Read more about Ballarat:
"Me lonely? Hell no! I'm half coyote and half wild burro." - Seldom
Seen Slim - epitaph on his grave marker.
It could be called a tale of two cities, one of which is seeing the best
of times and one that has sunk into what could be considered the worst of times.
Ballarat, Australia, steeped in gold mining history, is a popular tourist
destination and is prosperous and healthy.
Ballarat, California is slowly melting into the landscape. Poured adobe buildings
and a few weathered wooden structures are all that remain at the base of the
colorful Panamint Mountains. Abandoned trailers and trucks dot the landscape
like rusted ornaments on a dried-out Christmas tree.
One truck, a 1942 Dodge power wagon, belonged to Charlie Manson family member
and convicted murderer Tex Watson. Visitors Kathleen and Rick Ortega posed in
front of the truck for photographs on a recent late winter day feeling a cold
chill that was not from the crisp wind.
The tale of Ballarat is that of a boom and bust kind of town. Never much to
begin with, after the death of one of its more colorful residents, Seldom Seen
Slim, Ballarat continued its decline into what it is today.
Named after the Australian gold camp by young Australian immigrant George
Riggins, Ballarat was created in 1897 as a supply post when the Ratcliff Mine
opened in Pleasant Canyon. By 1899 the town had 400-500 residents as well as
a Wells Fargo Station, post office, school, jail, hotels and several saloons.
After the mine closed down in 1905, Ballarat began to die. And when the post
office closed in 1917, the town ceased to formally exist.
Located in the Panamint Valley north of Trona and just outside Death Valley
National Park, Ballarat is visited by the occasional wild burro - and people
who love exploring the nearby rocky canyons. Spring, winter and fall are the
best times to visit as 120-degree summer temperatures rival those of Death Valley.
Hiking and other outdoor activities are difficult in the heat if not downright
dangerous.
The only residents are Rock Novak, 51, and his dad George, 85. George is a
teller of tales with startling blue eyes and a full head of hair under a black
cowboy hat. Rock describes himself as a "lonely caretaker" looking
for love - always hoping to find someone who will share his life, love of the
desert and fondness for local history.
The Novaks are hard rock miners who run the little store and museum in the
privately-owned ghost town. They lovingly look after the cemetery and entertain
visitors with historical stories of Ballarat and the surrounding mountains' mining
lore.
Sharing a cold soda at sunset with Rock and George on the store verandah,
visitors can perhaps catch an impromptu airshow of fighter planes from nearby
China Lake as they buzz the valley. Or they can see freshly panned gold flakes.
The two men share their knowledge of local geology and gossip about the "Rainbow
Chasers" - prospectors whose names are legendary in the annals of Mojave
Desert history.
After the post office closed in 1917, a few legendary Death Valley old-timers
stuck around, like Seldom Seen Slim (born Charles Ferge), who lived most of his
life in Ballarat scouring the surrounding desert for minerals. Assayer Fred Grey,
a 53-year resident of Ballarat, lived on the edge of the dry lake long after
the mines closed. Chris Wicht kept his saloon open catering to other desert rats
and wanderers.
The assay office is one of the most complete buildings still standing.
Shorty Harris, who discovered the rich Bullfrog strike, called himself a "singleblanket-jackass
prospector." He lived in the fading town off and on until his death in 1934.
Seldom Seen, who claimed he hadn't taken a bath in 20 years because water
was so scarce, lived in Ballarat until his death in 1968 - the last of the Rainbow
Chasers. He is buried in the cemetery - one of the few graves with a real marker
and not just a wooden cross with the name scoured off by the weather.
George said of Slim, "He got a lot of pictures of himself taken for someone
who was 'Seldom Seen' ."Many people visit Ballarat to visit the grave of gold prospector 'Seldom Seen
Slim.'
Video on Ballarat to. Click Here
|
Follow DesertUSA