Friday, July 07, 2023

Check Out One of Northern Nevada's Special Surprises: Fly Geyser

Fly Geyser (Photo courtesy of Sydney Martinez/Travel Nevada)

  Fly Geyser, located on the edge of the Black Rock Desert, about an hour-and-a-half north of Reno, is one of those unexpected things you sometimes find in Nevada.

  Continuously spewing clouds of hot water about four or five feet high in the air, Fly Geyser is a remarkable sight when you first spot it from the nearby highway.

  The geyser, located on the Fly Ranch, consists of three, large travertine mounds, with a series of terraces around its base. In addition to the spraying hot water, the most impressive thing about the trio of tufa rock cones is their colors—rich, vivid shades of green and rust.

  The geyser, which is about 20 miles north of Gerlach via State Route 34, is located on private property but you can see the water plumes from the road. Adjacent is a small geothermal pond, fed by run off from the geyser.

  Perhaps the most interesting detail about Fly Geyser is the fact that it’s not really a natural phenomenon. The geyser was created accidentally in 1964, after a geothermal power company drilled a test well at the site.

  While the groundwater in the region turned out not to be sufficiently hot to be tapped for geothermal power, it did have a temperature of more than 200 degrees.

  According to later newspaper reports, the well was either left uncapped or was improperly plugged. In either case, the scalding hot water was allowed to shoot from the well hole and calcium carbonate deposits began to form, growing several inches each year.

  Jump forward several decades, and those deposits have become large mounds taller than an average-sized man that rise out of a field of tall reeds and grasses.

  Scientists familiar with the geyser note that the green and reddish coloring on the outside of the mounds is the result of thermophilic algae, which flourishes in moist, hot environments.

  Interestingly, the set of circumstances that created Fly Geyser in 1964 apparently occurred at least one time before. In about 1917, a well was drilled a few hundred feet north of the geyser. This well was also abandoned and, over time, a massive 10 to 12-foot calcium carbonate cone formed.

  Today, no hot water flows from the older mound—a photo of which appeared on the cover of a late 1940s issue of Nevada Magazine. It is almost as if the earlier geyser dried up when water was diverted to the newer one.

  In 2016, the Fly Ranch was acquired by the non-profit Burning Man Project, which now offers limited public access tours to the geyser and surrounding wetlands. Docents accompany visitors in small groups (minimum 10) for a two-and-a-half-hour tour of the grounds, including artwork from Burning Man.

  Admission to the Fly Ranch Nature Walks is $40 for adults (children under 12 free) and reservations are required.

  For more information go to: https://blackrockdesert.ticketleap.com/2023-fly-ranch-nature-walks-saturday-morning-and-evening-walks/details.

   The closest community to Fly Ranch is the tiny town of Gerlach, which was established in 1909 as a station on the main line of the Western Pacific Railroad. It was named for the Gerlach Land and Cattle Company, part of the large Gerlach and Waltz Ranch, which was founded in the late 19th century by Louis Gerlach.

  It is also home of Bruno's Country Club, a roadside diner that serves up some homestyle meals, including a pretty awesome hamburger with home fries. Additionally, make sure to visit Planet X Pottery, a local pottery studio owned and operated by artists John and Rachel Bogard (https://www.planetxpottery.net/).


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