Josh Jackson Josh Jackson

BLM Dispatch #24 - Granite Mountain Wilderness, California

I had it in mind to climb the mountain.

First week of July, first heat wave to knock on the door of the Eastern Sierra and sweep across the leftover snow like the opening of an oven. Even at eight thousand feet above the sea, temperatures flirt with ninety degrees. Sweat rolls down legs, out of armpits.

Winds at 1-2 miles per hour, imperceptible. Gnats bite incessantly.

Despite the heat, we decide to make a go of it. No trail to speak of. We meander around sage, switchback up steep sandy pitches, climb over sections of class 3 granite, and eventually summit in the early afternoon…

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Josh Jackson Josh Jackson

BLM Dispatch #22 - Highway 120 East

I was driving north on California’s Hwy 395, Mono Lake just about to come into view, when I spotted a road sign for Highway 120 pointing east toward Benton.

Until then, my only experience with 120 was heading west into Yosemite via Tioga Pass and Tuolumne Meadows.

I’d driven this stretch of the 395 dozens of times, always craning my head towards the range of light, staring at the formidable chain of Sierra Nevada peaks rising a mile high from the sagebrush covered foothills.

I’ve walked a hundred miles of that high country, mostly along sections of the Pacific Crest Trail. I’ve switchbacked over the passes, swum in icy lakes, camped in the meadows, and watched shooting stars rip across the sky. Each excursion brought adventure, but I never felt…what’s the word…comfortable? Peace?

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Josh Jackson Josh Jackson

BLM Dispatch #20 - My Evening With the Stallion

We made eye contact just as the last sliver of sun had dipped below the ridge. I had been wandering through a maze of sagebrush, pointing my camera in the general direction of west and north, studying shadows and watching the light slip upwardly along Granite Mountain.

That’s when I saw him.

Across the valley floor, a few hundred feet away, was a wild mustang. He was standing there motionless, like a statue, his head hanging in a posture that made him appear to be in a state of gratitude, as if he too had been appreciating the sunset. I was startled at first, not accustomed to seeing an animal five times my size. I scanned the surroundings for others, but he was as alone as I was.

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