RHH's photos with the keyword: stones

The Racetrack

RHH
01 Mar 2025 21 8 70
We are home again after two weeks of traveling, 3675 miles (5914 km), of traveling and eight states, Washington, Idaho, Montana, Utah, Arizona, Nevada, California and Oregon. We left Death Valley early yesterday morning and arrived home late last night after driving sixteen hours, stopping only for petrol and food. We were in three National Parks, Arches, Canyonlands and Death Valley, and numerous other places, Goblin Valley and Moonscape Overlook, Monument Valley, Navaho National Monument, Pipe Spring National Monument, Antelope Canyon and Rhyolite Ghost Town. The photo is of the Racetrack a playa (a lake bed that is dry most of the year) in Death Valley National Paek. The playa is noted for the stones that move across its surface when the playa is wet, leaving tracks behind. These tracks can be very long and often show that the stones have changed direction. For many years this was a mystery but was finally solved. The stones move through a combination of water, ice and wind. The photo shows one of these stones, about the size of my boot, and the track it has left behind in the dried and cracked mud of the playa. The Racetrack is reached by traveling twenty-seven miles over very rough and unpaved roads in a remote part of the park. We visited the Racetrack many years ago with our van, but a four-wheel drive vehicle with high clearance is really necessary, especially since the road is even rougher now than on our previous visit. We rented a 4WD Jeep for several days and after spending time at the Racetrack for photos, went on through Lippincott Pass, an even rougher road through the mountains south of the Racetrack. We were with our oldest daughter who had never been to DVNP.

The Racetrack

RHH
01 Mar 2025 5 4 37
This is the Racetrack in Death Valley. It is accessible only with a four wheel drive, high-clearance vehicle and is at the end of 27 miles of rough, unpaved road. It is a playa, a lakebed that is usually dry, and is known as the Racetrack because of the unusual movement of stones across the playa, the movement leaving tracks in the mud. The formation on the left of the photo is known as The Grandstand, for obvious reasons.

Bubbles

RHH
04 Oct 2020 27 17 166
Found on the beach at Whitepark Bay, this piece of basalt, one of the common rocks along the north coast, had just been wetted by the tide.

Charlevoix Stones

RHH
25 Jun 2020 7 3 74
I believe these are Charlevoix Stones, a fossil coral we picked up along the shores of Lake Huron. We will probably polish some of them and use them for jewelry.

Petosky Stones

RHH
25 Jun 2020 9 6 86
Petosky stones are fossilized coral that can be found along the shores of Lake Michigan and Lake Huron. They are the state stone of Michigan and are often made into jewelry. My wife, who picks up stones everywhere came home with a bag of them.

Moving Stone at Racetrack Playa

RHH
05 Apr 2018 3 1 170
A playa is a desert basin that periodically fills with water to form a shallow lake. This playa lies nearly thirty miles off the beaten track in northern Death Valley. It is called the Racetrack because stones from the surrounding mountains mysteriously move across the playa when it is wet leaving the tracks of their movement visible in the photo. Someone figured out that it was the wind which moved the stones across the mud, but the track remain visible after the playa dries.

Dartmoor Foxgloves (Digitalis purpurea)

Stone Wall and Foxgloves (Digitalis purpurea)

RHH
29 Mar 2009 1 275
Can't decide if I like this or not and whether or not it should be cropped.

Reflections

RHH
13 May 2009 270
In a neighbor's yard there are a number of old concrete stepping stones decorated with glass discs. The stones are overgrown with moss and lead nowhere. Most of them are buried in litter from the trees, but in a few places the glass still reflects the light and catches the attention of passers-by. In photographing these I did not even realize that I had gotten the reflection of the trees arching overhead until I uploaded them to my computer and examined them more closely.

Carrowmore, County Sligo Ireland

RHH
02 Jun 2009 1 240
Carrowmore is a complex of megalithic tombs near Sligo Town in County Sligo, Ireland. The type of tomb shown here is known as a dolmen.