9-12-19
I wake up really early today, before 5:00 AM, excited that I will be at my destination in California this evening, and a little nervous since the longest and most desolate day of travel is beginning. In my road atlas, US-50 bares the ominous sounding label "Loneliest Road" along the stretch from Ely to Fallon, Nevada. There are a couple sections of a hundred or so miles where there is nothing save for dry sagebrush, dust and sun. The only sign of human habitation in many places is the road on which you are travelling and the odd discarded can or shredded tire tread along its shoulder.
With some trepidation I point the VW west on US-50 and accelerate off into the pre-dawn blackness. In the rear view mirror, the lights of Delta and Hinckley, Utah shrink into an ever smaller twinkling mass, while ahead is an indeterminate vastness shrouded behind the cover of darkness. There is no moon out this morning and the impressive star display above me does little to illuminate the nothing stretching out in all directions. The VW's headlights cast a thin swath of dim yellow glow into the emptiness. Though slightly uneasy, I leave the radio off and remain content with the unwavering air-cooled drone behind me, strangely determined to savor this eeriness. Suddenly a jolt of movement in the road ahead startles me, and I swerve left into the other lane to avoid a rabbit.
Far ahead there is a tiny flickering light, looking almost like a distant campfire. The light disappears and reappears periodically as I continue in its general direction. For over a quarter of an hour this strange phenomenon continues unabated as I become more curious as to its source. On its next reappearance, I think I can just make out what looks to be two separate lights close together. Eventually there is a distinct pair of headlights coming toward me and soon a truck speeds past in the opposite direction. This nearly half-hour long apparition was nothing more than another vehicle traversing the same immense space as I am.
A dull silvery glow begins to grow along the eastern horizon, and I can just begin to make out the faint outlines of the distant mountains flanking the dead straight strip of pavement on which I travel. The roadway here has been freshly resurfaced, and as the light gradually increases, it cuts across the desert like a single ink line drawn on a massive sheet of grey paper. That line is now pointed at a rocky expanse of mountains where the VW and I are again climbing up, over and down. Now able to see the emptiness of the surrounding terrain, I find myself drawn to the little green mileage markers counting down the distance to Nevada, where I know from a previous trip there is a gas station right on the Utah/Nevada border. By about mile marker 20 my mind eases, as I am fairly confident I could reach the gas station on foot with my backpack and two gallon jugs of water should the VW's engine suddenly catastrophically explode.
But nothing happens as the VW pulls over the last hill and down into the valley where I can see the station ahead. There is a sign that states, "Services Ahead 12 Miles" or some similar distance. The visual compression of huge spaces is something that I have not become accustomed to out west. The gas station and the mountains beyond for that matter seem so close in the dry, clear air. But no matter how near that gas station looks, it still takes the full fifteen minutes it mathematically should have to reach it.
After another sixty or so miles I reach Ely, Nevada, the beginning of "The Loneliest Road in America." I have to take issue with that claim. This stretch is definitely remote for a US highway, and with a 109 mile gap between Austin and Fallon, it is no joke. But it is far from lonely, as there are plenty of RV's, semis, expedition style rigs, farm trucks, and regular cars which pass by frequently enough to question the title. I am sure the application of "Loneliest Road" has something to do with it, as the name draws people longing to get off the beaten path together onto this road for a not-so-lonely trek across this pretty but desolate area. It is a really fascinating stretch of the country in any case.
The VW and I continue westward with the usual struggles over pass after pass. I have heard that Nevada has the most mountain ranges of any state in the US and after half a day of long third gear pulls up and over the plenty of named summits on US-50, I am inclined to believe it. Relieved, I cross the half-way point between Austin and Fallon, and later stop in Fallon for gas and a late lunch consisting of a bag of Lays potato chips with a Dr.Pepper.
At the gas station in Fallon my credit card, which also didn't work in Austin, refuses to be accepted. In Austin, I chalked it up to the tiny little two-pump station I was filling up at where another customer was also having trouble with their card. Now though this was a huge travel plaza that should have working readers. I hesitate to use my debit card because I got scammed by a gas pump skimmer in Nebraska several years before. But I run it through the pump as a credit card and all is well, it goes through. Now nervous that my bank may think my cards are stolen and is in the process of cutting them off, I head to Walmart and buy two 98 cent jugs of water with $100 cash back on each. This futile gesture somehow placates my anxious mind even though I know darn well that the cash I have on me wouldn't even cover gas back to Wisconsin.
I continue on to Carson City, NV where it is peak rush hour. After traveling this country's highway system a number of times to a variety of places, I have come to the conclusion that it was designed to always plop you down in the middle of a large city at rush hour no matter where you go. I still remember being stuck on I-20 in Atlanta, Georgia; eight lanes wide but reduced to a parking lot with no end in sight.
Once out of Carson City, I leave US-50 for State Highway 88 which crosses into California and runs south along the base of the Sierra Nevada. The Sierra is striking to me because of the abrupt transition in the landscape. This range is nearly solid grey rock covered in dark evergreens, while looking to the east, the tan dusty mountain ranges stretch back for two states. The road rises into the mountains and the VW grinds its way slowly up. I turn right onto State Road 89 toward Luther Pass. Along this road, I stop to relax and take a few photos at a large turn-out on the way down. The air is clear, cool and dry, with just a light breeze; perfect. Below, tall pine trees frame a gold grassy meadow scattered with grey rocks and boulders of various sizes, while all around, cliffs and tree lined slopes surround me.
Highway 89 rejoins US-50 which I follow, thrown in with the craziness that is California driving. I always thought Californians are supposed to be all laid-back and chilled-out but driving here is sheer insanity. Obviously the VW doesn't have a prayer on the up-hills, but even going down the winding sections at almost 10 over, I'm being passed by freaking contractor vans with loaded down ladder racks. In Placerville, I take Highway 49 which is a really fun twisty road going up, down, and around toward the American River.
I stop in the town of Cool to get gas and have difficulty with the pump gun. The VW has a roughly 2-3" diameter filler tube in the gas tank and I normally only put the very end of the nozzle in so I can watch the fuel fill up. I don't want to fill too far because the little rubber sock on top of the fuel gauge sending unit doesn't seal the best and the interior smells of gasoline for the next couple hours if its too full. So I stand there pulling the pump trigger over and over looking stupid while nothing happens. The end of the nozzle has this big rubber accordion looking boot on it and suddenly it hits me. I push the nozzle all the way in the tank to mash that boot and the fuel starts flowing. I lift the pump gun back up and hold the rubber boot up with my left hand so I can see how full the tank is getting like normal. Ahh, California!
Highway 49 twists down to where it crosses the American River after which I turn right on Old Foresthill Road and twist back up the other side of the river valley. The sun is getting low on the horizon as I enter Foresthill, California after just over 600 miles of driving today. My friend Nick arrives in his hopped-up Porsche 914 about 15 minutes later. We have dinner and a beer at a place on the main street then head to the house they rented for the groomsmen, where we hang out for a while before I finally crash on the couch around midnight.
Early morning on US-50, Utah.
US-50, Nevada.
How it looks while driving a VW through the Nevada desert.
The VW in the Sierra Nevada, California.
Sierra Nevada, California.
Overlooking the American River from Old Foresthill Road, California.
The view from the wedding site. This was from when I walked out there in the early morning. The wedding was late afternoon so the sun was from the opposite angle and you could see all the way to the high Sierras in the distance.