New Brakes, Washington, Christmas, and Homeward Bound

Yesterday, as we were going down the mountain around numerous hairpin curves leaving Sequoia, our brakes went out! Hubby had pressed on the brakes and they went right to the floor, no resistance and no braking at all. As I was quietly suggesting,   calmly encouraging,  frantically yelling to Hubby to turn into the upward side of the mountain to avoid careening off the drop-off side, he started pumping the brakes and was able to slow our descent. We coasted up to the main entrance/exit gate to the park. There was a ranger checking passes, so we told him our dilemma. He said it would be hard to get a service/tow truck up where we were especially being as it was so late in the afternoon. He suggested driving slowly down the road about 15 miles to a small town, Three Rivers. I remembered driving through it on our way up. It was a cute little town, but I remembered it being at the bottom of   a l-o-n-g curvy road. Hubby said, “Ok” and started driving down the road.

“What! Hold on here. Have we considered all options? What about the National Guard or the fire jumpers or maybe the ski patrol? Would they be able to help?” Hubby gave me that “look” and I knew we were going for it, end of discussion! We drove slowly and coasted into the hairpin curves instead of using the brakes. We didn’t go careening off any edges and I even realized after awhile, that holding my breath until I turned purple, didn’t slow us down.

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Sequoia National Park

“When I entered this sublime wilderness, the day was nearly done, the trees with rosy, glowing countenances seemed to be hushed and thoughtful, as if waiting in conscious religious dependence on the sun, and one naturally walked softly, awestricken among them. ~John Muir

 

For me, Sequoia National Park was the highlight of our travels so far. This area has immense beauty and grandeur. It is located in the southern part of the Sierra Nevada Mountain Range which contains the tallest mountain in the “Lower 48,” Mount Whitney (maybe that was the one we climbed last night!) as well as the largest tree on earth, the General Sherman tree. 

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Death Valley National Park

This is the hottest, driest, lowest and largest national park in the contiguous United States. In fact, there were 43 consecutive days in 1917 where the temperature was over 120 degrees! The record high was 134 degrees on July 10, 1913! In 2001, a record 154 consecutive days reached 100 degrees. Ground temperatures have reached 200 degrees! You guessed it.  This is also the hottest place in the WHOLE world. There was a time between 1931 and 1934, that for 40 months, the only precipitation was 1.64 inches of rain! Wowzers!  That’s a lot of records!

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