and testament to others who dared to brave the desert in search of fortune.
10. The water wheel long gone but another example of desert dweller ingenuity.
Panamint City was called the toughest, rawest, most hard-boiled little hellhole that ever passed for a civilized town. Its founders were outlaws who, while hiding from the law in the Panamint Mountains, found silver in Surprise Canyon and gave up their life of crime. In 1874 the town was at the height of its boom with a population of 2,000 citizens. By the fall of 1875 the boom was over, and in 1876 a flash flood destroyed most of the town. The chimney of the smelter is the most prominent remnant of the town's heyday. The site of Panamint City is accessible via a 5 mile hike from Chris Wicht’s Camp, which is located 6 miles northeast of the ghost town of Ballarat. Mining in the area continued on a sporadic basis up until recent times. The ruins of old Panamint City were added to Death Valley National Park in October of 1994. ( https://www.nps.gov/deva/learn/historyc ... -towns.htm )
Some of the most fascinating points of interest along the way to Panamint City will also be included in the discussion.
1. Ballarat plaque contribution by the groups who like to share history with everyone. Theft of these plaques have become a problem, help report vandalism and theft so that they continue to provide a looking glass into the past.
2. The ghosts of the desert...until they bray at the moon and you are zipped up tight in your sleeping bag late at night and it is echoes through the canyon like some eerie sound effect from a horror movie.
3. Remnants of another time...they say the Manson family left graffiti on some of these artifacts.
4. Ballarat Jail as seen from the driver's seat of the old Power Wagon.
5. I would think staying in this jail during any of the extreme weather conditions of the desert would be reason enough to stay out of trouble.
6. The General Store during a get together that just happened to be going on during our visit. You may only find one or two cans of beans and weenies, some Ramien and a propane canister...so, hopefully they have what you "need" but I doubt it.
7. Chris Wicht's Camp and trailhead parking as seen from above.
8. This place is supernatural at night when you wake up and look across it with all the snags seeming to reach up at the star studded sky.
9. A living museum and testament to others who dared to brave the desert in search of fortune.
10. The water wheel long gone but another example of desert dweller ingenuity.