NavList:
A Community Devoted to the Preservation and Practice of Celestial Navigation and Other Methods of Traditional Wayfinding
Another time zone oddity [long]
From: Dan Allen
Date: 2004 Nov 9, 22:40 -0700
From: Dan Allen
Date: 2004 Nov 9, 22:40 -0700
The boundary between the Mountain and Pacific time zones generally follows state boundaries, e.g., the Utah/Nevada border is one such dividing line, but in the Idaho/Oregon area, there is something quite puzzling... Drive north from Winnemucca Nevada up into Oregon on highway 95. When you cross the NV/OR border at McDermitt, the time zone is still Pacific time, like all of Nevada. In fact most of Oregon is in the Pacific time zone. Continue on into Oregon travelling north. This is an amazing stretch of country. It is like America's Outback. Let me describe what it is like: in a word, desolate. Many valleys are untouched except for skinny highway 95, a two lane road, one lane each way. There are no power lines, no telephone lines, no dirt roads off to small ranches and the like, all of which are common in the rest of the Western US. This area would actually look today about what it would have looked like thousands of years ago. Totally unspoiled and unchanged. Scrub, dirt, rocks, sand, and volcanic rock is about all there is. There is very little wildlife, except for perhaps reptiles. Incidentally, highway 95 and this SE corner of Oregon are considered to be the most remote part of the Lower 48 states by National Geographic, as considered by this measure: the farthest distance from an Interstate highway. My metric is this: SE Oregon is 8 hours of driving without a McDonalds! (McDonalds are in Winnemucca NV to the south, John Day OR to the north, Ontario OR to the east, and Bend OR to the west.) Within this area is a lot of nothing. The only real town of any consequence is Burns OR, population 3064. Now as we drive through this open land we hit a VOR/DME station called the Rome VOR station. It is about 28 miles from the actual place known as Rome OR, which is too small to show up on the year 2000 census. Anyway, the road is all by itself until you are surprised by a white "milk bottle" shaped radio station out in such remote country. (VORs are for traditional aircraft navigation - there I got in traditional nav! ;-) This VOR reminds you of civilization, and then there is a road sign stating that you are now entering the Mountain time zone! One continues driving north about 20 miles with very little around, until the road divides at Burns Junction. One would think a store is at Burns Junction, but one would be wrong. One or two old abandoned homes and that is it. It is basically a place for highway 78 and highway 95 to join. Highway 95 makes a right hand turn to the east, but we continue on highway 78 NW toward huge Malheur Lake. One drives for miles without seeing anything other than scrub and volcanic rocks. And then, one sees a new road sign: "Pacific time zone". WHAT? The time zone changes back and forth in the space of about 40 miles. For no one! One drives into the time zone and then back out, and in that space of road there is not a single occupied dwelling, not a single establishment of any kind. And yet the time zone changes! It is quite a puzzle indeed. It appears that the northern four fifths of Oregon's Malheur County is in the Mountain time zone, but not the whole county. All of the rest of Oregon, including Burns, is in the Pacific zone. WHY would they change the time zone for 40 miles of highway driving? Anyway, if you want to see some wide open untouched places, try Southeast Oregon. Bring lots of food and water with you, and a full tank of gas. Dan Allen