Category Archives: Locations

When NOT to Visit the Racetrack

A reader sent me an email today after reading my piece on photographing the moving rocks at the Racetrack Playa, saying that he was hoping to visit the Playa later this year and asking for advice. He said he plans to visit in June.

Advice… Do not go to the Racetrack Playa in June. Or during any of the hot season months.

While I have little doubt that it is possible for well-equipped and very experienced desert travelers accompanied by similarly experienced folks to go there at that time of year, there are a number of reasons to warn everyone else against trying it:

  • The climate in Death Valley is quite hostile during much of the year. During the summer you can count on temperatures well over 100 degrees F. You shouldn’t be surprised by temperatures over 110 degrees, and much hotter temperatures have been recorded. For this reason, the Death Valley “high season” is more or less November through perhaps the first week of April.
  • Add to the above, the following additional challenges of the Racetrack Playa: You’ll drive a 55 mile round trip on an extremely washboarded gravel road; there will likely be few if any other people out there; there is absolutely no water on this road and there are no services whatsoever; there is no cell phone service. In the event of a breakdown you will probably be out there for a long time – perhaps a very long time.
  • If all of that wasn’t enough, quite frankly the photography is a whole lot better during the opposite season, when some clouds occasionally come through and add interest to the scene.

More advice… If you go to the Racetrack during a wet season – please stay off the playa! Better yet, save your Racetrack visit for a more appropriate time. Here’s the deal:

  • A playa is a very flat place formed when silt-laden water from surrounding hills flows into a low place with no outlet, floods it with muddy silt, and then dries and leaves behind a virtually completely flat surface.
  • Playas are often dry for extended periods of time – but on occasion they are wet. Very wet. And muddy.
  • Footprints on the playa last for years.
  • If you drive miles and miles to have the experience of visiting this vast, untracked place and find it to be wet… stay the hell off the playa so that the everyone who visits the playa for the next X number of years after your visit doesn’t experience a wonderous place marred by your semi-permanent foot prints in the dried surface.

If I know that the playa is flooded or muddy I won’t even go out there.


G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” (Heyday Books) is available directly from him.

G Dan Mitchell: Blog | Bluesky | Mastodon | Substack Notes | Flickr | Email


All media © Copyright G Dan Mitchell and others as indicated. Any use requires advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Photographing the Moving Rocks at Racetrack Playa

(Note: Originally posted in January, 2008.)

Earlier this week I posted an older photo from Racetrack Playa at Flickr and got a lot of comments and a few questions. In response, I said that I would post something here about this location – so here goes…

The Racetrack Playa is in Death Valley National Park in south-eastern California. The Playa is the site Death Valley NP’s famous moving rocks (a.k.a. “sliding rocks”) phenomenon. Rocks, some of which are television-sized, have left tracks behind them as they have traveled across the surface of the playa. (See a post from earlier today for one photograph – there are more in the Death Valley section of my Gallery.)

No one has actually seen the rocks move, but there has been a lot of speculation about the process by which the rocks manage to travel across the playa. I’m no expert on this, but here’s some of what I’ve heard. First of all, while you are free to have a different opinion, I’m not convinced that aliens did it. (Though it would be a heck of a good joke on us.;-)

One theory involved a combination of wind and water. While you might wonder how water could play a role in a dry place like Death Valley, it most certainly can. In fact a playa is a feature formed when water washes sediment down from surrounding hills into a lower basin. The water spreads onto the playa and drops its load of sediment. When the water dries it leaves behind an extraordinarily flat surface. The thought was that rocks sitting on a very slippery surface of the playa might be moved by strong winds. Observations tended to make this scenario unlikely. For example, it was calculated that the winds necessary to move the largest rocks would have to be several hundred miles per hour. It gets windy there, but not that windy.

A refinement of the theory adds ice to the mix. Imagine a thin layer of water on the playa with the slippery surface underneath. Now freeze a thin layer of ice on the top of the underlying water in this shallow “lake.” (And, yes, it very definitely gets cold enough there to freeze water.) Now the winds would not have to work directly on the rocks themselves, but could instead act on the whole frozen surface, much as they act on the arctic ice pack. As the ice moved, the rocks embedded in the ice would be dragged along. This seems to make sense given the observation that groups of rocks often follow parallel paths across the playa surface.

The rocks seem to come from a low rocky hill at the south end of the playa. While they can be found in many other areas of the playa, the greatest concentration is near this formation.

Access to the Racetrack Playa is typically by way of an awful 27 mile gravel road that starts near Ubehebe Crater. (I’m no expert on desert travel or on these roads, so consult the Park Service for current and more reliable information if you go.) The road has been badly washboarded every time I’ve been on it – some people are so distressed by the conditions on the road that they turn around after a few miles of driving. For most drivers this makes for very slow going and it can take up to about two hours to get out to the playa. I met one driver of a very large truck who was convinced that “once you get above 30 mph the road smooths out.” I don’t recommend that approach. Slow and careful is probably a lot safer, especially for those without extensive experience driving roads like these. I know that I sit back and take it slow.

The last time I checked the Park Service recommended a “high clearance vehicle” for this road, and I concur. I have seen some vehicles without such clearance and it seemed to be pretty rough going, not to mention that you increase the risk that the undercarriage will be damaged by rocks. (If it has rained or snowed, all bets are off. Best to stay away. You certainly aren’t going to walk on the playa when it is wet anyway, are you!?)

Soon after you pass Teakettle Junction you will catch your first view of the playa ahead and/or to the left. You still have a ways to drive before you arrive at the playa and drive along the right side. You’ll want to keep going if you plan to see the best rocks, though it is worth stopping at the Grandstand, a large rock formation in the playa not far from where it starts. I’ve had good luck photographing this feature during the late afternoon.

Continue on to pull-outs near the far end of the playa for closest access to the rocky hill and the largest number of moving rocks. You’ll need to leave your car and walk a good distance out onto the playa. (Don’t even think about walking on the playa unless it is completely dry. Foolish and inconsiderate visitors have done so, and their footprints mar the scene for years afterwards.) Before long you’ll start to see the rocks. One plan is to head for the low hill where the rocks originate and then explore outwards from there.

There is a small “camping area” a short distance beyond the end of the playa. It is very primitive, consisting of little more than a couple of wide spots in the road and one dilapidated outhouse. There is no water whatsoever. I have camped there and it is very quiet and peaceful. I’ve also see people sleep in their cars back at the turnouts right at the playa.

My ideal trip works something like this: Go during the cool season. Almost no one would want to try to visit this place in the summer. Most visit in late fall, winter, or very early spring. My visits have all been during the first week of April. Drive out to the playa in the afternoon, arriving a few hours before sunset. If you have time, stop to photograph the Grandstand in the afternoon light. Then head on down to the south end of the playa and figure out where you’ll sleep that night.

By the time the light starts to become interesting you’ll want to be out on the playa, perhaps with a few shots already scoped out. Shoot like crazy for the next few hours as the sun drops and finally sets, continuing on after sunset as long as the light is interesting. Head back to your car and grab some dinner. (The last time I visited I met some fellow photographers and we had a great time sharing food and drink.) If there is a full moon (or maybe even if there isn’t) head back out to do some night photography. This is a wonderful place to photograph star trails, and there are a ton of interesting opportunities on full moon nights once the moon finally makes it over the ridge located to the east. Finally, completely exhausted, head back to your camp for the night.

Rise early the next morning – well before sunrise. You want to already be out on the playa before the interesting light starts. The morning lighting is interesting and somewhat challenging. All I’ll say is that there are mountains to the east that block the first light, yet the very earliest light will illuminate some interesting subjects.

Soon, most of the playa is in full sun. I generally shoot a bit more, but by this time I’m running out of gas – and getting hungry for some real food. I head back to the car, say goodbye to the playa and start the long drive back to the paved road that begins near Ubehebe Crater. (Don’t pass up on photographic opportunities as you drive this road though.)

Finally, a few random thoughts – some in response to questions I’ve received.

  • Someone asked how often the rocks move? I’m not sure but not often – the interval must be measured in years.
  • Someone else asked how they keep visitors from “tracking it up” when it is wet? Good question, and an important one to mention. There are footprints on the playa left by inconsiderate visitors who wandered about when the playa was muddy. Their footprints remain for years. If you visit when the surface is wet please do not leave tracks on the playa, even if that means coming back a different time. Fortunately, the road is so long and so bad and there are no services out there – all of which drastically limit the number of visitors. I’ve seen perhaps as many as 20 people out there at once, but on one other visit there were only two of us.
  • Another photographer asked about the effect of the eastern ridge on sunrise photography. I touched on that above, but there is indeed a very tall ridge to the east that keeps the area with the concentration of rocks in the shadows until later in the morning.
  • And what about the ridge to the west at sunset? There is also a large ridge to the west of the main part of the playa, and the road past the playa runs along its lower east edge. This feature casts a shadow on the northern portion of the playa well before actual sunset. My advice it to photograph there a bit earlier – I’ve had good luck photographing “The Grandstand” in the late afternoon. The sun hits the southern portion of the playa later in the evening since the valley opens to the west from there.

Photographing the ‘Real’ Yosemite Firefall

UPDATE: As of 2020 I am no longer posting annual updates concerning this subject — and I am editing older posts on the subject in light of the need to be more responsible about not encouraging the onslaught. I also no longer recommend going to the Valley to see it. Unfortunately, too much exposure (yes, I played a part in it, unfortunately) has led to absurd crowds, traffic jams, littering, destruction of areas in the Valley where too many people go to see it… and the park has increasingly — and appropriately — cracked down. Parking options have been eliminated, at least one viewing location has been closed. Good news! The rest of Yosemite Valley is still there and often exceptionally beautiful at this time of year.

A photograph by Galen Rowell (“Last Light on Horsetail Falls” – #AA0008 at this link) made the image of this ephemeral winter waterfall into an iconic Yosemite image. Although I have spent a lot of time in Yosemite I have to admit that I’ve missed this event entirely.

I may try to rectify that this year. Edie (a.k.a. “AmbitiousWench” – one of the most prolific online photographers I know of) has posted a series of pieces at her The Little Red Tent blog sharing almost everything you might want to know about photographing this scene. She should know – from what I can tell she must actually live in the Valley. That sounds quite cool – as long as you can get away from the crowds during the summer and as long as a tree doesn’t fall on your car.

By the way, when I first visited the Valley with my family as a child I witnessed the old Glacier Point firefall quite a few times. While I completely understand the reasons that it was discontinued, it was truly a marvel for me as a child.


G Dan Mitchell is a California photographer and visual opportunist. His book, “California’s Fall Color: A Photographer’s Guide to Autumn in the Sierra” (Heyday Books) is available directly from him.

G Dan Mitchell: Blog | Bluesky | Mastodon | Substack Notes | Flickr | Email


All media © Copyright G Dan Mitchell and others as indicated. Any use requires advance permission from G Dan Mitchell.

Inge Fernau’s Fall Color Wrap-Up

Photographer Inge Fernau seems to have become even more obsessed (in the most positive sense of the word!) than the rest of us with photographing eastern Sierra Nevada autumn colors. She has posted a narrative summary of this fall’s journey, along with a lot of interesting information gleaned from her visits to most of the great aspen color sites:

2007 Fall Color Summary Planning my trips to hunt for Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra starts about 10 to 11 months prior to Fall. Sooooo I start planning in November for the next year.
After 5 years of coming on different days throughout September and October, I finally came to the conclusion that the best time to catch Fall Colors in the Eastern Sierra is the last week in September (~9/23) to about the second/third week in October (10/20). Cold spells, snow and high winds can change this drastically. I also must say that 2007 was not a banner year for the colors on the East side. In 2007 I logged over 4000 miles of travel.

– Magical Glow Photography [Journal of my travels for the perfect photo]

Follow her links to read more… much more.