Nevada: Lovelock, Elko and the Ruby Mountains

I’m going to do a few posts about our current trip to Summit County, Colorado, where we are spending  most of September and October.  We are staying in Dillon, in a townhouse that my in-laws bought 22 years ago.

Quick note, Kim’s mother Myra passed away on May 23rd, so we have been quite busy clearing out her primary house in Los Alamitos, CA.  We headed to Dillon on August 27, two days after escrow closed, driving from Livermore to the beautiful garden city (definitely tongue-in-cheek) of Elko, Nevada.  On the way we stopped to charge our car in Lovelock, Nevada, which is most recently famous for housing your favorite double murderer, OJ Simpson (just outside Lovelock).  You know you are near OJ’s former “hood” when you see the “don’t pick up hitchhikers sign” on the side of the freeway.  Can’t you just picture OJ standing by the side of the road with his thumb out?  Maybe my autopilot freaks out and swerves right all of a sudden?  Yeah, that’s the ticket.

We walked around Lovelock to kill some time, and suffice it to say this is a very sad little town.  Nearly every storefront is closed up, and has been for awhile.  Lovelock was a stopping point on the Humboldt Trail to California during the gold rush, and is named after English settlor George Lovelock, who decided in 1866 that this was the place to stop and make a home.  Maybe it was a lot prettier back then??  Maybe they failed to let us know that George was blind?

Today Lovelock is mostly famous due to couples placing padlocks on some chains in Lovers Lock Plaza.

The above photo is about one tenth of the overall locks.  That’s a lot of locks!  I was surprised there wasn’t a vending maching on site selling them!  It puts an interesting spin on it when you realize that at least half of those locks ended in breakups.  Yeah, I’m quite the romantic.

From there we were off to Elko where we would be staying the night.  We have stayed in Elko several times as this is a good stopping point for the drive to Dillon, which we have done about a half dozen times.  I will say Elko is pretty damn ugly, but not too far from Elko are the Ruby Mountains, and almost nobody knows about them!

We didn’t hike there on this trip, but we did the last time we made this drive a little over a year ago.  The drive from Elko into Lamoille Canyon is a quick 30 minute trip…and it will leave you wondering why the Ruby Mountains aren’t a National Park!

in 2013 we hiked up to Liberty Pass, and the views on this hike are simply amazing!  This is Lamoille Lake along the trail.

A short distance from the top of Liberty Pass (elevation 10,489 feet), with Liberty Lake below.

We were going to hike down to Liberty Lake, but a thunderstorm came out of nowhere, so we headed back down as quickly as we could.  Here is Fletcher after we basically ran most of the way down.  The storm had blown over by then, but we had plenty of exciting moments with rain/hail and lightning strikes all around us.

Just incredible flowers near the bottom of the trail.  If you ever do this trail make sure you take the northern most trail (on the left) at a junction on the way back down.  Both trails end up in the same parking lot.

Two more shots from the Ruby’s.  This is on a different hike called the Thomas Creek Trail, which Kim and I did last year, just a few days after our retirement.

While Elko may be your typical ugly desert town, it’s worth a stay just to visit the Ruby’s…even if you don’t do a hike.  The drive into the canyon is well worth it.  Here is Kim sporting her retirement shirt.

Escape from Sequoia National Park!

On our last evening in Sequoia NP we were watching the weather very closely.  It was supposed to snow in the early morning, and we didn’t bring chains with us.  We didn’t want to get stuck in the park without a hotel reservation.

At about 4:00 AM, I got up and saw it was raining, not snowing.  Ok, no worries.

At 7:00 AM it starting sleeting, and that turned into frozen rain by 7:15.  We decided to skip breakfast and get the hell out of dodge because the frozen rain was quickly accumulating!  By the time we got to our car I was thinking we were screwed.

We left the Wuksachi Lodge and found the Northbound direction of the Generals HIghway, the direction we wanted to go, was already closed.  Grrr!  We ended up having to leave the long way to the south, although it at least gave us a different perspective of the park.  Fortunately we had charged the car every night (albeit at only 120V) so we had the necessary range to get us to the Fresno Supercharger, even with the additional miles we had to go.

On the way down  the road splits in two because they literally built the road around some sequoia trees!  I would have stopped and taken a picture of the car between the two trees but didn’t want to risk it.

Here is one last look at Moro Rock from the roadway leaving the park.  This would not have been a good day for the hike!

Definitely a worthwhile visit!  We didn’t get to see any of Kings Canyon National Park due to the road closure, but that leaves something for next time!

We should be back in July, as we have a trip planned for Sandpoint, Idaho.  Thanks for reading!