Infos zum Death Valley NP

  • Heißester Septembertag weltweit
    Neuer Hitzerekord im Death Valley aufgestellt

    Zitat

    Mit extremer Sommerhitze hält der September in Kalifornien Einzug. Seit Tagen warnen die Behörden vor möglichen Rekordtemperaturen, die bis Mitte kommender Woche über 40 Millionen Menschen in dem Westküstenstaat und benachbarten Regionen drohen.


    Im kalifornischen Baker wurden am Mittwoch Höchsttemperaturen zwischen 108 und 110 Grad Fahrenheit gemessen, umgerechnet 42 bis 43 Grad Celsius. Noch heißer war es am Donnerstag im Furnace Creek Visitor Center im Death Valley National Park. Hier wurde sogar eine Höchsttemperatur von 53 Grad Celsius gemessen, der bisher heißeste aufgezeichnete Septembertag auf der ganzen Welt. Wetterexperten halten weitere Rekorde in den kommenden Tagen für möglich. Das Death Valley hält den Weltrekord für den heißesten Platz der Erde. Am 10. Juli 1913 wurden dort 56,7 Grad Celsius registriert.


    Link

  • Remnants of Hurricane Kay cause road closures
    CA-190 and Badwater Road temporarily closed


    Link

  • Mexican earthquake sloshes Devils Hole


    Link

  • Badwater And Wildrose Reopen But Many Roads Still Closed In Death Valley


    Link mit Übersichtskarte

  • Free mandatory permits for roadside camping and backpacking


    Link

  • State Route 190 partially reopens after floods

    Zitat

    Caltrans has reopened parts of State Route 190 between U.S. 395 and Panamint Valley Road after flooding closed it.
    The stretch was officially opened Wednesday night, nearly a month after being initially closed.
    The closure between Dirty Socks Hot Spring and Darwin Road on SR 190 has also been lifted, and vehicles can now use the west entrance to Death Valley National Park and Panamint Springs from U.S. 395 in Lone Pine and Olancha.
    Emergency work will now move on to SR 190 over Towne Pass. That section of highway, which extends from Panamint Valley Road to Emigrant Junction, remains closed to all vehicles.
    Caltrans will provide a detour around Towne Pass is available using Death Valley National Park roads, but vehicle restrictions do still apply.


    Link

  • Decisions made on proposed Stovepipe Wells improvements


    Link

  • Beatty entrance to DVNP open
    Caution required due to gravel sections


    Link

  • Towne Pass section of CA-190 open

    Zitat

    Towne Pass section of CA-190 is now open to all vehicles. This provides access from the west into Death Valley National Park.
    Caltrans completed work on this section of the road over the weekend, allowing visitors to once again travel between Panamint Valley and Emigrant via CA-190.
    The Towne Pass section of CA-190 has been closed since September, when rainfall caused flash floods to wipe away pavement. Many other roads in the park remain closed due to the August and September floods Death Valley received.


    Link

  • Cottonwood Canyon and Marble Canyon backcountry roads reopen
    Free permits required for roadside camping and backpacking

    Zitat

    Death Valley National Park opened Cottonwood Canyon and Marble Canyon roads on Wednesday, November 23. The National Park Service (NPS) road crew re-established these backcountry roads after damage by flash floods this summer. A free permit is now required to camp along these backcountry roads and for backpacking along the Cottonwood-Marble Canyons Loop.
    The Cottonwood and Marble Canyon Roads are accessible to high-clearance vehicles with all-wheel drive and four-wheel drive. The road corridor beings with 4 miles of deep sand that is not typically passable for a low clearance vehicle.
    There are ten campsites along Cottonwood Canyon Road and four along Marble Canyon Road. For information on how to acquire a free permit, visit nps.gov/deva/planyourvisit/wilderness-permits
    Roadside camping has greatly increased over the past decade. As sites filled, people drove off road to create new sites. Permits are a way for park rangers to communicate with campers about Leave No Trace ethics, NPS regulations and other ways users can help protect the environment. By limiting roadside camping to designated sites, the NPS hopes campers can experience the solitude and quiet of the surrounding wilderness and limit the human impact on the desert.
    Many other roads in the park remain closed. Visitors should check the most up to date road conditions on the park webpage.


    Link

  • Badwater Road & Shoshone entrance re-opened


    Link

  • Park reopens more flood-damage areas


    Link

  • Mud Canyon and Racetrack Roads opened

    Zitat

    Death Valley National Park recently reopened Mud Canyon Road and Racetrack Road. Both roads were closed since August 2022 due to flash flood damage.

    Mud Canyon Road is a paved road that links the park to Beatty, Nevada. A contractor rebuilt destroyed sections of the road, under a project administered by Federal Highway Administration.

    Racetrack Road is an unpaved road from Ubehebe Crater to Racetrack Playa, the infamous location where rocks occasionally slide around, leaving tracks in the dry lakebed. Flooding had erased sections of the road. National Park Service maintenance workers graded the road and reestablished the route. Racetrack Road is only suitable for high-clearance, four-wheel-drive vehicles with sturdy tires, due to sharp rocks.


    Link

  • Death Valley National Park to move to cashless fee collection starting June 1, 2023


    Link

  • Park rangers warn about interacting with wildlife


    Link

  • Man died at Golden Canyon trailhead


    Link

  • National Park Service hopes to reopen Scotty's Castle 10 years after flood

    Zitat

    After a decade of repair and fortification, Scotty's castle has a re-opening planned for December 2025.

    In the meantime, the Death Valley National History Association will hold private walking tours of the landmark in 2024.


    Mehr Infos zu Scotty's Castle gibt es hier

  • Death Valley National Park Closed due to Active Flooding - Turn Around, Don’t Drown

    Zitat

    Death Valley National Park is closed due to active flooding. The park received 1 inch of rain by mid-day Sunday, with unprecedented levels of rainfall predicted over Sunday night. California Highway 190 is also closed.

    Park rangers are reminding travelers to “Turn around, don’t drown.” Flash floods are rivers of mud and rocks that can easily sweep cars off roads. Emergency responders may not be able to reach people in need.

    Flash floods started in Death Valley National Park on Sunday morning. Furnace Creek Visitor Center received 1.04 inches of rain by 1:30 pm. The park might receive one to three more inches of rain Sunday night. For comparison, Furnace Creek’s average annual rainfall is 2.2 inches. This unprecedented rainfall is due to Hurricane Hilary.


    Link mit Fotos und Video

  • Death Valley National Park remains closed, all visitors evacuated


    Link mit Bildern

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