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Little Finland
Location: Nevada Desert

by Robert Hitchman, Photograph America

 

 

Photo of rock formations at Little Finland in the Nevada desert by Bob Hitchman
© 2011 Robert Hitchman.  All Rights Reserved.
 

A Wide View
 

Nikon D300s | 13mm Focal length | 1/25  sec. at f/20

 

A strange red sandstone landscape, called Little Finland, is fourteen miles east of Nevada’s Valley of Fire State Park in a remote part of the Nevada desert.  Four-wheel-drive is recommended, but a high-clearance vehicle will take you there.  If you love photographing the deserts of the Southwest, add this place to your list.


Little Finland is on BLM (Bureau of Land Management) property. There are no entry fees and you do not need a permit for the area or to camp at the end of the road. Purchase the USGS 7.5 minute topo map called Devil’s Throat, Nev. Pack a compass and a GPS receiver if you have one. Pack lenses from 10 mm wide-angle to a 300 mm telephoto.

 


Photo of rock formations at Little Finland in the Nevada desert by Bob Hitchman
© 2011 Robert Hitchman.  All Rights Reserved.

 

Wolf
 

Nikon D300s | 16mm Focal length | 1/160 sec. at f/8

 

Bring a friend along with a second high-clearance vehicle. Four-wheel-drive, all-terrain tires, full gas tanks, and radios for communication between vehicles are also recommended. Pack a towrope and a lunch. Do not attempt this all-day exploration on a rainy or windy day. Avoid high summer temperatures. Late autumn or early spring has the best weather.
 

Eighty miles northeast of Las Vegas on Interstate 15, take the Riverside/Bunkerville Exit. Stop at the bottom of the hill and reset your trip odometer to zero. Drive south three miles to a bridge over the Virgin River. On the south side of the river, turn right onto the first paved side road you come to. This is called the Gold Butte Road. The next twenty-four miles are paved. Stay on the pavement. When you reach the center of large red rock formations called Whitney Pockets, the pavement ends. Your odometer should read 23.7 miles.

 

 

Photo of rock formations at Little Finland in the Nevada desert by Bob Hitchman

© 2011 Robert Hitchman.  All Rights Reserved.
 

Mom & Pup
 

Nikon D300s | 45mm Focal length  
1/100 sec. at f/20

Photo of rock formations at Little Finland in the Nevada desert by Bob Hitchman

© 2011 Robert Hitchman.  All Rights Reserved.

 

Hood Ornament
 

Nikon D300s | 18mm Focal length
1/20 sec. at f/18


 

Photo of rock formations at Little Finland in the Nevada desert by Bob Hitchman 
© 2011 Robert Hitchman.  All rights reserved.
 

Snarl
 

Nikon D300s | 43mm Focal length | 1/15 sec. at f/22

 

 

Keep driving down Mud Wash for another two miles beyond the corral and you will come to the opening of another wash, entering Mud Wash, on your right.

N 36˚27’49”  W 114˚14’02”

 

Turn right, and drive up this other wash that almost reverses your direction for one mile. You’ll see two more trail markers. One to the left is marked “Dead End” and the other is marked “Designated Route.” Follow the tracks to the right and, in a couple hundred yards, you’ll reach a wide spot in the wash where all the tire tracks loop around and head back down the same wash. Stop there.

N 36˚27’22”  W 114˚13’15”

 

After parking and gathering up all your camera gear, you can make the final, half-mile cross-country walk from the new parking area by heading east toward the highest point above the red hills in the distance.


 

Photo of rock formations at Little Finland in the Nevada desert by Bob Hitchman 
© 2011 Robert Hitchman.  All rights reserved.
 

Elephant Bird
 

Nikon D300s | 90mm Focal length | 1/160 sec. at f/9

 

 

If you are not sure which direction to walk, follow the old road along the bottom of the wash and you will soon walk between several vehicle barrier posts. In ten more minutes, you’ll reach a wide, flat parking area at the base of forty-foot high red rock cliffs above five palm trees. At the near end of the cliff is a steep jeep trail that climbs to the rim of the cliffs near an easily climbed “gate” in a barbed wire fence. Once over the wire, it’s a hundred-foot walk to the edge of the strangest examples of erosion you will ever discover.

N 36˚27’09” W 114˚12’53”

 

Be sure to include this part of the Nevada desert in your next trip to the southwest and see what creatures you can capture with your camera.
 

~~~~~~~

 


Bob Hitchman

 

Bob has had a life-long career in photography that started in 1957.   He majored in Industrial Arts in college and then served as a photographer and darkroom technician in the U.S. Army Signal Corps.  He then produced industrial and military training films for Raytheon Electronics, while showing and exhibiting his nature photo prints.  By the early 1980’s he was teaching color darkroom workshops, which expanded to field trips and photography workshops.  The workshops evolved into writing about his adventures and sharing as much as possible with others.  Photograph America Newsletter includes information gathered from these travels and from research trips on his own.

 


 

 

Photograph America Newsletter is a twelve-page travel newsletter published since 1989.  Issues describe in detail where to find and photograph desert slot canyons, autumn color, remote beaches, rain forests, spring wildflowers, hidden waterfalls, wildlife refuges.  This online shopping facility provides immediate downloads of PDF newsletters.

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