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More Stuff About this Stuff
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Introduction
Most of the photos of people, places and events in these
galleries should be able to stand on their own (a thousand words per
picture, remember?)
However, a few additional comments are sometimes
useful. A friend complimented me on my pictures and said he hoped to reach
that level with his new digital camera. I explained that one of my secrets
is to show only one of every ten or twenty photos taken.
Sometimes it may be one of nine or even eight,
because the purpose of the photo goes beyond what appears in the frame.
For example, a bunch of trees in Ohio looks much like a bunch of trees in
Illinois or Michigan, but I took some of those pictures to show people
back home in California what it was like in the area where I spent much of
the summer of 2002.
In other cases, an area or situation is interesting
enough to deserve a longer explanation than my brief captions (for
example, numerous
books have been written about the national parks shown here). In these
cases, the caption will be a link which will bring you to the expanded
comments which appear below.
--Dick Estel
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| Devil's Postpile
The
Devil's Postpile is in fact an act of nature. Hot lava cooled around
variable centers and cracked 900,000 years ago to form basalt columns 40
to 60 feet high and a foot in diameter. Other basalt formations are seen
in the photo of the river and Rainbow Falls.
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| Dinner on the Trail
Dinner
time on the trail from Granite Creek Campground to Devil's Postpile
National Monument. Your web host made this 30 mile round trip hike in
1980, descending into the canyon of the North Fork of the San Joaquin,
over the divide, and into the middle fork, where the Postpile and Rainbow
Falls are located.
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| Oregon Coves
A
vacation on the southern Oregon coast in July 1999 revealed numerous rocky
coves, most accessible only by trail through heavily wooded spruce forest.
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| Joel out west
The notation on the back of this photo reads, "When Joel went out west in 1891;" photo is from a studio in Puyallup and Sumner Washington. Joel Richardson is the brother of your webmaster's great grandmother, Tillie Richardson Watkins. Photographer unknown.
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| Old Barn
I
photographed this barn
in 1966, near the corner of Shaw and Cedar, across from Cal State
University. It's been replaced by restaurants and office buildings.
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| Dinkey
Mill/Pine Logging Co.
Abandoned
lumber mill site at Dinkey Creek, Sierra National Forest. There are 100 or
more buildings and worker cabins in various states of disrepair. Photos
taken in 1998 and 2001. Receipts found in the old store building indicate
the mill last operated in the 1970s.
2008
Update: The mill was known as the Pine Logging Company, and originated
in Mariposa County. In the 1930s it moved to the location near Dinkey
Creek in Fresno County. In the last few years, a historical organization has started
restoration of the site, removing old junky appliances and buildings in
the worst condition; and restoring some cabins, a dorm room, the
store and office.
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| Glacial Erratics
Polished
granite strewn with boulders gives testimony to the power of glacial
action in the Sierra (near Courtright Lake, Sierra National Forest, 1966).
Rocks and boulders are carried by the glacier as it moves, and dropped at
random when it melts.
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| Mariposa Mine
The Mariposa Mine operated as recently as the late 1950s, but has been
shut down since then. The actual mine (a hole in the ground) is not
accessible, but what is there and of interest is the equipment used to
crush the ore and remove the gold. Rock was brought out in small ore cars
that run on a rail, and dumped into a hopper, eventually landing at the
bottom of a stamp mill. This consists of very heavy iron shafts, with
larger cylinders at the bottom (as shown here).
They are raised by a camshaft, and allowed to drop onto the rock. The crushed rock is then washed down a trough with
a screen in the bottom,
which traps the heavier gold particles. The mine is built on the side of a
hill, and is probably 150 feet or so from top to bottom. It was operated
by electricity, and there are giant motors, huge pulleys, and other
equipment still there. There are stairs you can climb, catwalks across
from one side to another, and a ladder that leads up to the very highest
point of the structure.
Several years ago my Grandson Johnny and I went to explore the area.
Inside the building we found a number of 3" diameter iron balls,
which were used in the stamp mill to help crush the rock. The roof of the
mine is aluminum and slopes down, paralleling the hill and the different
levels of the mine. Johnny got the idea of going up in the top part and
dropping a ball out the window onto the roof. I was standing to the side,
watching. What I expected would be a rather unspectacular event instead
was an amazing sight. The ball rolled down very fast, flew over a section
where the roof is gone, hit another section of roof about five feet lower,
and bounced 10 feet into the air and down into a ravine. Regrettably we
can't usually duplicate the leap, but at least we get to see the ball roll
down the roof very fast.
Sadly, in 2002 some teenagers set a fire in the mine, apparently to keep
warm while they partied. Of course, a fire built on a wooden platform has
a predicable result, and half the building was destroyed. Most of the big
timbers are there, charred and tumbled together, and of course the metal
equipment is intact. Most of the lower half of the mine, which was the
most damaged by age and elements, was spared from the fire, but the days
of the annual ball roll are over.
Update: A visit in the spring of 2007
revealed that more of the remaining wood structure had collapsed, and the
site is now very dangerous and now lacks the elements that made it a
special place to visit.
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| Motorcycles
in Mariposa
1916 Merced Field Day Motorcycle Group - Main Street, Mariposa |
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Mouse
Rock
This "artifact" is actually a collaboration
between nature and man. The rocky rodent stood guard along California
Highway 41 north of Fresno for a while back in the 1970s. CalTrans later
blasted it apart to widen the road.
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| Arches and
Canyonlands
Arches haunts me. I dont mean that in any mystical
or religious way, but I found it to be a very special place one where
we are reminded dramatically of the powerful forces of nature, and that
the earth is not a finished product.
If there were no arches at all, it would still be
worth seeing fascinating shapes, twisted juniper trees, and sheer
walls of sandstone. Then there are the arches over 2000 of them,
although the typical visitor sees fewer than 100. Some are close to the
main road; some of the most dramatic require an investment of time and
effort to walk a mile or more in an area that is hot in summer, snowy in
winter, and close to perfect in October.
Not far away is Canyonlands National Park but
much of Utah is canyon lands the Colorado Plateau, a high desert cut
by canyons and gorges, some accessible only at great effort on foot, bike
or four-wheel drive vehicle. The Green River joins the Colorado in the
middle of the park, dividing it into three sections that are isolated from
each other a trip by road from one to another requires a drive of
nearly 100 miles. The Island in the Sky district stands at 6000 feet, and
from its edge you look down a thousand feet on the White Rim plateau. The
plateau is cut by gorges and canyons large and small, including the
dramatic Monument Basin. Another thousand feet below White Rim are the
rivers. In the distance you can see the Needles district. The Maze, a
nearly impenetrable tangle of canyons and rock formations, makes up the
third part of the park. Top
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Arches
National Park Official Site Canyonlands
National Park
Official Site |
| Kaibab Plateau and
Grand
Canyon North Rim
The Kaibab Plateau rises from the high desert in northern Arizona.
Traveling generally south from St. George UT, the visitor goes through
desert scrub, pinyon and juniper forest, a zone of nearly pure ponderosa
pine, and finally into spruce and fir near the border of Grand Canyon
National Park.
The Grand Canyon's north rim is about a thousand feet higher than the
south rim, and draws far smaller crowds, while offering dramatic views and
a fantastic vacation experience. Facilities in the park and on the upper
plateau close around October 15, in anticipation of an average ten feet of
snow.
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| Sonoran Desert
The Sonoran Desert is an arid region covering 120,000 square miles in
southwestern Arizona and southeastern California, as well as most of Baja
California and the western half of the state of Sonora, Mexico.
Subdivisions of this hot, dry region include the Colorado and Yuma
deserts. Irrigation has produced many fertile agricultural areas,
including the Coachella and Imperial valleys of California. Warm winters
attract tourists to Sonoran Desert resorts in Palm Springs, California, and
Tucson and Phoenix, Arizona. The photos here were taken in the
Superstition Mountain area, northeast of the Phoenix metro area.
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| Studebakers
This load of old Studebakers was on its way to Texas. A man there was
buying about 100 of them, in order to create three or four restored
models.
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| Deer in the
Garden
This deer and four of his buddies (all bucks) visited my mother's yard,
as well as those of at least two neighbors, during the summer of 2006.
Next door neighbor Ludie even came up with names for them. The yards in
question are all on the very edge of Mariposa, a small town in the Sierra
Nevada foothills.
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| Lizard
Banished from the House
My parents lived in a house right on the edge of the Sierra foothill
town of Mariposa. Unwelcome visitors over the years included tarantulas,
crickets, bugs of all sorts, and lizards, including this one. Mother would
get the broom and unceremoniously sweep the hapless reptile out onto the
lawn.
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| Butterflies
These photos were all taken at the Butterfly House in Whitehouse, Ohio.
Read more about this in Road
Trip 2004.
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| Black
Widow
This lady lived in my back yard for an entire summer, and my friends
and I enjoyed going out with a flashlight to check on her every few
nights. The web was built against a concrete block fence, and anchored to
the lawn. Later that fall there were five or six spiders building webs in
the same area, and they had to be terminated with extreme prejudice.
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| Neely
Cats
My daughter and son-in-law, Jennifer and Rod Neely, have always had
three cats in the family. Starting with Noodles about 2002, and continuing
through Buster and Stickers in the next two or three years, they found
themselves with the Tiger Trio, three cats who were all gray tiger stripe.
Stickers arrived unexpectedly, wandering up from the drainage that runs
through their property, abandoned and covered with stickers. Sausage broke
the "color barrier" in 2006. Stickers proved to be a rare
"snow cat," frolicking in the snow and even burrowing into it.
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| Elliott
Barn
William (Bill) Elliott, who turned 90 in January
2007, grew up on the property where this barn is located, and provided the
following information in May 2005: Here is a brief description of the
barn. The picture you have is what we called the "back horse
barn" with the tack room at the right end. If you take a picture of
the front here is the general layout. On the left is the "front horse barn"
which has a covered access to that tack room. The center, high part,
of the barn is the hay and feed section with access to both horse barns.
To the right of the hay barn was sort of a buggy and repair shop barn but
we used it as a garage. A lot of those old barns were built pretty much
the same.
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Barn
at Highway 49 and Pegleg Road
The house I grew up in is about
100 yards behind this barn, so I saw it many times, walked by it, but
never went inside. As far as I know, it was not in use back then
(1945-1957) and does not appear to be now. You can see a corner of
our garage through the trees near the lower left of the photo.
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| Old
Bootjack Dance Hall
Opened in 1894, the Bootjack Dance Hall stood
about a half mile from the Bootjack store, where today's Highway 49 and
Darrah Road meet. The hall was home to dances featuring local fiddlers,
school events put on by nearby Sebastopol School, and from 1948 until it
was torn down, the Bootjack Stompers Square Dance Club.
Although the hall was supplanted by a new hall
next to the store, the old hall remained in use until it was razed in the
late 1960s to make room for a realignment of the Bootjack Road, which had
now become an extension of the Mother Load Highway, California 49.
Read Helen
Callan's story about the closing of the hall
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| Bodie
In the late 1800s this gold mining town located at 8,000 feet in the
mountains of eastern California, boasted a population of 10,000. The town
had a wild and wooly reputation, boosted by the tale of a young girl whose
family was moving there. As they packed their belongings, she wrote in her
diary, "Goodbye, God; I'm going to Bodie." Residents of the town
took issue with this story - what she really wrote, they said, was
"Good, by God! I'm going to Bodie!" Click
here for more Bodie photos.
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| Power
Poles
Cunningham Road between State Highway 140 and the village of Le Grand
was lined with these poles when I was a kid (shortly after electricity was
invented), and they always fascinated me. As the poles wear out, they are
being replaced with modern poles with the insulators at the top and sides,
and there are probably less than a dozen of the old poles left. I've seen
them in a couple of other places, and to me they have more character than
any other design.
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| Carlton
Road Barn
This building has seen better days, but unlike every other barn
pictured, it is MINE (well, mine and my sister's). Our ownership is
temporary, by inheritance, and the property will be sold. But this will
always be the only barn I ever owned.
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| A
Family Dinner
This photo was found in my mother's things after she passed away. It is
not identified, and no one recognizes anyone in it; most likely it was in
with something she bought at an action, and they are not relatives. It's
typical of family reunion photos from the turn of the century. Note
the priceless expression on the boy seated at left.
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Updated October 13, 2008
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