Daylight Pass Road Death Valley California USA | On the road
We follow the Daylight Pass Road in Death Valley. Here we cross the state line from Nevada to California.
Death Valley is a valley in the United States of America that, together with the environment, is part of Death Valley National Park. It is for the most part located in the state of California and for a small part in the state of Nevada.
The valley is surrounded by mountains and is part of the Great Basin and the Mojave Desert. In Death Valley National Park there is a desert area with salt flats, rock formations, canyons, sand dunes and mountains.
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Death Valley National Park (Daylight Pass to Beatty NV)
Daylight Pass Road is part of the 34-mile route between Beatty, Nevada, and Stovepipe Wells in Death Valley.
Daylight Pass Road Death Valley
Daylight Pass is the route you must take to get to or from Beatty. It is the first junction off Scotty's Castle Road
Daylight Pass (Death Valley, CA) - Introduction
Climbing Daylight Pass (Death Valley, CA) by bike - the 72nd most difficult climb by bike in the U.S. - PJAMM - Introduction
Across Death Valley Drive: Stovepipe Wells, Daylight Pass, Beatty
Check out the drive from a snowy Towne Pass, into Death Valley, and up Daylight Pass Road to Beatty, Nevada.
MyDrivelapse.com and Takemytrip.com provide driving videos and stories to help you plan your trip. Check out hundreds of videos on my YouTube channel. Subscribe if you like it! Dozens of new videos are on the way in the coming weeks.
I made this trip in March, 2016. Video shot with a Brinno TLC-200 Pro time-lapse camera, mounted on my roof with a homemade magnetic case. I travel with two Brinno cameras - one facing forward, the other in reverse. Sometimes the reverse camera captures better video (fewer raindrops and bugs hit the rear-view lens).
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Photography:
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Music Info:
I am running down the long hallway of Viewmont Elementary
Artist: Chris Zabriskie
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Use:
The video used in this clip is copyrighted. You may NOT rip, reencode, download, rebroadcast, etc., on any platform without permission. You MAY embed this video on your website without permission. You MAY -- and really should -- post this video on your Facebook page, tweet it out, etc., and share it with your friends! If you'd like to use it in a non-commercial project, school project, etc. (for free), please contact me for permission.
Daylight Pass Death Valley National Park drive with RUSH In The End
Nothing too exciting in Death Valley but it's free to watch!!
Daylight Pass, Death Valley, CA - miles 10-12.9 (summit)
Climbing Daylight Pass (Death Valley, CA) by bike - the 72nd most difficult climb by bike in the U.S. - PJAMM - miles 10-12.9 (summit)
Daylight Pass, Death Valley, CA - miles 0-10
Climbing Daylight Pass (Death Valley, CA) by bike - the 72nd most difficult climb by bike in the U.S. - PJAMM - miles 0-10
#3 USA Roadtrip - Death Valley, California & Yosemite National Park, California
Places visited:
Death Valley National Park
Badwater Basin
Long Pine
Big Pine
Lake Sabrina
Yosemite National Park
June Lake
Music: Galactic Marvl feat. Connor Foley - Save Me
Equipment:
GoPro HERO4 Black
Yuneec Typhoon G
CGO Steadygrip
Sowtfware:
Final Cut Pro X by Apple
Death Valley National Park, California - Drive Through the Furnace Creek Ranch HD (2016)
Death Valley is a desert valley located in Eastern California. It is the lowest, driest, and hottest area in North America.
Death Valley's Badwater Basin is the point of the lowest elevation in North America, at 282 feet (86 m) below sea level. This point is 84.6 miles (136.2 km) east-southeast of Mount Whitney, the highest point in the contiguous United States with an elevation of 14,505 feet (4,421 m). Death Valley's Furnace Creek holds the record for the highest reliably recorded air temperature in the world, 134 °F (56.7 °C) on July 10, 1913. This has been contested by other weather experts.
Located near the border of California and Nevada, in the Great Basin, east of the Sierra Nevada mountains, Death Valley constitutes much of Death Valley National Park and is the principal feature of the Mojave and Colorado Deserts Biosphere Reserve. It is located mostly in Inyo County, California. It runs from north to south between the Amargosa Range on the east and the Panamint Range on the west; the Sylvania Mountains and the Owlshead Mountains form its northern and southern boundaries, respectively. It has an area of about 3,000 sq mi (7,800 km2). The highest point in Death Valley itself is Telescope Peak in the Panamint Range, which has an elevation of 11,043 feet (3,366 m).
Death Valley National Park
Recorded April 9-10, 2017
Death Valley National Park straddles the border of California and Nevada and occupies an interface zone between the arid Great Basin and Mojave deserts. The park protects the northwest corner of the Mojave Desert and contains a diverse desert environment of salt-flats, sand dunes, badlands, valleys, canyons, and mountains. It is the largest national park in the lower 48 states and has been declared an International Biosphere Reserve. It is the hottest, driest and lowest of the national parks in the United States. The lowest point in North America is in Badwater Basin, which is 282 feet below sea level. This Video includes...
0:00:00 Southern Entrance
0:01:13 Jubilee Pass Road
0:11:32 Ashford Mill Ruins
0:12:34 Badwater Road
0:15:16 Mormon Point
0:23:04 Badwater Basin
0:25:41 Artist Drive
0:36:46 Artists Palette
0:52:28 Furnace Creek Ranch
0:57:08 Dantes View Road
1:05:01 Dantes View
From:
Lone Pine, California to Death Valley National Park
Kick back and enjoy the ride from Lone Pine, California (at US 395) into Death Valley via California Route 136 and 190.
MyDrivelapse.com and Takemytrip.com provide driving videos and stories to help you plan your trip. Check out hundreds of videos on my YouTube channel. Subscribe if you like it! Dozens of new videos are on the way in the coming weeks.
I made this trip in March, 2016. Video shot with a Brinno TLC-200 Pro time-lapse camera, mounted on my roof with a homemade magnetic case. I travel with two Brinno cameras - one facing forward, the other in reverse. Sometimes the reverse camera captures better video (fewer raindrops and bugs hit the rear-view lens).
On Facebook!
Like for updates & great travel ideas
Photography:
---
Music Info:
Jellyfish in Space
Artist: Kevin Macleod
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Use:
The video used in this clip is copyrighted. You may NOT rip, reencode, download, rebroadcast, etc., on any platform without permission. You MAY embed this video on your website without permission. You MAY -- and really should -- post this video on your Facebook page, tweet it out, etc., and share it with your friends! If you'd like to use it in a non-commercial project, school project, etc. (for free), please contact me for permission.
Towne Pass Pinks - Delightful Death Valley Discovery
East and downhill from Towne Pass summit about a mile, look to the south catching a glimpse of pink rock formations. Hike in a mile and get up close especially in the spring to enjoy the flowers as well. Images captured spring 2015.
Zabriskie Point, Death Valley National Park, California, United States.
A quick look at Zabriskie Point on the edge of Death Valley (you can see it from the viewpoint), in Death Valley National Park, California, United States.
One of the few viewing points with off road but secure car parking. Worth the short walk.
Driving down into Death Valley. Daylight Pass Rd.
Driving down into Death Valley on Daylight Pass Road.
Daylight Peak Death Valley
This seldom climbed peak is the highpoint of the ridgeline transversing Daylight Pass between Beatty, NV and the Death Valley Buttes. There are a total of four knolls between the highway parking spot and the summit. Not visible from the highway are strange rock formations, caves, geode beds and colorful plants and lichens. The views of The Funerals, Grapevines, Panamints and Cottonwoods are superb. This moderately strenuous hike takes only a half day at most. This was shot in September 2017 when the temperature was in the high 90's.
Beatty Cutoff Road, Death Valley National Park Dashcam
Check out the drive from Beatty, Nevada, over Daylight Pass, then down Beatty Cutoff Road, ending at the Harmony Borax Works.
MyDrivelapse.com and Takemytrip.com provide driving videos and stories to help you plan your trip. Check out hundreds of videos on my YouTube channel. Subscribe if you like it! Dozens of new videos are on the way in the coming weeks.
I made this trip in March, 2016. Video shot with a Brinno TLC-200 Pro time-lapse camera, mounted on my roof with a homemade magnetic case. I travel with two Brinno cameras - one facing forward, the other in reverse. Sometimes the reverse camera captures better video (fewer raindrops and bugs hit the rear-view lens).
On Facebook!
Like for updates & great travel ideas
Photography:
---
Music Info:
Air Hockey Saloon
Candlepower
Artist: Chris Zabriskie
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Use:
The video used in this clip is copyrighted. You may NOT rip, reencode, download, rebroadcast, etc., on any platform without permission. You MAY embed this video on your website without permission. You MAY -- and really should -- post this video on your Facebook page, tweet it out, etc., and share it with your friends! If you'd like to use it in a non-commercial project, school project, etc. (for free), please contact me for permission.
Death Valley National Park, Mojave Desert, California, United States, North America
Death Valley is a desert valley located in Eastern California. Situated within the Mojave Desert, it is the lowest and driest area in North America. Death Valley holds the record for the highest recorded air temperature on Earth. Badwater Basin, located in Death Valley, is the point of the lowest elevation in North America at 282 feet (86 m) below sea level. This point is only 84.6 miles (136.2 km) east-southeast of Mount Whitney, the highest point in the contiguous United States with an elevation of 14,505 feet (4,421 m). Death Valley holds the record for the highest reliably reported temperature in the world, 134 °F (56.7 °C) at Furnace Creek on July 10, 1913. The previously-claimed world record air temperature, 136 °F (57.8 °C) in 'Aziziya, Libya, on September 13, 1922, has been officially deemed invalid by the World Meteorological Organization. Located near the border of California and Nevada, in the Great Basin, east of the Sierra Nevada mountains, Death Valley constitutes much of Death Valley National Park and is the principal feature of the Mojave and Colorado Deserts Biosphere Reserve. It is located mostly in Inyo County, California. It runs from north to south between the Amargosa Range on the east and the Panamint Range on the west; the Sylvania Mountains and the Owlshead Mountains form its northern and southern boundaries, respectively. It has an area of about 3,000 sq mi (7,800 km2). Death Valley shares many characteristics with other places below sea level. Death Valley is one of the best geological examples of a basin and range configuration. It lies at the southern end of a geological trough known as Walker Lane, which runs north into Oregon. The valley is bisected by a right lateral strike slip fault system, represented by the Death Valley Fault and the Furnace Creek Fault. The eastern end of the left lateral Garlock Fault intersects the Death Valley Fault. Furnace Creek and the Amargosa River flow through the valley but eventually disappear into the sands of the valley floor. Death Valley also contains salt pans. According to current geological consensus, during the middle of the Pleistocene era there was a succession of inland seas (collectively referred to as Lake Manly) located where Death Valley is today. As the area turned to desert the water evaporated, leaving behind the abundance of evaporitic salts such as common sodium salts and borax, which were subsequently exploited during the modern history of the region, primarily 1883 to 1907. Death Valley has a subtropical desert climate (Köppen: BWh), with long, extremely hot summers, mild winters, and little rainfall. As a general rule, lower altitudes tend to have higher temperatures where the sun heats the ground and that heat is then radiated upward, but as the air begins to rise it is trapped by the surrounding elevation and the weight of the air (essentially the atmospheric pressure) above it. The atmospheric pressure is higher at very low altitudes than it is under the same conditions at sea level because there is more air (more distance) between the ground and the top of the atmosphere. This pressure traps the heat near the ground, and also creates wind currents that circulate very hot air, thereby distributing the heat to all areas, regardless of shade and other factors. This process is especially important in Death Valley as it provides its specific climate and geography. The valley is surrounded by mountains, while its surface is mostly flat and devoid of plants, and of which a high percentage of the sun's heat is able to reach the ground, absorbed by soil and rock. When air at ground level is heated, it begins to rise, moving up past steep high mountain ranges, which then cools slightly, sinking back down towards the valley more compressed. This air is then reheated by the sun to a higher temperature, moving up the mountain again, whereby the air moves up and down in a circular motion in cycles, similar to how a convection oven works. This superheated air increases ground temperature markedly, forming the hot wind currents that are trapped by atmospheric pressure and mountains, thus stays mostly within the valley. Such hot wind currents contribute to perpetual drought-like conditions in Death Valley and prevent much cloud formation to pass through the confines of the valley, where precipitation is often in the form of a virga. Death Valley holds temperature records because it has an unusually high number of factors that lead to high atmospheric temperatures. The depth and shape of Death Valley influence its summer temperatures.
Deadman Pass Rd timelapse Death Valley CA Suburban 37 tires Las Vegas off road
Deadman Pass timelapse starting from SR127 just south of Death Valley Junction, driving through the pass itself and ending on Furnace Creek Wash Rd inside Death Valley.
The trail is tough to find, I started at the gig parking area where SR127 makes a turn, however a more direct trailhead is 100 yards south on SR127 from where I started.
Initially the trail is a fast fun wash with a couple dips where I slowed down to 5mph, after the pass the trail resumes the fun factor for 1/2 mile and the rest is constant slowing for never ending dips all the way to Furnace Creek Wash Rd.
I ran my 37 tires at 15psi and other then the 2ft deep dips was able to run very smooth and quick.
2000 K1500 Suburban
37 tires
3 body lift
AFP coil over conversion
Beatty Cutoff Road, into Death Valley
Enjoy this drive into Death Valley, starting in Beatty, Nevada, then over Daylight Pass and onto Beatty Cutoff Road, then Furnace Creek, and finally, Zabriskie Point.
MyDrivelapse.com and Takemytrip.com provide driving videos and stories to help you plan your trip. Check out hundreds of videos on my YouTube channel. Subscribe if you like it! Dozens of new videos are on the way in the coming weeks.
I made this trip in March, 2016. Video shot with a Brinno TLC-200 Pro time-lapse camera, mounted on my roof with a homemade magnetic case. I travel with two Brinno cameras - one facing forward, the other in reverse. Sometimes the reverse camera captures better video (fewer raindrops and bugs hit the rear-view lens).
On Facebook!
Like for updates & great travel ideas
Photography:
---
Music Info:
Jellyfish in Space
Artist: Kevin Macleod
Licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license (
Use:
The video used in this clip is copyrighted. You may NOT rip, reencode, download, rebroadcast, etc., on any platform without permission. You MAY embed this video on your website without permission. You MAY -- and really should -- post this video on your Facebook page, tweet it out, etc., and share it with your friends! If you'd like to use it in a non-commercial project, school project, etc. (for free), please contact me for permission.