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The author with a 3,200-year-old tree
The author with a 3,200-year-old tree
63 Parks Traveler

See Some of the World’s Oldest Trees at Great Basin

While most bristlecone pines are between 2,000 and 3,500 years old, a special few can live to be nearly 5,000鈥攁nd they're easily found in this area of Nevada. It's our 62 Parks Traveler's 17th stop on her journey to visit every U.S. national park in a year.

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The author with a 3,200-year-old tree

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62 Parks Traveler聽started with a simple goal: to visit every U.S. national park in one year. Avid backpacker and public-lands nerd聽聽saved up, built out a tiny van to travel and live in, and hit the road. The parks as we know them are rapidly changing, and she聽wanted to see them before it鈥檚 too late.

Pennington has returned to traveling and is committed to following CDC guidelines during the COVID-19 pandemic to ensure the safety of herself and others. She鈥檚 visiting new parks as they open and closely adhering to best safety practices.


Visiting Great Basin National Park in eastern Nevada is like teleporting from the arid desert to the high alpine in a matter of minutes. After a six-hour drive along Highway 50, dubbed 鈥渢he loneliest road in America,鈥 I cruised through the tiny town of Baker, then found myself transported into a lush pine forest.

I took a sharp right onto Wheeler Peak Scenic Drive and parked among the bright聽marigold-colored balsamroot聽blooms near Upper Lehman Creek Campground. A brisk wind occasionally tussled my hair as I packed up my things to hike. It was going to be a long day.

Not five minutes after I started聽on the trail, I passed a ranger doing maintenance work. 鈥淵ou going up?鈥 he hollered. 鈥淣ot all the way,鈥 I replied, 鈥淛ust hiking to the bristlecones.鈥

鈥淭hat鈥檚 like 5.5 miles each way!鈥 he said. 鈥淚 know! It鈥檚 gonna be great,鈥 I replied. Eleven miles of pristine wilderness and not another car or hiker in sight鈥擨 was in heaven.

I set off聽beneath聽a canopy of Englemann spruce聽and ponderosa pine, the rushing water of Lehman Creek punctuating the silence. In three and a half聽miles, I was eating lunch on a park bench with a perfect view of Wheeler Peak, Great Basin鈥檚 most notorious mountain, standing at an elevation of 13,065 feet.

As I walked聽through the closed campground at 10,000聽feet, I bumped right into the same ranger I saw that morning. 鈥淵ou made it!鈥 He said. 鈥淭he Bristlecone聽Trailhead鈥檚 right over there.鈥

That鈥檚 when the day took a left turn from casual stroll into full-blown adventure. I quickly became one of only two sets of footprints pushing uphill through the patchy聽May snow. Half a mile in, I was the only set. Breaking through thigh-deep,聽snowy sludge made for slow going on a trail that was supposed to be a mellow 2.8-mile jaunt into the ancient forest. It took me 30 minutes to go a quarter-mile.

Ever the stubborn hiker, I persisted, and eventually聽I found myself in a grove of giants, nestled under the craggy pinnacles of Wheeler Peak鈥檚 cirque. It was so聽worth it.

Great Basin is one of very few聽places where visitors can get up close to the oldest trees on the planet. While most bristlecone pines are between 2,000 and 3,500 years old, a special bunch can live to be nearly 5,000.

I placed my hand on the ragged trunk of one of these timeless beings and took a deep breath. This tree has lived through the rise and fall of Julius Caesar,聽a civil war, and the French Revolution,聽I thought. What I wouldn鈥檛 give for a bit of their perspective, especially during a year like this.

Suddenly, the temperature dropped over ten degrees in just five minutes, and a light snow began to fall. Not wanting to get caught in a storm, I leapt聽to my feet and rushed down the mountain to my cozy little van. I was thinking of my silent conversation with the tree the whole way.

62 Parks Traveler Great Basin Info

Size: 77,100 acres

Location: Eastern Nevada

Created In: 1922 (Lehman Caves National Monument), 1986 (Great Basin National Park)

Best For: Stargazing, hiking, caving, backpacking, peak bagging, car camping

When to Go: Summer (48 to 86 degrees) and fall (26 to 75 degrees) offer the best conditions for snow-free hiking in moderate temperatures. Spring (24 to 66 degrees) is less busy and might have road closures up high, while winter (18 to 44 degrees) is best avoided. (Temperatures聽listed here were taken at about 7,000 feet.)

Where to Stay: The stunning Wheeler Peak Campground is closed for the 2020 season, but the offers a lower-elevation option鈥7,300 feet鈥攖ucked into a dense pine forest, with plenty of privacy between sites.

Mini 国产吃瓜黑料:聽Tour Lehman Caves, then hike the聽Bristlecone聽Trail. Though the caves were closed when I visited, they鈥檝e been a fan favorite and a staple of the park for nearly a century. I recommend starting your day with a morning tour (if available), then driving up to the 2.8-mile Bristlecone Trail for an afternoon hike when it warms up.

Mega 国产吃瓜黑料: Summit Wheeler Peak. In summer and fall, once the snow has melted, a summit attempt of this mountain聽is one of the park鈥檚 great thrills. It鈥檚 a steep聽eight-mile round-trip, with over 3,000 feet of elevation gain, but the 360-degree views at the top make all the leg burn worth it.

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