Utah Trip Fall 2001

Now it was the time to get serious on a Utah Trip. I am been all over California, and have had a bit of success but have yet to capture the jaw dropping color and composition that I have been working towards. I have taken several images that were interesting, but nothing that I have really been happy about.
In October, I took two weeks off, and spent one week on a house boat at Lake Powell with friends. Each afternoon I would hike out into the country looking for the right light. However, I was never able to find the images I was looking for. I found that I had some problems being on the wrong side of the lake, when the sun light began to soften.
After a week on the lake, I was finally able to relax from the office, and wind down. The second week of my trip was spent with my good friend John and his wife. John has been taking photographs for several years, but only began after I stopped. So this is the first time we have ever taken pictures together. A truly fine photographer, John has taught me much in the last year and has been instrumental in helping me develop my technique and style.
The Slot Canyons

Our first day was spent around page Arizona, We got ourselves organized, and headed off to Antelope Canyon. Each toting two cameras, several lenses, tripods, multiple rolls of film, we jumped on a Native American truck and drove up the road to Upper Antelope Canyon. Upper Antelope is a truly amazing place, and I consider myself fortunate to have visited this place.
The light at midday was inspiring and I found it difficult to shoot as I was just content to look. However, after a quick walk through the canyon we went to work with the cameras with some good results. The only negative thing that I could say about Upper Antelope Canyon, was that it has become quick popular, and was rather crowded. There was only 25 people or so in the canyon, and this may not seem like many, but when you are in a canyon that is only 3 feet wide, you are constantly moving and relocating to let someone pass.
Lower Antelope canyon is just across the road from Upper Antelope, but could not have been more different. Upper Antelope is known for it’s Grandeur, Lower Antelope Canyon is a much more intermit place to visit. The whole time that we were there, we only saw two other people. I could not have planned it better. Lower Antelope canyon starts literally as a small crack in a river bed. It opens up into one of the prettiest places on earth. Words can not do it justice, and the images that can be capture are beyond description. Hours past in an instant
Escalante & Bryce
After leaving Page Arizona, we head North West on our Utah trip, and took a dirt shortcut up to Bryce. We spent the next day exploring Escalante Canyon. We got a late start, and we did not really have a good plan of attack for Escalante Canyon. I took some good shots of around Calf Creek Falls.
Zion
I had not been to Zion in many years. It had been so long, that I was not too sure what to expect. However, John knew exactly where to go, and had previously obtained all the back country permits. Our Utah trip was made when we discovered that we would be in the same valley as one of our mutual influences. We hiked down into the small river canyon that contain our goal. A tubular structure carved into the canyon wall known as the subway. The nine mile hike into the subway is strewn with a lot of boulder hoping along a “trail” that is missing most the time. It was rough going, but was truly worth the effort. Leading up to the subway itself is a series of cascades. It was on these cascades that John and I met the man who has so influenced our work.
After a quick lunch we started shooting the water falls, and let the other photographer work further up the valley unimpeded. Although careful, I quickly was completely soaked with water from the knees down. Continuing up the canyon, we found our goal, the subway itself. Standing in near freezing water, for hours at a time had its toll, but the time continued to fly by. However, the longer we waited the better the light became.
After just four short hours we had to leave. The climb out of the canyon is steep up a heavily eroded trail that is best navigated with some remaining light.
The next two days were spent relaxing a bit. On the hike out of the subway, I aggravated an old knee injury, and my knee had quickly swollen and became painful. It was worth it though. I captured some good photographs, and met one of my influences out in the field, doing what we both love. Truly a great Utah trip.
Boulder Beach Campground

Located within 45 minutes to the Las Vegas strip, Boulder Beach Campground offers a camping opportunity near the shore of beautiful Lake Mead. The campground is located on a bluff overlooking the shoreline and Lake Mead. The campground offers views of the lake and amazing sailing, boating, fishing, swimming, fishing and hiking trails.
This is a year round campground which offers group camps, tent and RV Accommodations. During the summer moths the desert heat can be a factor, so be sure to plan ahead. Each site is equipped with fire rings and tables and palm trees may offer a break from the sun. Due to the location of the campground and the lower lake levels, the beach is located a bit further than normal.
Boulder Beach provides quick access to Hoover Damn, the Hoover Damn Bypass Bridge, the Visitor Center. The River Mountains Loop Trail and the Historic Railroad Trail provide are quick hikes which are also located near by.
The weather can vary from freezing temperatures in the winter months with summer heat the temperature of easily capable of over 110 degrees Fahrenheit. This is a first come first serve campground
Campground Summary
| Name | Boulder Beach Campground |
| Location | Lead Mead, Clark County, Nevada |
| Latitude, Longitude | 36.036901,-114.802604 |
| Elevation | 1,280 feet |
| Sites | 154 |
| Ammenities | Tables, Fire Rings, Water, Bathrooms, |
Campground Map
Resources
Marietta Nevada – Mineral County Ghost Town
Marietta is a historic ghost town in Mineral County, Nevada, located in the Excelsior Mountains at approximately 38°14′36″N 118°20′19″W and an elevation of about 4,947 feet (1,508 meters). Situated southeast of Hawthorne near the alkali flats of Teel’s Marsh (also spelled Teel’s Marsh), it was never a typical Nevada boomtown fueled primarily by gold or silver. Instead, its economy centered on non-metallic minerals—first salt and then borax—extracted from the nearby dry lakebed. Founded in the late 1870s, Marietta grew rapidly as a supply and processing hub but declined sharply in the 1890s when richer deposits were found elsewhere. Today, it stands as a near-abandoned site of stone and adobe ruins, including remnants of F.M. “Borax” Smith’s company store. Since 1991, the surrounding 68,000-acre area has been designated the nation’s only federally managed Wild Burro Range by the Bureau of Land Management (BLM), home to roughly 78–104 wild burros descended from those used by 19th-century miners.
The town’s story reflects broader patterns of Nevada’s mining history: rapid boom driven by resource extraction, isolation-fueled lawlessness, economic vulnerability to distant market shifts, and a lingering legacy in the form of feral animals and occasional modern exploration.
Early Exploration and Salt Mining (1860s–Early 1870s)
Prospecting in the Marietta Mining District (sometimes called the Silver Star District) began in the 1860s, making it the third-oldest mining district in Mineral County. Initial activity focused on small-scale silver, lead, copper, and gold claims in the surrounding ranges, though these yielded limited results compared to neighboring camps like Candelaria and Belleville.
By around 1867, attention shifted to the vast alkali deposits at Teel’s Marsh, a seasonal dry lake about two miles south of the future townsite (roughly 5 miles long, 1–2 miles wide, and covering about 6 square miles). Salt (sodium chloride) was scraped from the surface and transported—primarily by mule teams, though some accounts (disputed by historians) mention camel trains—to chlorination mills in Virginia City, Aurora (Nevada), Bodie (California), and other Comstock-era operations. Salt was essential for processing silver and gold ore at the time. These early operations supplied distant mills but did not yet support a permanent settlement.
Borax Discovery, Town Founding, and Boom Period (1872–Early 1890s)

The pivotal event came in 1872 when Francis Marion “Borax” Smith (often called F.M. Smith) and his brother J.P. Smith, while working salt fields in nearby Columbus, identified rich borate deposits (including ulexite) in Teel’s Marsh. They staked claims across much of the marsh and began large-scale scraping and processing. Crude borax was hauled roughly 115–130 miles north to railheads like Wadsworth by large freight teams (in 1875, 28 teams of 16 horses each were reportedly engaged). The Smith brothers formed the Teels Marsh Borax Company, a precursor to larger entities that eventually controlled much of the world’s borax market. Borax, previously a niche pharmaceutical import from Europe, was marketed by Smith as an abrasive cleaner, expanding demand dramatically.
Marietta was formally established as a town in 1877 (some sources note informal settlement as early as 1872). It quickly grew into a functional community with a post office (established July 1877), a newspaper, a company store owned by the Smith brothers, general mercantiles, and other businesses. Population peaked around 1880 at several hundred residents (exact counts are uncertain due to untracked Chinese laborers who worked the marsh and plants). At its height, the town boasted 13 saloons, stone and adobe structures, a stamp mill (erected early on), and supported intermittent metal mining in the hills above. Borax plants on the southeast edge of Teel’s Marsh produced up to six tons daily at times, operating seasonally for about eight months a year.
Marietta was notably isolated and lawless, even by Old West standards. As a mostly male camp, it suffered frequent robberies—the stage line was reportedly held up 30 times in 1880 alone, including four times in one week. A notorious 1880s gunfight between rival factions (involving figures like Tom McLaughlin and the Brophy brothers) left four men dead in a domestic dispute that escalated into street violence. Despite the chaos, the borax and salt operations proved lucrative, tying Marietta into the regional economy alongside nearby boomtowns.
Decline and Abandonment (1890s–Early 1900s)
Marietta’s prosperity lasted roughly 15–20 years but proved unsustainable. By the late 1880s, borax prices fell, operations slowed, and Chinese laborers (who had leased some works) abandoned the site amid illness in 1891. The decisive blow came in 1892 when vastly richer colemanite deposits were discovered in Death Valley, California. F.M. Smith relocated his operations southward, closing the Teel’s Marsh plants. With the primary industry gone, businesses shuttered, the post office closed (around 1881 in some records, though the town lingered longer), and most residents departed. By the early 1900s, Marietta was largely a ghost town, its wooden structures decaying and stone ruins left behind.
Intermittent Revivals and 20th-Century Mining (1900s–1960s)
Metal mining in the surrounding district continued sporadically. The Endowment Mine (also known as part of the Marietta operations) produced significant silver-lead ore, contributing roughly $1.5 million (with some estimates higher) from the late 1800s into the early 1900s. District-wide output reached about $2 million by 1939, with over half from tungsten mined during World War I price spikes.
Brief revivals occurred in the 1930s with silver and gold prospecting (e.g., shipments from the Joe Rutty Mine and development at the Endowment property, plus a short-lived “Cloudburst” district claim in 1940). Small uranium discoveries in the 1950s–1960s sparked minor interest but never scaled up. Large-scale activity largely ended by 1956, though exploration persisted into the 1980s. A few caretakers and later industrial buildings reflect ongoing (mostly private) mineral work, but these did not revive the town.
Modern Status and Legacy
Today, Marietta consists of scattered ruins—most prominently the stone walls of Borax Smith’s general store, mill foundations, and debris from wooden structures—amid the arid landscape. A handful of modern dwellings and mobile homes house caretakers or private interests. The site is accessible via dirt roads off U.S. Highway 95 (part of the Free-Range Art Highway), but visitors are advised to use 4×4 vehicles, carry supplies, and avoid entering old mines or private property due to hazards.
The area’s most distinctive modern feature is its status as the Marietta Wild Burro Range, dedicated in 1991 (the 20th anniversary of the 1971 Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act). The burros, descendants of those brought by miners for hauling, roam freely among the ruins and marsh, numbering around 85–100. This makes Marietta a unique cultural and ecological site blending Nevada’s mining past with wild horse/burro preservation.
Marietta’s history underscores the fragility of resource-dependent towns in the American West. From salt and borax booms tied to F.M. Smith’s empire to its quiet endurance as a burro sanctuary, it remains a tangible link to Nevada’s 19th-century mining frontier. Sporadic modern exploration continues, but the town endures primarily as a ghost of its former self.
Marietta Trail Map
Marietta Personalities
Francis Marion Smith – “Borax Smith”Francis Marion "Borax" Smith Francis Marion Smith, also known as "Borax" Smith was a miner and business man who made a fortune in the hostile… |
References
French Camp Campground
Camping in the High Sierras is not as easy as it once was, however this fact offers one the ability to explore and remove oneself from their comfort zone. French Camp campground was the result of just this fact for me and as result, I found a little gem in the High Sierra.

On our last trip, we planned on visiting and exploring the High Sierra. Immediately, we planned on returning to Convict Lake. Perhaps Lake Mary or Twin Lakes Campground in Mammoth Mountain however all of these campgrounds where sold out for our time period. I did not want to relocate our campsite during the course of our trip.
Each campsite had quite a bit of room and the undergrowth was such that you did have a bit of privacy. There was a lot of trees to offer shade on a warm June day. Each location had a table and fire ring. The soil is sanding and this old campground has quiet a bit of soot and charcoal mixed into to it from years of fires. This could mean an interesting and frequent clean up period with children.
The flush bathrooms were centrally located and cleaned on a regulate basis. Rock creek ran along the northern side of the campground and allowed for easy creek access for fishing.
French Camp , like many High Sierra Campgrounds does have California Black Bear from time to time. During our stay, there was bear activity. One report had a bear come into camp while a family was having dinner. This bear apparently helped itself to several rolls while the family looked on.
French Camp Campground is just one a string the campgrounds along Rock Creek. The campground host at French Camp was a very personable man, who did a great job keeping the place clean and greeting the campers.
Directions
From Bishop go north on Hwy 395 approximately 23 miles to Tom’s Place. Turn southwest on Rock Creek Road and go approximately one mile to the campground on the right.
Campground Summary
| Campground Name | French Camp |
| Latitude, Longitude | 37.552500, -118.679167 |
| Sites | 86 |
| Elevation | 7200 ft |
| Ammenities | Bear Boxes, Fire rings, Table, Flust Toilets, Shower, Water, Camp host |
French Camp Trail Map
Mojave Mound Cactus ( Echinocereus mohavensis )

The Mojave Mound Cactus ( Echinocereus mohavensis ) is a cactus of many names and it also known as the claret cup cactus, hedgehog and kingcup cactus. It is native to the desert southwest of the united states and parts of Mexico. The cactus can be found in a variety of habitats including rocky slopes, scrub, low desert and mountain woodland.
This is a small barrel shaped cactus, which will range in color between light green and bluish green stems. As the name implies, this is a mounding cactus with may form up to 500 cylindrical stems with create a bulbous mound. This low lying cactus only grows to about 16 inches in height, while is clusters of spines can grow up to 1.5 inches long.
The funnel shaped waxy flowers range in color from orange to red to a dull scarlet color. The plant is commonly found at altitudes of 3500 to 9000 feet in elevation. This beautiful little cactus is known to locate Joshua Tree National Park, the Mojave Desert and parts of Nevada.
This delightful specimen was found in the spring on the Pine Nut trail about 50 miles outside of Las Vegas, nestled among from boulders.
