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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Racing the Blizzard

Originally we had planned on going from the Petrified Forest east of Holbrook to Flagstaff and see if our friends from the Phoenix area would like to meet us in Flagstaff for a day. We would have to wait for the blizzard forecasted for the Grand Canyon to move on and for the roads to get plowed before we could travel north to explore that area.

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