** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
Thoughts mostly about travel and places I have been. While a lot of my travel is into the backcountry backpacking or paddling I do my share of trips to more traditional front-country locations too. From time to time other items of note will appear that definitely fall outside the realm of travel and associated things. It is also worth noting that I am legally blind.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
I apologize for the dark spots in the lower left of some of the video. The protective skin I had on the iPhone covered a bit of the lens and that was easy to miss when shooting.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
Name: | Douglas Springs Trail to Bridal Reef Falls |
Date: | Dec 4, 2009 12:00 pm |
Distance: | 3.14 miles |
Elapsed Time: | 1:33:08 |
Avg Speed: | 2.0 mph |
Max Speed: | 3.5 mph |
Avg Pace: | 29' 37" per mile |
Min Altitude: | 2,682 ft |
Max Altitude: | 3,713 ft |
Start Time: | 2009-12-04T19:00:51Z |
Start Location: | |
Latitude: | 32.227363º N |
Longitude: | 110.650766º W |
End Time: | 2009-12-04T20:33:59Z |
End Location: | |
Latitude: | 32.235150º N |
Longitude: | 110.686851º W |
Click on this link to display the track in Google Maps. This link will be valid until Jan 3, 2010 3:34 PM PST.
"Douglas Springs Trail to Bridal Reef Falls.kmz" is a Google KMZ track that can be displayed in Google Earth or Google Maps.
"Douglas Springs Trail to Bridal Reef Falls.gpx" is an Open Standard track that can be displayed by select mapping software.
** Ken **
sweatwater Trail to Wasson Peak one way is about 4.6 miles. data gaps exist because I left GPS off. Also the minimum elevation is complely nuts. A more realistic numbervis about 2,500 feet. Footing is generally good even considering the loose rocks on the trail between the big wash and main intersection.
Name: | SweatwaterTrail to Wasson Peak |
Date: | Dec 3, 2009 9:34 am |
Distance: | 4.46 miles |
Elapsed Time: | 3:05:56 |
Avg Speed: | 1.4 mph |
Max Speed: | 3.8 mph |
Avg Pace: | 41' 43" per mile |
Min Altitude: | 0 ft |
Max Altitude: | 4,556 ft |
Start Time: | 2009-12-03T16:34:10Z |
Start Location: | |
Latitude: | 32.288686º N |
Longitude: | 111.120680º W |
End Time: | 2009-12-03T19:40:07Z |
End Location: | |
Latitude: | 32.273439º N |
Longitude: | 111.146720º W |
Click on this link to display the track in Google Maps. This link will be valid until Jan 3, 2010 3:30 PM PST.
"SweatwaterTrail to Wasson Peak.kmz" is a Google KMZ track that can be displayed in Google Earth or Google Maps.
"SweatwaterTrail to Wasson Peak.gpx" is an Open Standard track that can be displayed by select mapping software.
.
** Ken **We have been visiting this area around this time of year for the past decade. This year we saw very little water. The overflow just beyond the desert floor which last year was flowing briskly was bone dry. However, we found spots where pools still exist especially as we hiked down towsrds the tram road and along the road.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
Name: | Track 006-Phoneline Trail, Sabino Canyon |
Date: | Dec 2, 2009 10:44 am |
Distance: | 8.36 miles |
Elapsed Time: | 4:18:43 |
Avg Speed: | 1.9 mph |
Max Speed: | 3.9 mph |
Avg Pace: | 30' 58" per mile |
Min Altitude: | 248 ft |
Max Altitude: | 3,639 ft |
Start Time: | 2009-12-02T17:44:59Z |
Start Location: | |
Latitude: | 32.309530º N |
Longitude: | 110.823071º W |
End Time: | 2009-12-02T22:03:43Z |
End Location: | |
Latitude: | 32.310007º N |
Longitude: | 110.822611º W |
Click on this link to display the track in Google Maps. This link will be valid until Jan 1, 2010 6:33 PM PST.
There are three files attached to this email:
"Track 006-Phoneline Trail, Sabino Canyon.kmz" is a Google KMZ track that can be displayed in Google Earth or Google Maps.
"Track 006-Phoneline Trail, Sabino Canyon.gpx" is an Open Standard track that can be displayed by select mapping software.
"Track 006-Phoneline Trail, Sabino Canyon.jpg" is a picture attached to the track by Ken Knight
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
Could I have used my Gossamer Gear Maraposa? Sure, though I think it would have been less comfortable than the McHale Speed Bump as it has had a tendency to slip on my shoulders. I'd have shed 2 pounds going with the Maraposa but the extra comfort was worth it (I'll have to give the Marsposa another go sometime though).
The Miuntain Laurel Designs Trailstar worked quite well. It is spacious beyond compare for one hiker and no doubt a true gram weenie would balk at the trail weight of 25 ounces for shelter, stakes, lines, and 6x3' Tyvek floor. I don't think I'll ever set it up as fast as MLD claims it can be done. I know I have to work on getting a tight pitch. All that room meant I could be a bit less picky about site selection. Andy had to carefully site his Tarptent Squall so he and Konrad wouldn't slide all over the tent floor. I'd take this shelter again.
I think the coldest it ever got was mid to upper 30s. We had frost at Guirar Lake but only just a hint of it. My Golite Ultra 20 Quilt was more than enough. My Integral Designs Hot Socks kept my feet comfy. I never used the down balaclava funding my Possumdown Bernie sufficient the one time I used it at Guitar Lake camped cowbow style under the stars.
As for clothing it worked out just fine. Longsleeve Thorofare Shirt did fine service keeping the wind off and I didn't feel the lack of a more traditional windshirt like Anfy's Montane Featherlite (I've one of those too but it doesn't fit as well as the Thorofare). Nothing special about my other clothing. The Keen sandals were a definite hit though. The sandals worked very well especially when fording streams. As astute readers know I've a knack for not managing to cross streams without getting wet. The sandals let the water in and out and given the wonderfully dry climate things dried off quite quickly. While I don't think i'd wear the Keens on a trip on root and rock laden trails of the Midwest or East Coast on the less cluttered trails of the High Sierras they're keepers: at least when the weather is warm.
Food. Nothing special here. The buritos from Packit Gourmet were OK. My cheese and dry hot saussage were a good thing. The scones, as reported didn't work but that's because of my failure. I think Andy's beef and bean chili was a clear leader in our meals. If you're willing to put the time in for the home prep and time on trail to rehydrate ingedienrs you can do very well by your digestive needs. Just remember to bring a pot scrubber, a piece of onion bag works well, to clean your pot.
On the electronics front you have seen some of those results already. Everything you have seen and heard here has come from the iPhone 3GS. I recharged using the PowerMonkey. I didn't really use the solar cells to recharge the batterypack. I should have run tests. I know it works and works very slowly just not exactly how slowly. I also had my Samson Zoom H2 audio recorder which I very much like except for one thing: the on/off switch. Twice the switch ended up in the "on" position and my batteries drained away twice. Very annoying and it means I have much less high quality audio than I'd like. My aging Canon point-and-shoot 710IS worked as well as I could hope. Nothing special there. Finally, I had the Garmin Colorado 400t which we used to check we hadn't missed the turn for Big Arroyo Junction. I still think the display is lousy and signal acquisition times are woefully slow.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
We planned to take a more round about route back to the other car. Through desert and mountains we would drive pausing at a desert brewery with some tasty and some awful brews and so-so service. It was going to be a long drive since mountain roads are slow and twisty things. I bet after all was said and done we used up three extra hours getting to the grove with the Sherman tree because of how we decided to drive back. Not awful but a long day. Probably especially so for Andy who was doing funky things up front in the passenger seat to not get carsick. Adam was doing his best not to get tossed into me or Konrad.
After meandering through the park for longer than seemed needful but probably wasn't. We began the drive to Fresno. Campgrounds in the park were full and to be honest I was perfectly fine with this. Matt kept trying to get in touch with Jen to confirm she had managed to get Konrad, Andy, and I a great deal for a Las Vagas room (she had) and to find us a cheaper place in Fresno. Around 11:00PM we pulled into a Four Points and a very nice room awaited us. If doing it again I wish we could have shortened the drive maybe I'm just griping because it is tough to take part in conversations from the back at times.
See and download the full gallery on posterous
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
The alarm sounds. It is certainly colder. I have a bit of frost on the quilt. Heavenly bodies ate lower in the sky and nowhere bright enough to see by unaided. Signs of life from the others in our group as we pack up and maybe have a bite to eat before beginning our night hike to the trail junction with the spur trail to the summit of Whitney some 2.9 miles and 1,700 vertical feet above Guitar Lake.
On with the longjohn pants and puffy jacket. No doubt something will come off when we start to really climb. With Adam leading the way we began our assault on the trail. Darkness surrounded us and we just saw our small headlamp lit worlds. Once in a while a stationary light marked a campsite of some person or group who camped away the bustle, such as it was, of Guitar Lake. I suppose if you get set with water, unreliable after Guitar Lake though this morning we crossed much flowing water, you certainly could camp Brobdingnagian the lake a bit closer to the top of the mountain. The climbing grew steeper and pauses became a bit more frequent to rest. I wondervif anyone else really needed those breaks. But we were making progress. Now and then we would gaze back and see a trail of bobbing lights following our path. A train of orcs someone said. But nothing sinister here.
Slowly slowly slowly. The sky began to lighten. You could begun to see we had really gained serious ground. Guitar Lake became visible way off in the distance and granite crags nearby became more impressive. The swutchbacks, generally of quite good quality, continued. I plodded on with Matt keeping me company as we worked our way upward. I don't think we were ever terribly far from the others but I am sure the climb took more out of me than them. I was still not 100% and I had pretty much concluded that I would not make the final four mole roundtrip to summit. Maybe I could gave done it. No way I could do it as fast, or likely even close, as the others. If that makes me a wimp so be it.
It would take us all about three hours to reach the junction sign and find packs of folks who had already begun their summit attempt. The wide rogravel area with cliffs on one side falling away and a cliff on the other blocking any hope of sunshine for hours yet was windy and cold. Quite chilly. At least the others would be moving and staying warm. I just huddled at that spot under my sleeping quilt now and then chatting with the intrepid souls with more omph than I who were readying themselves for their climbs or who were coming back from frigid windy sunrise assaults. Very cold for me (yes in hindsight I should have begun my descent right away. I wasn't having significantmaltitude issues it was more my bowels and concern about being way too slow for the group).
Video shot near the end of the final switchbacks to the junction.
I can't believe I neglected to take a photo of the sign. I hope someone else did. Kiss the sign and feel proud because to get this far requires a good bit of work and the descent will be no cakewalk. I feel a bit bad that I've not done the summit but the mountain is not going anywhere. When the boys returned a bit before 11:00AM. Matt and Adam torrme off down the trail while the rest of us tore into my Boars Head sausage first. Then the climb to Trailcrest before the 99 switchbacks down to Trailcamp. Finally sunshine and warmth. The shivers we all had been experiencing faded away. Andy and Konrad pulled ahead and from a switchback below Andy called up to say let's just meet at Whitney Pirtal. Then they pulled ahead. I plodded on. The switchbacks are moderately rocky but the footing is actually not bad. That isn't too say this is an easy teail. It is not. Especially when the sun really begins to best down on you and everything heats up. Down down down. The turns slow me down. Big steps slow me down. A couple bathroom breaks slowed me down. Scores of people passed ne going down. Hordes passed me going up. How do the dayhikers do it? Their roundtrip is about 22 miles with something like 5,000 feet of elevation gain between the summit and Whitney Portal. You don't see them carrying much water let alone cold weather clothing for the top. But hundreds climb this sunbaked rocky trail.
I reached Trailcamp and its lake whose name I do not know at 1:00PM. It is a lovely deep blue lake with hard hot rocks surrounding it. Your most pleasant final campsite on this side of the mountain. Sure you could camp near Trailcrest but that'll be chilly and waterless. When I left this lake around 1:30PM I didn't know the toughest bit was yet to come.
The hike from Trailcamp enters a section of rocks that pour heat off of themselves. The trail, for me, was tougher here with less good footing. I feltvi did better on the previous section. Worse I managed to not really see the pretty lakes like Mirror Lake as I went by. Sure the spit by Outpost Creek a mile and change from Outpost camp was nice but this section was just hard. By this point in the afternoon the only people I was seeing going up were thise planning to camp. Many more scampered past me on their way down. Some I'd seen heading to the summit hours before. It would take 2.5 hours to reach Outpost camp.
That campsite certainly seems pretty enough. Being below treeline makes a world of difference. I passed some folks who recognized me from on high and continued the 3 plus miles down. Finally the footing improved but the trail seemed endless. Climbing up and bit then descending and leveling out as it came to the Lobe Pine Lake and Whitney Portal fork. You stroll a gravel path through lush forest with the sounds of Lobe Pine Creek (I assume) in your ears thinking I must be close. Then you see the mountain valley belie, way below, and you wonder. Switchbacks again. Good footing but I'm still slower than others and these things seem endless. Now and then I would heat a cat engine but it never seems to get closer. On abd on. A long seeming stretch. When I waded the North Fork of Lone Pine creek and passed the signs about permits and entering the John Muir Wilderness I felt I must be close. I was but it didn't feel like it. Just after 6:00PM I walked past the trailhead sign and utterly failed to get an iPhone snapshot to share with you. Minutes later I found the gang sipping drinks and tracking down a hotel for the night. They had been at the store for about 90 minutes. That store is staffed by very helpful people and the Mooseberger was something else ( couldn't quite finish it, remember my system was still not quite right, though better). What a haul this day turned out to be.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
Climbing open swutchbacks that would lead to more alpine forest and meadows. Good places for emergency bathroom breaks. Andy and Konrad passed me during such a pause. Oh joy. We mrched on past the sign telling us Crabtree Meadow was 4.4 mes away (I first went down the wrong path causing Andy to come back and look for me. We met at the sign as I was going to ask a backpacker where the proper trail was). More climbing. Walking open level bits baking in the sun. Hello , a pretty stream and a shaded hillside. Lunch spot! I broke out the Jalapeno Jack cheese and Sndy, who HD been dehydrating black beans and beef, fired up his stove for chili. Wonderful long lunch. People passed by and I can only hope they gazed longingly at us eating mouthwatering food.
At 2:00PM we hauled our butts into Crabtree. I was still feeling bowels issues and the pit toilet was my good friend there. Nice view too. It is a hot hike from the lunch stream to Crabtree. Even though it descends modestly but it felt like such a slog.
The last stretch to Guitar Lake was surprisingly easy if not straightforward. Sure at times I had to pause in a climb to catch my breath but I covered the distance more quickly than I thought I would and at times I was moving eTher slow on purpose. Guitar Lake looks like it deserves to be explored but unlike Andy and Konrad I didn't leave camp once I arrived. Adam and Matt had been there for hours trying to find shade amongst the rocks. They had dinner ready. I ate modestly and not long after the best alpinglow had faded, long before I bet the campers next door packed it in, I went too bed. After all, I thought we were to rise at midnight for a 1:00AM climb to Trailcrest intersection, 2.9 miles and some 1,700 feet above. Sleep was what I needed.
Photos are of Guitar Lake. You pass some other fine lakes on that trail nut I'm not sure you can camp at them. timberline Lake struck me as very pretty.
See and download the full gallery on posterous
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
We would leave Moraine Lake around sunrise. That might sound exceedingly early but it gave us the chance to dawdle at Kern Hot Springs and take our time strolling up the river valley later on and not bake too much in the heat. It would be a 14 mile day.
Matt and I would leave first with the sun dappling the forest and now and then blinding us. Colors shifted from dusky to vibrant as we passed Sky Meadow (sp) which is an enticing spot even though it is a dry lake. The hiking is not bad until you get to the big descent of the day down into the Kern river valley. Over the next couple miles you drop a couple thousand feet into even more verdent forest. Photo 1 gives just a hint of an idea. Around 9:00AM Matt and I had made it to the bottom. We hadn't stopped much. A photo here and there and moments to marvel at how deep the valley was and maybe for me to catch my breath.
As we walked through the forest amongst some big boulders we were leapfrogged by Adam, Andy, and Konrad. It isn't a race and we would be on their heels when we came out to a more open area with superb views of a long waterfall cascading off the cliffs from whence we had come. The cold Kern flowed off to one side and we strolled though a sandy wash across the bridge and then as I climbed into a new bit of forest I was callesmd by the others who were already settling into the hot and warm pools of Kern Hot Springs (video). We would hang out here for varying amounts if time with Adam and Matt leaving first, then me just before noon, and the rest a little later.
To the right and just above the rocks at the river's edge amid the grass and oozing warm mud is a reddish wood structure concealing a tub big enough for one that is full of water that is probably 110-114 degrees. Plenty darn hot. A metal bucket, with a hole in it, can be used too fetch cold water and you can plug the hot flow but the tub will always be hot. Relaxing too once you adjust. Peaceful. But if it is too hot shift to the warm pool below and let your cares float awaybon the crystal clear surging water. The occassional burstvof hot water only adds pleassure to the experience. The infrequent sulfurous burst just adds flavor to a rich varied experience. Is anyone really surprised we hung out as long as we did.
Photo 1: gazing down into the Kern River valley.
Photo 2: Forests along the trail as I walked northerly towsrds camp. When not in a forest you were on open hot ground. Always within earshot of the river though often well above the rushing waters.
Ker Hot Springs Video
8 miles of level and gently ascending terrain must be trod to reach the bear lockers at Big Junction Campsite. It is deceptively easy walking because often you have no shade from trees against the sun. But you do have many, likely not year round as they're not on the map, streams to give you relief. I'm told they can all be forded without getting your feet wet. Hah. The first one, just minutes out of the hot springs, was above my knee deep and I saw no obvious safe dry ford.
When I walked by a cateract I thought Andy meant for us to have lunch I dissmissed it since it was in hot sun and lacked water access. I kept going. Working my way north listening to the watervon my left and wading through streams. Lunch at a bug stream whose name I'll determine sometime later. Where are Andy and Kobrad? I'll leave a note. At least then they'll know what is up.
On I went as clouds built up to the north and west. I thought I felt a drop of water on my arm but ignored it. Another cool dropon my arm, surely that cNt be sweat. Another minute went by and the quiet afterrnoon continued with another cool droplet. A sun shower barely worth the term was raking place. I was provably within 1.5 miles of camp. My final creek crossing of the wide shallow creek (Whitney perhaps) took longer than it should have as I pondered where the trail was. I forged across and found the trail where it should be and moments later I found Matt and Adam (he was napping in their tent). A half hour or so later a slightly irked Andy with Konrad came in. He was miffed cause he hadn't found me at the lunch spot he thought we should be at. He had said first water crossing I had heard first waterfall. Miscommunication. He never saw my note (the group we had been following, or were they following us, did find the note). Then the hail and rain came down. Sounded line frying bacon on my shelter whereby honkered down to keep dry.
The evening campfire was small but kept dome of the bugs at bay as we talked about the day. Cheered the fat with a hiker travelling in tshirts and jeans, and learned how Jack's repaired outersole-less shoes were faring. Aong day but a saticefying one.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
I would leapfrog with Abdy and Konrad for the next couple hours as we worked our way over the mountain. By noon I had topped out and they caught up to me 15 minutes later. That would be our pattern for the day. When I caught up to them an hour or so later we settled down by a small creek for a lazy lunch (photo). It was after this I would meet the mule train. It was also after this that my bowels started to have some issues that were just annoying because of lack of warning (enough said). That would slow me down and make our final arrival a bit later than it would otherwise have been. Those last couple dusty miles to the lake were a drag.
Moraine Lake is surrounded by pleasant forest and good campsites. Too bad it didn't have a vault toilet like we had at Hamilton. But this lake is emmenently swimmable and sp a fine place to wash trail grime away and at least feel like you might be clean. I was feeling a bit conked so I don't have photos to share but as the sun set the colors changed to deep orange and the lake refkected lovely alpine scenery. I think I have been to more picturesque lakes but this is a very fine camping area indeed.
We would end our might again with a campfire. One advantage of having hikers like Adam and Matt along is that they get into camp so early they have time to do camp tasks like find goood firewood thus allowing those of us who arrive later to enjoy a fire I doubt we would ever bother to build. Falling asleep with a riding moon shining into my shelter was a treat.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
I would leapfrog with Abdy and Konrad for the next couple hours as we worked our way over the mountain. By noon I had topped out and they caught up to me 15 minutes later. That would be our pattern for the day. When I caught up to them an hour or so later we settled down by a small creek for a lazy lunch (photo). It was after this I would meet the mule train. It was also after this that my bowels started to have some issues that were just annoying because of lack of warning (enough said). That would slow me down and make our final arrival a bit later than it would otherwise have been. Those last couple dusty miles to the lake were a drag.
Moraine Lake is surrounded by pleasant forest and good campsites. Too bad it didn't have a vault toilet like we had at Hamilton. But this lake is emmenently swimmable and sp a fine place to wash trail grime away and at least feel like you might be clean. I was feeling a bit conked so I don't have photos to share but as the sun set the colors changed to deep orange and the lake refkected lovely alpine scenery. I think I have been to more picturesque lakes but this is a very fine camping area indeed.
We would end our might again with a campfire. One advantage of having hikers like Adam and Matt along is that they get into camp so early they have time to do camp tasks like find goood firewood thus allowing those of us who arrive later to enjoy a fire I doubt we would ever bother to build. Falling asleep with a riding moon shining into my shelter was a treat.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
End of Day Two Audio
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
With that recording an eventful day would ginally end. We would get our shelters set up and Adam and Natt would feed us Mac n Cheese as we regailed them with the story of what forced us to go "hard core." but those events were late in the day and it is best to start with the morning at first light.
We all wot fairly well. Andy and Konrad were unlucky enough to have to move their Tarptent Squall to a flatter spit do they would slide all over the slick silnylon floor but that was only a minor annoyance. We put our feet on the trail around 7:00AM. Our goal was about 11 miles away and we would have considerable climbing, notably From Hamilton Lake to Precipice Lake and the Kevawah (sp) Gap, to do. Far more elevation change than yesterday even though that day was lenghthened to mealy 13 miles.
Leaving Bearpaw we woukd pass above the Bearpaw High Sierra Camp, oh the smell of cooking meat for the hikers staying there, winding out way along the mountain side heading towsrds our first bug site and corresponding climb/descent onto a gorge. Phew. But what a raging river to see (Lone Pine Creek). Pausing at a stream and rock outcrop we could gaze back and easily pick out Bearpaw which was quite close as the crow flues but had required mire than two miles of steady walking (photo 1).
See and download the full gallery on posterous
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
We left the stream and headed to what is certainly one of the prettier backcountry lakes around: Hamilton Lake. You have dome climbing to do
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
See the photos from part one (previous post).
We left the stream and headed to what is certainly one of the prettier backcountry lakes around: Hamilton Lake. You have dome climbing to do
to reach the lake and first you pass what I think of as Lower Hamilton Lake (photo 4). Hamilton Lake is very pretty and probably sported. Great swimming had we taken the time to swim. It was a fine place to rest for a bit and gather strength for the 200 foot climb to Kaweah Gap ( this on top of the 1000 foot climb from Lone Pine creek earlier). The climb bid exposed and makes the ascent in little more than two miles. Fortunately their are streams along the way and a couple lakes. But it is s tough slog. Draining. Tiring. It must be brutal for trail crews who hail jackhammers up to break rocks and improve trail. We saw just suvh a crew perhaps a third of the way up.
Reaching the unnamed tarn was a nice place to stop though getting water would have been tough. On we went up and up. Somewhere I got confused andistook the uphill trail for what I'd just walked and failed to see the actual trail. I just saw a rock outcrop that kinda had potential. I was phlomuxed and zandy and Konrad came back down looking for me. I should have realized my error but did not. We lost a good hour on my mistake and Andy and Konrad had to come track me down. We got to Precipice Lake which is a fine deep dark clear yarn that I could see being a good place to camp ad long as you don't mind camping under the stars sans shelter. We still had a few hundred feet to climb to the gap before hiking the 3,4 or so miles to Nig Arroyo Junction. It was about 6:20PM. The walk through the valley was actually quite nice ad the sun colored the mountains in front of us (photo 2). The walkng went on and on and the light faded from dusk to dark and we stilll weren't at the campsite. Wr slowed down so as not to miss the turn and so I could hike safely in the dark. It was quite something to pull our tired legs into camp and find Matt and Adam by a campfire ready to get some Mac n Cheese warmed up for us. Though the day was long and tough it ended well and we all came through it well. In some ways this day of hiking would rate as the hardest of the trip.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
On our first full day Andy, Matt, and Konrad took on the necessary if inorous chore of shuttling a car to Whitney Portal. That left Ad and me with the day to ourselves. We couldn't get a park shuttle until 1:00PM so we had a languid morning at the hotel pool. The shuttle is effecienr and hair raising. The drive up the twisty mountain road, The Dragon, could make some carsick. Adam and I scored a bit of luck when the driver told us tobstay on as hecwas going the Lidgepole Pibd campground for lunch. We saved quite a bit of time.
That left us the chance to check out the Dakoopta (sp) Trail. After a wrong start that had us going off route across the river we found our way to the nice trail. Sad to say the big waterfall and pool we were expecting didn't appear but on put return hike a mother bear and her cub did. Quite a sight and fairly close and clearly unconcerned by our presence.
Our next day, day two, would mark the stsrt of the actual hike. We began at Wolverton creek taking theWolverton Creek trail, I think, to Panther Gap (photo 3). That hike through open pine forest was a real treat and the expansive view at the gap was an excellent indicator of things to come. We would hike down to the High Sierra Trail and once on it never leave it until the end of the trip. We fell into our style of hiking qu kly with Adam and zmatt pushing ahead while the rest ofvus maintained a slower pace sometimes with me playing the tail sometimes Andy and zkobrad holding that spot (though as a rule I'm the slowpoke of the group). When we eventually came to the granite slab shores of Buck Creek we quicly decided to the on to Bearpaw. That meant suffering a steep climb into the woods and s meandering hike to Bearpaw but the reward would be a better campsite, a shorter day tomorrow, and some good camp chatter with neighbors around their campfire.
P
See and download the full gallery on posterous
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
On our first full day Andy, Matt, and Konrad took on the necessary if inorous chore of shuttling a car to Whitney Portal. That left Ad and me with the day to ourselves. We couldn't get a park shuttle until 1:00PM so we had a languid morning at the hotel pool. The shuttle is effecienr and hair raising. The drive up the twisty mountain road, The Dragon, could make some carsick. Adam and I scored a bit of luck when the driver told us tobstay on as hecwas going the Lidgepole Pibd campground for lunch. We saved quite a bit of time.
That left us the chance to check out the Dakoopta (sp) Trail. After a wrong start that had us going off route across the river we found our way to the nice trail. SAlt the big waterfall and pool we were expecting didn't appear but on put return hike a mother bear and her cub did. Quite a sight and fairly close and clearly unconcerned by our presence.
Our next day, day two, would mark the stsrt of the actual hike. We began at Wolverton creek taking the Alta trail, I think, to Panther Gap (photo 3). That hike through open pine forest was a real treat and the expansive view at the gap was an excellent indicator of things to come. We would hike down to the High Sierra Trail and once on it never leave it until the end of the trip. We fell into our style of hiking qu kly with Adam and zmatt pushing ahead while the rest ofvus maintained a slower pace sometimes with me playing the tail sometimes Andy and zkobrad holding that spot (though as a rule I'm the slowpoke of the group). When we eventually came to the granite slab shores of Buck Creek we quicly decided to the on to Bearpaw. That meant suffering a steep climb into the woods and s meandering hike to Bearpaw but the reward would be a better campsite, a shorter dAy tomorrow, , and some good camp chatter with neighbors around their campfire.
P
See and download the full gallery on posterous
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
See and download the full gallery on posterous
Photos:
The cabin of Israel Galman (sp) who ran cattle amongst the grand trees in the 1870s.
Me at the Welcome sign.
The video is one of the first Sequioa you see on the path.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone
Minkler , California , population 30. This bustling fruit stand features post laden with business cards Fromm all across The States and the world. I picked up some huge peaches aand nectorines as well as some truely tasty red grapes. Wash them in the wishing/washing well and you have a fine treat. Especially fine since I didn't eat on the flights to here.
** Ken **
Sent from my iPhone