Inland Valley Daily Bulletin

Kayakers paddle in Death Valley after rains replenish lake in one of Earth’s driest spots

- By Ty O’neil, John Locher and Stefanie Dazio

DEATH VALLEY NATIONAL PARK >>

Kayakers have been paddling in one of the driest places on Earth after a series of record rainstorms battered California’s Death Valley and replenishe­d Lake Manly.

Park Ranger Nichole Andler said Badwater Basin at Death Valley National Park, which runs along part of central California’s border with Nevada, “is normally a very beautiful, bright white salt flat.”

This year, it is a lake. In the past six months, Death Valley has received more than double its average annual rainfall amount, recording more than 4.9 inches compared with a typical year that gets about 2 inches. Temperatur­es at or above 130 Fahrenheit have only been recorded on Earth a handful of times, mostly in Death Valley.

Badwater Basin is the lowest point in North America at 282 feet below sea level and has been a favored spot for tourists to take selfies and briefly walk along the white salt flats ringed by sandy-colored mountains.

“It’s the lowest point in North America. So it’s going to collect water, but to have as much water as we have now — and for it to be as deep and lasting as long as it has — this is extremely uncommon,” Andler said. “If it’s not once-in-a-lifetime, it’s nearly.”

Andler said kayakers should come soon since water levels are expected to drop in a matter of weeks, though the lake “will probably be here into April. If we’re lucky, May. And then it’ll be a muddy, wet mess, and then it’ll dry out into those gorgeous white salt flats.”

On Thursday, Heather Gang of Pahrump, Nevada, and her husband, Bob, were among hundreds of visitors playing in the water. Most waded into the lake, though the couple and others paddled where the water reached up to about a foot deep in parts.

“It’s a once-in-a-lifetime opportunit­y to kayak Lake Manley,” Heather Gang said.

It was a sharp contrast to the Death Valley of the past where they figured they had once stood around the same spot and looked at the chalky salt flats for as far as the eye could see.

The couple have been eyeing the lake’s evolution ever since last year’s storms started filling the lake. In the fall, they drove out to see it reemerge as a lake but they said it wasn’t deep enough for kayaks like now. This time the water reached up to the boardwalk.

The lake, which is currently about 6 miles long and 3 miles wide, is still nowhere near its original state thousands of years ago after it formed during the Ice Age and covered a significan­t part of the park and was several hundred feet deep.

Bob Gang said he had heard the lake had filled up to the point that boaters could go on it about 20 years ago, so he didn’t want to miss out on the experience this time.

“It’s a lot of fun,” said Bob Gang, who gave a girl a ride on his kayak. “It’s good to see the little kids out here enjoying this and seeing something totally unique.”

It could be another 20 years before boaters return, he added, but “with climate change, who knows, maybe this will be the normal.”

Guo Yu, an assistant research professor of hydrometeo­rology at the Nevadabase­d Desert Research Institute, said the lake’s size is a “simple natural phenomenon.”

It’s linked to a wet winter from a strong El Niño — a natural and occasional warming of part of the Pacific Ocean that can lead to more precipitat­ion than usual in California — plus climate change, which brings more intense atmospheri­c rivers to the area more frequently, Yu said.

Scientists need to study Lake Manly now, he said, to see if they can harness the water for other uses in the future, such as drinking water throughout the dry Southwest.

For now, friends Trudell Artiglere and Sheri Dee Hopper of Las Vegas will enjoy paddling through the lake. At the end of the day, Artiglere said, their salt-encrusted kayaks looked like “glazed doughnuts.”

 ?? TY ONEIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A paddle boarder tows an inflatable unicorn on a temporary lake in Death Valley on Thursday in Death Valley National Park. A series of storms has brought more than double the park’s average annual rainfall in the past six months.
TY ONEIL — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A paddle boarder tows an inflatable unicorn on a temporary lake in Death Valley on Thursday in Death Valley National Park. A series of storms has brought more than double the park’s average annual rainfall in the past six months.

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