Tuesday 5 November 2024 - The next morning I was on my own again and decided to return to Mesquite Dunes. Having already hiked
to them the day before, I had no trouble finding a good place to enter the dunes in the dark.
The light prior to sunrise makes the dunes a different color.
Sunrise was beautiful.
The mountains in the west reflect a pink glow just prior to the sun.
The dune photographer at sunrise.
Hard to understand the forces making the complex designs in the sand.
Sand everywhere - the deeper into the dune field, the views are all around.
The sun peeking around a large dune.
Once the sun is up, the low light makes for great shadows.
Waves of sand rippling out.
Ripples in the sand at the bottom of a dune.
Shadows in the rising sun.
The sun caught in the center of the dune.
Ripples in the sand without footsteps. I was a long way from the public parking for Mesquite Dunes and the other
tourists.
Light and curves.
More dunes.
Sand is everywhere
Sharp lines along with the curves - wind is amazing.
A cool swirl of sand surrounded by ripples and shadows.
The dark edge of one dune aligns with the shadow on a distant dune.
It looks like the sand on a dune has fallen.
Swoopy texture and lines in the sand.
Sand curve.
Not sure how this set of ripples formed on the side of a dune.
Sand swirls into a hole.
Sand surrounding a dry place in the desert.
A little bush looks like it is no longer living - maybe some water?
Cracks in the desert floor lead into the dunes.
A creosote bush survives at the edge of the dunes. How can it survive??
Huge dune with the mountains in the background.
The sun is setting over Death Valley.
The light from the setting sky sets the sand a pink color.
Pink sky and Death Valley desert floor.
Sunset in the desert - so pretty.
A mile walk back to the trucks in the dark and an early dinner at the hotel.