Image:Ridge Route rockslide.jpg

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Ridge Route, rockslide.jpg courtesy of avnative

Public domain This file has been released into the public domain by the copyright holder, its copyright has expired, or it is ineligible for copyright. This applies worldwide.
Warning sign Note: This tag is deprecated! Please use instead:
  • {{PD-old}} (for works out of copyright where the author has been dead for over 100 years),
  • {{PD-art}} (for photos of old paintings),
  • {{PD-ineligible}} (for trivial work),
  • {{PD-USGov}} (for work by the U.S. government),
  • {{PD-US}} (for work that is public domain for the U.S. only),
  • {{PD-self}} (if the uploader releases the rights),
  • {{PD-user|user}} (if another user released his/her rights).
  • If the work is PD for another reason, check the copyright tag page or use {{PD-because|reason}}.


This was the most significant rockslide encountered on the Ridge Route as it was traveled upon Saturday, August 21, 2004. Looking north.

In inclement weather such as rain or even snow, rockslides and/or mudslides on the Ridge Route - and in Southern California generally - increase in mountain areas such as this one. Because there is no maintenance done on the Angeles National Forest controlled portion of the Ridge Route (excepting US Forest Service help in keeping the road passable), bringing a shovel along to move rockslides and/or mudslides could prove a wise decision for today's traveler here. Ridge Route scholar and advocate Harrison Scott has written of almost being immobilized in a mudslide while traveling the 17 mile Forest controlled section.

Truckers, who in the Ridge Route's heyday rarely had air brakes on their vehicles, suffered with largely inadequate mechanical brakes. To slow their trucks down, drivers would sometimes brush the side of the hills en route to regain control - the alternative was to careen over the ridge and become part of the Ridge Route's well known "junkyards" as they were called then. Photo from private collection of avnative.

Commons
This picture/multimedia file is now available on Wikimedia Commons as Image:Ridge Route rockslide.jpg.

Images which have been tagged with this template may be deleted immediately after satisfying these conditions (CSD I8).

File history

Legend: (cur) = this is the current file, (del) = delete this old version, (rev) = revert to this old version.
Click on date to download the file or see the image uploaded on that date.


No pages on the English Wikipedia link to this file. (Pages on other projects are not counted.)