Saturday, February 29, 2020

Feb 29 Visited Lone Pine (Western Films)

Lone Pine History 
In 1920, the history of Lone Pine was dramatically altered when a movie production company came to the Alabama Hills to make the silent film The Roundup.[12] Other companies soon discovered the scenic location, and in the coming decades, over 400 films, 100 television episodes, and countless commercials have used Lone Pine and the Alabama Hills as a film location.[12] Notable films shot here in the 1920s and 1930s include Riders of the Purple Sage (1925) with Tom Mix, The Enchanted Hill (1926) with Jack Holt, Somewhere in Sonora (1927) with Ken Maynard, Blue Steel (1934) with John Wayne, Hop-Along Cassidy (1935) with William Boyd, The Charge of the Light Brigade (1936) with Errol Flynn, Oh, Susanna! (1936) with Gene Autry, Rhythm on the Range (1936) with Bing Crosby, The Cowboy and the Lady (1938) with Gary Cooper, Under Western Stars (1938) with Roy Rogers, and Gunga Din (1939) with Cary Grant.
In the coming decades, Lone Pine and the Alabama Hills continued to be used as the setting for Western films, including West of the Pecos (1945) with Robert Mitchum, Thunder Mountain (1947) with Tim Holt, The Gunfighter (1950) with Gregory Peck, The Nevadan (1950) with Randolph Scott, Bad Day at Black Rock (1955) with Spencer Tracy, Hell Bent for Leather (1960) with Audie Murphy, How the West Was Won (1962) with James Stewart, Nevada Smith (1966) with Steve McQueen, Joe Kidd (1972) with Clint Eastwood, Maverick (1994) with Mel Gibson, and The Lone Ranger (2013) with Johnny Depp. Through the years, non-Western films also used the unique landscape of the area, including Alfred Hitchcock's Saboteur (1942) with Robert Cummings, Samson and Delilah (1949) with Hedy Lamarr, Star Trek V: The Final Frontier (1989) with William Shatner, Tremors (1990) with Kevin Bacon, The Postman (1997) with Kevin Costner, and Gladiator (2000) with Russell Crowe.
The most important movie filmed in and around Lone Pine is director Raoul Walsh's High Sierra (1941), starring Humphrey Bogart as Roy Earle in the role that moved Bogart from respected supporting player to leading man. Cast and crew lodged in Lone Pine, and Walsh shot various scenes in and around Lone Pine. For the film's mountain chase scenes, Walsh took everyone to nearby Mt. Whitney, where pack mules lugged camera equipment up the mountainside: "filming began just outside Lone Pine ... on August 5, 1940. ... On a slope at the side of Mt. Whitney, ... a group of twenty men from the studio worked for four days to clear a path so that mountain-trained mules, packing cameras and other equipment, could get up to the shooting area. ... Bogart had to run three miles up a mountainside for two days ... Walsh ordered all the big boulders removed from the path of [Bogart's] final fall, but the little ones remained, and Bogart complained about that plenty ... Bogie especially did not want to trek up that mountain. This was the shoot on which Walsh gave him the nickname 'Bogey the Beefer'".[13] John Huston wrote the screenplay, and Ida Lupino co-starred.

Film Museum
John Wayne
Lone Ranger and Tonto

Roy Rogers

Gene Autry

Iron Man


Star Wars

Transformers


As we were leaving the Museum a lady approached us to see if we were interested in completing a survey for the local Chamber of Commerce regarding tourism. She told us it was a 5-7 minute survey.
The discussion lasted for more than an hour as we exchanges stories of our adventures and theirs of their trip around the world. They joined us at our campsite in the Alabama Hills later for happy hour.
The most enjoyable survey I have ever participated in.
Sandra and Wayne Burns 

Friday, February 28, 2020

Feb 28 Lone Pine


When they built the aqua duct  to Los Angeles they lowered the water level significantly in this area and what you see is a salt flat  where the water was removed. Water supply is a huge problem in California. Most people are reluctant to discuss it


closer look at the salt flat



A herd of beef cattle. First time we see cattle since we left the southern part of the state




We are not in Alabama. This area was named after a war ship

We are in the Alabama Hills at the foot of Mount Whitney

This rock was very unusual as they never allow any graffiti . 



the view from our window when we got up in the morning


Thursday, February 27, 2020

Feb 27 Barstow








Palm Springs is in a very high wind valley and there are wind mills for miles


Camp Wally  for another night .  Two campers from Quebec, 2 From BC , plus the US 

Feb 26 Palm Springs


A change of pace

How do you like this? We found a free unlimited stay parking lot in downtown Palm Springs behind the buildings on Palm Canyon Dr right in the heart of Palm Springs. It doesn't get any better . We walked the down town area from from one end to the other and back,stopped for a patio lunch and a break for an ice cream in the afternoon. Later we went out for  a really nice supper and 5 minutes later we were home to our Gypsy Wagon. Enjoyed a nice glass of wine with no worries.


We forgot to take pictures during the day of our campsite
We woke up in the morning surrounded by sunshine and mountains. I had to pinch myself to see if it was real.
The wall in the parking lot in front of our Gypsy Wagon . 





Wednesday, February 26, 2020

Feb 25 White Water Nature Preserve




We stayed at a rest stop as it was too late to find a spot in Palm Springs
This are was originally a fish hatchery and then converted to a Nature preserve with hiking trails. It is only about 20 miles outside of Palm Springs
The visitors center

It is spring and the leaves are just starting to form

lots of picnic tables and you can walk in the stream
Path to the trail head

The hike takes you along the stream


2444 .9 miles from Canada ( Vancouver)


There is snow on the peaks in the background

You cannot see them in the picture but there were about 2 dozen mountain sheep walking on the white ledge near the top.

Monday, February 24, 2020

Feb 24 Forty Nine Palms Oasis

A 3 mile hike with a 300 foot elevation in both directions as you hike up over a ridge and then decend to the oasis










There is a chuckwalla lizard on the rock in front of the little shrub.




Feb 24 Keys View

Keys view is a short hike to a look out over the San Andreas Fault, Mt San Jacinto , Mt San Gorgonia and the Salton Sea

Even on a clear windy day there is a haze in the air from the smog from Los Angeles