Great Basin has a mix of attractions above ground and below ground.
The underground world is Lehman Caves, a single cavern with a few rooms to explore. We took the 90-minute Grand Palace tour that gets you as far into the cave as you can go.
J & I seem to be cave junkies. If there is a cave, we must explore it. We've only been in 9 or so caves, which isn't really a lot considering there are 170+ commercial caves throughout the U.S. But they all seem to mesmerize us.
Typically, it's the same old thing--stalagmites, stalagtites, popcorn, draperies and a few other formations. But we learned a few new cave vocabulary words in Lehman. One is a shield, which is rare and unexplained in caves. It's almost like a flattened, circular plate. I found it to be particularly fascinating.
Besides cave exploring, there are high mountains to climb, alpine lakes to view and bristlecone pine trees (the oldest living trees!!) to marvel. We stayed overnight at the Wheeler Peak Campground, up at 9,886 feet and only did the 2.7-mile Alpine Lakes Trail. Justin really wanted to climb to the top of Wheeler Peak (13,063 feet), but in the interest of time, we couldn't (do you sense my disappointment?).
The view from bed was not bad!
We're not at all disappointed that we need to return to Great Basin NP!
I used to work there! I led cave tours and bristle cone pine walks. Yet I only climbed Wheeler once. Meh. It's a nice view but unless you are really into summits, it's mostly a slog to a windswept peak.
ReplyDelete