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Climbing and ... Climbing => Everywhere Else => Topic started by: Brad Young on July 28, 2014, 07:54:57 AM

Title: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 28, 2014, 07:54:57 AM
Our 2014 PCT kickoff trip went very well. Sitting here looking back, we seem to have filled the perfect weather window; the series of storms during the week before our trip caused some flash-flooding in the Sonora Pass area and, right now, serious clouds are building even way down the hill for what looks like more of the same.

We've got a long tradition on the PCT of starting completely, exactly where we left off on our last trip. This time we decided to (of course) do the same thing. Here we are in Tuolumne Meadows, near Lembert Dome, right at the gate on the trail to Soda Springs:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5586/14758708521_e68e2924e4_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3875/14761886805_29450578a3_c.jpg)


This trip included three people. I was mightily disappointed that Katie was still sick and couldn't go (in retrospect it was a good idea for her not to have done this fairly strenuous trip). But our friend Reid, one of the "yellow packs" that we had met on our nine day trip last year, joined us this trip:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3923/14738896306_952962a7ed_c.jpg)


As for most California climbers, Tuolumne Meadows is pretty special to me. But I haven't just spent huge numbers of climbing days there; when I was boy, my family vacationed there most summers. I came to know the peaks and domes of the area by heart. So, just like last year, being there again, pursuing a special goal with Tricia, was pretty cool. This shot of her on the way down the Tuolumne River well captures this new PCT adventure, some of the many domes I've climbed on there, plus some of the the better-known Tuolumne Meadows area peaks:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3848/14761889865_f85f034282_c.jpg)


Although we had heavy loads, the trail to Glen Aulin is lightly downhill, and we flew down it:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5580/14775956001_7ffa0db83d_c.jpg)


The first waterfall on the river is as pretty as I remembered (and so is the second one - I still recall my family being at the second waterfall, the one right at Glen Aulin, swimming and playing when I was a boy 45 years ago):

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5585/14761901785_70f4864f48_c.jpg)


From Glen Aulin, the trail heads up Cold Canyon, through forests and beautiful meadows, toward Virginia Canyon. This part of the trail was all waterless during this very dry year, even in July:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3862/14575284938_13112e5188_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3876/14759572984_230ec6abfa_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2925/14575286739_86828996f6_c.jpg)


As we do each day on our hikes, we stopped for a "trail milkshake" as an afternoon pick-me-up. These "milkshakes" consist of one half liter of water mixed with powdered whole fat milk and two vanilla Instant Breakfasts. They make a nice energy boost late in the day (Reid started calling them "whales' milk" later in the trip; that name made us laugh):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3867/14781783073_1f8ece8d66_c.jpg)


This enormous boulder looked pretty cool, both as a climbing location and as a place to just hang out:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5555/14738930906_4639ffea8a_c.jpg)


But we'd planned a fairly long first day and we had a few miles to go yet to water. So we continued on and then into Virginia Canyon (and the creek there, which, curiously, bears the name Return Creek, not Virginia Creek):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3920/14575480267_a49b9074d6_c.jpg)


We ended that day in a pretty, slabby area of the creek. We had enough daylight left to relax and enjoy the cooler hours:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5574/14575298298_dbf64baf6c_c.jpg)


We made 13.6 good miles on this first day. We had fun and then got to lighten our loads (by eating!). And the next day promised more of the same.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 28, 2014, 06:12:55 PM
Day two started in a leisurely fashion with breakfast, coffee and some sunshine:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5588/14745440636_5cc0655a9b_c.jpg)


We then started three straight days of ups and downs into and out of deep canyons. Although not as severe as some of the passes and valleys in the southern Sierra, these canyons make for a lot of elevation change.

From Virginia Canyon we hiked up to Spiller Canyon. Switchbacks then led to pretty Miller Lake:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5561/14788326423_22f4fb8cfd_c.jpg)


(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5592/14768144822_687dbdee1e_c.jpg)


As we then continued north we got our first view of the Sawtooth Ridge on the northern edge of Yosemite (just up and left of Tricia):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3868/14745464766_bff1e91317_c.jpg)


The guidebook then describes "two dozen" switchbacks down into Matterhorn Canyon. Matterhorn is pretty and pretty remote. Among its beauties is a very large buttress of nice looking granite (I don't know of any name for the buttress and nor do I think it has been climbed). Here's the trail visible on the canyon floor (just higher in the photo than the creek):

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2897/14768151752_ed6a38dc87_c.jpg)


Here's a photo of hiking on the floor and one of the buttress:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5573/14788346593_38f7143cc9_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3871/14768168472_af62c8e9f7_c.jpg)


Having gone down, we then had to go up. Switchbacks and creekside hiking led in a few miles to Benson Pass. Although not particularly high, this pass is high enough to get really good views of most of northern Yosemite. The view to the west shows Volunteer Peak (Volunteer is also not very tall, except in comparison to the surrounding areas, and then it really stands out):

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2924/14768499815_3d5ab39bc4_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3906/14768187042_78c3e98846_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3855/14581873898_2f82795bfc_c.jpg)


From Benson we headed down (naturally) to Smedberg Lake. I'd been to Smedberg once before, in 1982 with my brother (I was then 21 years old). I was quite pleased to see it again 32 years later. We found a nice camp there and spent the rest of the daylight hours reading, relaxing, eating and planning our next day's hike (to include summiting Volunteer Peak!):

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5579/14765345841_7b592e1b35_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3918/14765350891_2b53fcab54_c.jpg)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on July 28, 2014, 06:15:25 PM
nice start to the TR. I need arrows and labels on the pictures please - maybe some dotted lines, hatch marks, v's, etc...:)

you could compliment your perfect tan with some shades there squinty-man :)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 28, 2014, 06:41:30 PM
It takes too much to label and then post, but I'll try to be more specific using what's in a photo.

And yeah, I guess I am squinting in most of the photos (it was pretty bright and we were pretty high). But no shades for me, I've never liked wearing them while I hike.

Still working on getting the next days photos onto Flickr.

Meanwhile, our next leg (Highway 108 to Highway 4) is in delay mode for a few days due to the return of the high country thunderstorms.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mungeclimber on July 28, 2014, 07:10:38 PM
That boulder up above Glen Aulin, I think is called the Satellite boulder. there's a pic of it with no information in one of the supertopo books. I forget which now, but I've hiked up that way and was pleasantly surprised to see that boulder. I seem to recall a rumor that Dave Yerian had done some of the first problems on it.

The last time I was down at Glen Aulin there falls below the bridge to the "Camp" had a water slide feature. There was a fire down canyon and we didn't see the closure signs, so we hopped on down the 100yards or so and swam a bit, and rudely got chased out by CDF.

Some nice photos in there. What did Tricia think of this trip compared to others?  1000 miles is a good point to reflect on the trip.

Forecast was starting to look decent for the weekend. Think you'll pick up again over the weekend?

That big formation you found, how many miles in is it (from the shortest approach?) 
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 28, 2014, 07:23:58 PM

That big formation you found, how many miles in is it (from the shortest approach?)


Probably the PCT is the shortest approach (it's a long, long way to it from the north or the west; from the south all the trails move mostly east-west because of the Tuolumne River canyon). By way of the PCT it's about 22 miles (19 if one uses the Pothole Dome cutoff).

(And allow me to describe the 1,000 mile point with photos in an upcoming post  ;) )
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: clink on July 28, 2014, 07:40:28 PM
Quote
I still recall my family being at the second waterfall, the one right at Glen Aulin, swimming and playing when I was a boy 45 years ago):

 You will always be, and that is wonderful.

 Tricia, Brad and Reid, what a hike!
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on July 28, 2014, 08:02:37 PM
It takes too much to label and then post.

no shades for me.

Can you believe Alexandra called me snarky when we were at Pinns Saturday?

Come to think of it I don't ever recall you in shades - other than driving.

The pics and narrative are great - can't wait for the next installment...

Envious to a fault :)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 29, 2014, 07:54:04 AM
When I hiked this section of trail (north to south) in 1982, it never occurred to me to walk up Volunteer Peak (or up any other peak for that matter). Yet one of the photos I have from then is of the very steep, very tall, north face of the formation. When I see that shot it makes me wonder why I didn't just sidetrack now and then to a summit.

And Volunteer in particular is a cool peak. While it wouldn't even qualify as a "bump" in the Palisades or the Evolutions, it stands very far above it's surrounding terrain in northern Yosemite. And even though its north side is nearly vertical, its an easy walk up on the south.

So, on our third morning I decided that I would drop my pack about a mile into our hike and go to the top of Volunteer. Reid was totally jazzed at the idea. Tricia didn't apparently get the "I" part of "I" and just assumed that she'd go too.

Here it is from the northwest:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3908/14586489349_b3a065a468_c.jpg)


And the views from the summit:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5578/14586498679_6650451384_c.jpg)


(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5574/14586435800_da7a239aee_c.jpg)


Tricia quickly picked out where we'd slept at Smedberg the night before:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2923/14586448400_05398f6c1d_c.jpg)


By now, Tricia's done many Sierra summits, and so she's quite comfortable descending talus (and let's face it: all 12 year olds should be absolutely comfortable on talus):

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2928/14750148746_c68555ff4f_c.jpg)


After descending Volunteer, we shouldered our packs and did the bone-crushing 2,100 foot descent down to Piute Creek near Benson Lake. And what a descent! They don't build steep, steep trails like this any more.

Just like she is good on talus, Tricia is also comfortable on fallen log "bridges" (and all twelve year olds should also be good at these too):

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5556/14793036543_6e6870a5cb_c.jpg)


Reid does pretty well on features like this too (for an old guy):

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5575/14773175845_b70478945a_c.jpg)


A too-warm hump up Seavy Pass followed (that's Volunteer Peak in the next photo, just up and left of me):

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5561/14586531878_b95b903dc5_c.jpg)


In exchange for the heat and the uphill though, the hike up to Seavy included some very nice terrain. This included one feature that the PCT guidebook artfully describes as a "wind free, sparkling pond:"

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2914/14793049063_095a4da28e_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2899/14586703267_7a20cbacd4_c.jpg)


And then we ended this third day in Kerrick Canyon, camped near the creek, oriented to get the last rays of the setting sun. We were nicely set up again for another day, and another section of a fantastic trail:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3871/14770023001_287350221d_c.jpg)

Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 29, 2014, 08:39:02 AM
Oh, and here's one for the Muds:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2927/14754731146_cbf3ffa8a5_c.jpg)


And not to give too much away, but of all the miles we did on this trip (and even of all the miles we've done on the PCT), the miles closest to home - the 10 miles up to Sonora Pass itself - were some of the most spectacular we've seen. These are coming up on days six and seven...
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mungeclimber on July 29, 2014, 09:26:07 AM
*like*
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on July 29, 2014, 09:32:12 AM
my favorite so far is the one of you and T on top of Volunteer.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 29, 2014, 01:46:41 PM
I always let Tricia sleep in on these trips. I know, I risk having a spoiled brat child by indulging her in this way, but on the other hand, she is putting out huge gobs of energy on these trips, and she's still growing at a fantastic rate too. I'll take the risk:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5571/14591057998_8706943350_c.jpg)


This day started with the usual packing rituals (everything in its place, everything buttoned down, lunch and water ready):

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2895/14775359624_8105349fcf_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2932/14591214147_11b3caa62e_c.jpg)


Today's hike required two big uphills, out of Kerrick Canyon and then into and out of Stubblefield Canyon. This photo shows about where the PCT crosses Kerrick Creek; this crossing was placid for us, but it has a reputation for danger when early-season through-hikers hit it in June of most years:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2936/14754708546_5cd84da585_c.jpg)


Like Kerrick, Stubblefield Creek was also placid, but it was also deeper:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2906/14777727185_cefc3650f5_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3896/14591084098_e5cbeb204d_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3895/14775422434_4f6f807520_c.jpg)


The second climb of the day was out of this canyon. It was a hot climb. Here's what it looked like from the other side of the canyon (we climbed up the shallow side-canyon in the center of this photo):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3858/14774559871_4e935e1ff9_c.jpg)


Here's how it looked going up it:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5562/14591020850_c0002d4378_c.jpg)


We found a nicely shaded lunch spot with a breeze though:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3895/14591064559_1e36c9d162_c.jpg)


At the end of this climb, according to the PCT guidebook, the "deep canyons" that had dominated the last 30 miles of hiking were done. We liked this. From the ridge top we quickly reached Tilden Canyon and then Wilma Lake:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3836/14754734646_34d0f85b74_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3844/14777403642_011621cd47_c.jpg)


We ended the day by starting up Jack Main Canyon (the creek through this canyon doesn't share that name - the creek's named Falls Creek; go figure). Jack Main Canyon is one of the longest north-south canyons in the Sierra (ten plus miles). It's also beautiful and the hiking is easy:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5569/14777784585_1f254494ec_c.jpg)


Our camp for the night was perfect. Easy creek access, beauty, near the trail, and good sun exposure. We relaxed and cleaned up before making camp and then dinner:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5595/14797622703_88c5569801_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3907/14591288027_707c103072_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3870/14591273897_b130f76800_c.jpg)


As we got into our sleeping bags that night, I thought back to the start of this trip; I had particularly looked forward to two sections of trail both of which I'd done many years before. One of these was the last ten miles to Sonora Pass itself. The other was the distance up Jack Main Canyon past Grace Meadow and then to Dorothy Lake. I knew that this latter section, which I remembered as gorgeous and gradual, would make up most of our hike tomorrow.

I also knew that we'd pass PCT trail mile 1,000 late tomorrow. That's only 1,000 out of 2,658 miles, but that's still a long way to hoof it from the Mexican border. I looked forward to "going quadruple digits" with my little 12 year old; 1,000 miles seemed significant to me, and it's taken her more than half her life to get that far. How would she react to this milestone?
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mungeclimber on July 29, 2014, 02:25:17 PM
I love a good cliff hanger!  do tell! do tell!  :)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on July 29, 2014, 03:52:29 PM
The green hues of the grass + the shadows and light around the lake are surreal.
The pic of you and T right after that is priceless.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 30, 2014, 08:30:17 AM
Jack Main Canyon is a nice place to wake up. Here's the view downstream from our camp:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3887/14780036542_43d4460977_c.jpg)


We headed upstream and quickly reached the lower end of Grace Meadow:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5564/14593732339_1e26b71c08_c.jpg)


Reid and Tricia seemed to use every break this trip to soak their feet in the many creeks and lakes we passed:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2928/14780399845_1678552b90_c.jpg)


Dorothy Lake sits near the top of Jack Main Canyon. Dorothy is a half-mile long, beautiful lake in a beautiful location:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2916/14777257211_2608f09bc9_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2897/14777258521_7acab1dc21_c.jpg)


Forsyth Peak stands over the lake (Forsyth was an Army officer back when the Army patrolled the park; Dorothy was one of his daughters):

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2921/14778054074_4f641ed4a6_c.jpg)


By the time we'd reached Dorothy's northwest shore, we'd already hiked eight miles for the day. So we took a long lunch:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5564/14778142084_f8c03e116b_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2918/14778140544_12abf5f775_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3866/14780167392_bacaccf117_c.jpg)


After lunch we did a quick quarter mile up to Dorothy Lake Pass (which is very visible just above the lake in the second Dorothy Lake photo above):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3871/14800302873_e7007b5e0a_c.jpg)


This pass is the north border of Yosemite National Park. The Hoover Wilderness starts on its north side. This point, which I have passed over several times before, is where it hit me hard that, "man we're getting close to home!" We stopped for pictures:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2901/14593729300_70088f48e8_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3849/14593808570_1c314447ea_c.jpg)


On the other side of the pass are a series of smaller lakes (named for Forsyth's other daughters). The hiking past here is very pretty:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3875/14593780969_4b22aeddc3_c.jpg)


But we had another purpose by now. Yes, the lakes here are pretty. And yes, the hiking is easy. But Dorothy Lake Pass is at PCT trail mile 998.3; we had several miles of hiking energy still in us, and we were getting excited about that upcoming, meaningless, but oh-so-fun mile marker 1,000.

We didn't know what to expect. As usual, Tricia was hiking ahead of me. I had the map. I'd yell thoughts and directions to her as we moved. Then, just as I was describing a curve in the trail, she yelled back "here it is Daddy!" Here it is:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3862/14593744690_3d107bbda0_c.jpg)


Tricia had actually seen a small "sticks and stones" 1,000 mile marker that is right on the trail:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3862/14778108904_b29c42521f_c.jpg)


But over the years, PCT hikers had also left a larger marker. This is off the trail, and it's subtle enough that other hikers might not even notice it (it is visible in the photo of Tricia above, a big cairn to the right of the trail). Reid, for example, had hiked ahead a bit at this point, and, since he wasn't particularly looking for it, he didn't see the marker. We walked over:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3890/14593817038_a61b4543e4_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3860/14780120062_d79a37d380_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3878/14593965027_a783072dd2_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3885/14593959477_df6da32cba_c.jpg)


Tricia then asked if she could add a stone to the monument. "Of course," I said:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5579/14777311321_c697111549_c.jpg)


This was a pretty cool moment. Does the 1,000 mile mark have any more meaning than any other point we passed on this trip? Maybe not; certainly it doesn't have more meaning in any objective sense. But Tricia was pretty thrilled (and when we caught up to him a few minutes later, Reid was totally thrilled for her too). As for me? Well, the area there must have had some kind of odd bug in the air, just there, right at that one location; an odd and invisible bug that must have been buzzing, unseen, very close to my face. How else to explain the moisture in my eyes as I saw the beaming pride of accomplishment in my beautiful little girl?

We kept going after this marker. When the forest opened up we started seeing ridges and peaks that weren't granite. We were leaving the High Sierra now and entering the northern Sierra:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3920/14777331201_d53e94c98f_c.jpg)


We got our first view of still-distant Tower Peak (a big, big peak for this area, it's in the high, left-center of this photo; Tower Peak also marks the northern border of Yosemite National Park):

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5562/14757457696_8f23729832_c.jpg)


We finished the day at a nice camp near the Long Lake Trail Junction:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3868/14800357393_ee338d08eb_c.jpg)


(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5573/14777341921_ea3e7a074c_c.jpg)


At this point we were well along toward Kennedy Canyon and, after it, the Sierra Crest. We had a plan for tomorrow, and this campsite put us in perfect position to see it through.


Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on July 30, 2014, 09:27:46 AM
The scenery is nice and the mile marker + accomplishment is monumental.
My favorite pic of this batch is the one of you two sitting close, looking out at the lake.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mungeclimber on July 30, 2014, 10:31:07 AM
That Dorothy lake looks a lot like Peeler Lake. Peeler sits right on the crest. One side looks down into Tuolumne, the other back toward the East Side. Such a pretty region.

Pesky bugs. :)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mynameismud on July 30, 2014, 12:59:54 PM
super cool.  Love the huge 1000 marker.  Proud moment.

Not 100% sure about this but isn't the volcanic part where the Cascades come wrapping down into the Sierra?

JC, can you answer this?
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 30, 2014, 07:29:24 PM
Our plan for day six involved going slow on purpose. We'd spent night five just four miles from Kennedy Canyon. The trail through Kennedy Canyon leads right up to the sierra crest. This canyon is also only 11 miles from Sonora Pass. Finally, we expected to find no water past this canyon (and we were right, there wasn't any).

So, after a leisurely start, we made the four miles, tanked up on water, added three gallons of water to our loads (three gallons total, not each), and humped up to spend a night right on the crest. And what a treat that was!

The climb out of Kennedy is long but not steep. After a gradual ascent to above tree line, it follows an old mining road up several dramatic switchbacks.

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2919/14600734219_e317a8f220_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3859/14787056052_3609bf5b0e_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3870/14600703190_ec63774cc3_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2916/14787074922_4dd4f9ede9_c.jpg)


(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5570/14764438026_0b22dfe529_c.jpg)


Here's the view back down the switchbacks and also one down Kennedy Canyon (beautiful country there above tree line):

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2936/14600774499_44cdd5afec_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3854/14600728290_58cb92ca50_c.jpg)


This long uphill with extra water was worth it. Once we reached the top of the climb we were on the crest. The views were sublime and the location fantastic. Here's the view looking south, into the Hoover and Emigrant Wildernesses and Yosemite:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2934/14787439495_548a8dafd4_c.jpg)


This photo shows the actual pacific crest heading north toward Sonora Pass. The PCT is barely visible right below that crest:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5580/14600743820_21873e53c7_c.jpg)


And here we see a view to the west, showing also a proud daddy who's having a hell of a good time with his daughter:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2924/14807309643_573f7e5887_c.jpg)


Once the PCT reaches the crest it stays right near it for the next ten miles to the pass. This is just an incredible section of trail; views in every direction, dramatic cliffs to one side, steep slopes to the other. I'd forgotten how cool this part of the trail is, and how close it is to our home:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2904/14785112694_d76dc14797_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3889/14787480905_fc1e9f2af6_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3907/14784328601_278516742e_c.jpg)


Eventually we came to a spot that was flat, wind sheltered and right near the crest. The perfect last night's campsite:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5560/14600808690_8f489eda95_c.jpg)


(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3892/14601021557_f84870eec9_c.jpg)


Although we quit hiking a bit early for the day, we did so just to enjoy this spot (it was only 6 1/2 more miles to the pass). After settling in, Tricia and I decided to go one step further; she and I moved up to a flat, sheltered spot that was on the actual crest itself. This was a spot where, even laying in my sleeping bag I could have thrown a rock one way and it would have gone into the Pacific Ocean drainage, while a rock thrown the other way would have gone into the Great Basin drainage. We slept under the stars too, all at 10,500 feet (and that's an elevation that gives a whole new meaning to the phrase "under the stars"). This was a really nice place:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2919/14807431423_2e57f29fc2_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2937/14600944268_899d378060_c.jpg)


The last rays of the sun looked particularly soft here; we were in the alpenglow instead of just seeing it:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3888/14787240172_c81f519f9d_c.jpg)


We had a nice campsite, adequate water and just enough food. So we spent a great night and were well positioned for the next morning and for the rest of a wonderful hike.

Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on July 31, 2014, 07:37:10 AM
Some great scenery, aspect and feel good dad/daughter shots in that last batch.
Drum roll please...
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 31, 2014, 08:55:39 AM
Our last day was short and beautiful. We continued along the pacific crest:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2932/14607762710_64b83e9e96_c.jpg)


The trail alternates sides of the crest. It also passes among volcanic towers:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3922/14607832278_5357d73d32_c.jpg)


We took a break overlooking Blue Canyon:

(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2899/14607960757_cb691862ae_c.jpg)


Before long Chipmunk Flat, a Sonora Pass Climbing area with hundreds of established routes came into view (this was quite a new way to see this climbing crag - too bad the smoke was thick on this day from the fires to the south):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3857/14771484616_faf578e034_c.jpg)


One last flat stretch led to a point from which we could clearly see the paved highway at Sonora Pass:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3867/14607847188_10a8d07e70_c.jpg)


(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5588/14794139852_9b014e7fe6_c.jpg)


(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5590/14607857988_c480efca7d_c.jpg)


Two miles of long switchbacks then led down to the closest point that the PCT comes to our house:

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3892/14794505645_35b879bfd4_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2921/14791378241_b25511218d_c.jpg)


(https://farm3.staticflickr.com/2920/14794161002_ef7479e7a2_c.jpg)


We continued another tenth of a mile to the picnic area located near the pass and then we were done. There remained only to wait for Vicki, our ride home (only a 50 minute drive!), and to add up all our remaining food. Here's the leftover food, left over from a three person, seven day trip (not bad, I wish I could call it that close every time!):

(https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3874/14794163802_218c9201b7_c.jpg)


And now we're still waiting for the weather. Although Tricia and I had hoped to finish from Highway 108 to Highway 4 and then from Highway 4 to Highway 88 this week, the thunderstorm cycles are back, and we're not so foolish as to go out directly into them if we can help it. Instead it looks like we'll get out Saturday and Sunday for the 31.6 mile hike to Highway 4 and beyond that will wait until after Tricia's week at science camp.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: waldo on July 31, 2014, 09:39:51 AM
Again, great work!  I very much liked your lake picture, too.  By the by, are there routes on that north face of Volunteer?
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Jim on July 31, 2014, 09:45:02 AM
Beautiful!  And a wonderful write up too.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mungeclimber on July 31, 2014, 09:46:11 AM
How far in are the volcanic crags?
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 31, 2014, 10:05:06 AM
Again, great work!  I very much liked your lake picture, too.  By the by, are there routes on that north face of Volunteer?

Waldo, I don't know of any routes up that obvious face of Volunteer. That's a looong way in for what would likely be 4 or 5 pitch routes (although the climbing lines look good from below).
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 31, 2014, 10:06:29 AM

How far in are the volcanic crags?


About four miles (but with 1,500 feet ?? of elevation gain. These crags can be seen from east of the pass (they are above Sardine Falls).

Interested?
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mungeclimber on July 31, 2014, 10:32:44 AM
oofa, 4 miles. I may have some alternatives.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mynameismud on July 31, 2014, 02:31:33 PM
not very long on a bicycle....
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: F4? on July 31, 2014, 06:10:36 PM
Too bad there isn't a road up there....
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: waldo on July 31, 2014, 09:26:43 PM
I forgot to mention how great I thought the alpen-glow camp was!  An evening like that fixes everything.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on July 31, 2014, 09:30:18 PM

I forgot to mention how great I thought the alpen-glow camp was!  An evening like that fixes everything.


Yep. And we both woke up in the middle of the night and spent time studying the stars. Pretty fun.

And Factor, there is s road up there. It's called "Highway 108."
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: lasher on August 01, 2014, 11:27:29 AM
It must have been great ending at Hwy 108.  After the hours of driving to shuttle between points having a 50 min drive home must have been a nice change.  I imagine Vicki appreciated it also.

Can't wait to share some of the trail with you.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: F4? on August 01, 2014, 03:34:36 PM
Quote
And Factor, there is s road up there. It's called "Highway 108."

I meant the part from Dorothy Lake. then we could bolt the volcanic stuff.

Nice job!
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 01, 2014, 04:14:19 PM
I meant the part from Dorothy Lake. then we could bolt the volcanic stuff.

Nice job!

I knew what you meant   :rolleyes:

I think I'll just be very happy that our U.S. Government has had the good sense to preserve large swaths of public land as wilderness. I for one am ever-so-grateful for the foresight, the wisdom, and the intelligence of this move. Fifty years ago: The Wilderness Act.

Wilderness with a capital "W."

Have you ever read the statute (the written law) that defines wilderness? It's beautiful, actually it's nearly poetic.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: F4? on August 01, 2014, 07:31:34 PM
I can only imagine.

I must say that the last 10mil to the pass....wow that would be cool to hike.

Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 01, 2014, 08:14:08 PM
Quote

I can only imagine.


United States statutes are called the U.S. Code. And actually there are two parts of the Wilderness Act that are wonderfully written:

Here's the first sentence of 16 U.S. Code Section 1131(a), about the purpose of the Wilderness Act:

"In order to assure that an increasing population, accompanied by expanding settlement and growing mechanization, does not occupy and modify all areas within the United States and its possessions, leaving no lands designated for preservation and protection in their natural condition, it is hereby declared to be the policy of the Congress to secure for the American people of present and future generations the benefits of an enduring resource of wilderness."

Now I know that this is the internet, and I know that no-one reads long sentences on web forums, but read that law. Even read it aloud to yourself. It's an amazing statement.

And 16 U.S. Code Section 1131(c) defines wilderness. It's first sentence is even more worthy of reading aloud; it truly is like a poem:

"A wilderness, in contrast with those areas where man and his own works dominate the landscape, is hereby recognized as an area where the earth and its community of life are untrammeled by man, where man himself is a visitor who does not remain."

There are some things that our country and our government have done emphatically right over the years. The Wilderness Act is among them.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 02, 2014, 06:38:30 AM
All righty... "T Girl" and I are off in twenty minutes (leisurely start since the next leg starts only 50 minutes from our house!!!).

We'll go 31.6 miles in two days. We're both carrying a lot less weight (I've got 29 pounds instead of 48).

And, bonus, our four-legged beauty gets to go too:

(https://farm6.staticflickr.com/5330/9564664329_082a627485_c.jpg)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: clink on August 02, 2014, 09:15:50 AM
Quote
We'll go 31.6 miles in two days

That is hauling arse.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: F4? on August 02, 2014, 09:17:36 AM
Is it all downhill???
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on August 02, 2014, 10:12:39 AM
Is it all downhill???

Philosophically it's all uphill and sometimes a little sideways :)
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: F4? on August 03, 2014, 07:39:47 AM
I thought it was all uphill as they are going north.

What do I know.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 03, 2014, 05:09:24 PM
It worked, that was a very nice trip (feet are pounded though).

I've never been through the whole Carson-Iceberg Wilderness before. It's very pretty. I was blown away that, from almost to Highway 4, we could see Sonora Peak (right near where we started), Stanislaus Peak and the Three Chimneys (which is south of Highway 108!).

The northern half of the Wilderness could be renamed the Cowshit-Iceberg Wilderness though. Eat sh#t and die you damn corporate welfare, meadow-despoiling "ranchers."
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 03, 2014, 05:10:31 PM
I thought it was all uphill as they are going north.

What do I know.

Oh, and we lost about 900 feet in elevation overall (with lots and lots of ups and downs in between).
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mynameismud on August 04, 2014, 08:22:07 AM
I agree and it really pisses me off that they allow corporate grazing, but not bicycles.  And, horses and pack animals.  There is no difference between horses and bikes.  Well it can be argued that bikes are easier on the trails (plus we poop less).
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 04, 2014, 11:41:40 AM
I agree and it really pisses me off that they allow corporate grazing, but not bicycles.  And, horses and pack animals.  There is no difference between horses and bikes.  Well it can be argued that bikes are easier on the trails (plus we poop less).

You know, at the risk of pissing you off Mud, I gotta say that I agree, I disagree, and I disagree.

1. I agree about cows. There is no justification that works for grazing cows in federal wilderness. Grazing was shoehorned into the law in 1964, but it's long outlived any usefulness it had. Plus the corporate welfare types who do it pay anywhere from 1/4 to 1/10 of what they'd have to pay for similar grazing on private land. It's a giveaway and it's wrong.

2. Although I used to agree with your comments about horses, I've changed my mind over the last decade. Here's why:

Over the last 40 years, it seems to me, we've gotten to a state in which fewer and fewer young people use the wilderness. Now, maybe I'm wrong, maybe I just see fewer young people using it. But I don't think I'm wrong, and it scares me.

It scares me because the less people know the wilderness, the less they will stand up for it. Ed Abbey said this succinctly: "The concept of wilderness needs no defense, it only needs more defenders."

Unfortunately citizens of this country all get to vote, whether they value the environment or not. They even let people vote who might want to put new tungsten mines (or some such) in wild and protected country.

Horses actually help with this issue, they help "create defenders." Many people are being brought into (and shown the value of) wilderness by horses. That is, horses are to some extent making wilderness defenders out of people who might not otherwise care. There is value in getting people out there (even fat, budweiser swilling horse-packer clients - who are not the majority mind you as far as I can see - can be shown the value of wilderness). This way of looking at this issue led to me becoming more understanding of horses and horse packers (and more willing to put up with their crap, and all of their negatives).

3. And I strongly disagree with you about bikes in the wilderness. The vast majority of hikers find that bikes seriously degrade their wilderness experience (the Wilderness Act itself talks about primitive, non-mechanized recreation; there's a lot of value in this type of experience).

Although most bikers don't see this, the degradation of a hiker's primitive, non mechanized recreation by bikes in the wilderness is very, very much like what bikers themselves would experience if they were "forced" to share their trails with motorcycles and ATVs (open Henry Coe to motorcycles!!). Would any sane mountain biker enjoy sharing a trail with motorized, off road vehicles? Hell no, it flat ruins the experience. It's no different for hikers, no different at all.

Would you as a biker want non-motorized bike trails opened up for motorized use? Should all trails everywhere be opened for any type of travel? Should the lowest common denominator prevail? Or should different values be accorded respect and protection in different areas?

And if you don't believe my comment that bikes seriously degrade hikers' wilderness experience, check into it for yourself. Try some of the PCT Association blogs and/or just backpacking web forum discussions. Bikers frequently flaunt the law in Southern California in particular; they ride wherever and whenever they please. It's a big problem in the eyes of foot travelers and you'll see it in these blogs and forums.

Oh, and I absolutely do agree with your comment about the relative trail impact of horse versus bicycle use: horses clearly have more impact than bikes. But that's not at all the issue, that's not what's led to mechanized travel restrictions in wilderness.
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: JC w KC redux on August 04, 2014, 01:58:51 PM
Geezus - that's a lot of keyboarding!
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: mynameismud on August 04, 2014, 05:21:05 PM
First, when it comes to trails, I see absolutely no correlation between bikes and motorbikes.  I have have spent a fair amount of time on both.  When going up a hill on a motorbike I twist a throttle, on a bike I peddle my ass off.

second this has been taken up here

http://www.mudncrud.com/forums/index.php?topic=2087.0
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Brad Young on August 04, 2014, 05:53:40 PM

Geezus - that's a lot of keyboarding!


Yeah, I have a passing interest in the subject.

And yes Mud, Munge had a good idea starting a separate thread (I've been typing my ass off there too).
Title: Re: The PCT Volume 21: Closest to Home
Post by: Atomizer on August 21, 2014, 08:19:22 AM
Good Stuff! I miss the days when I used to hike that country for work.

That boulder in Cold Canyon is spectacular.

The reason Return Creek has that name is because their used to not be a bridge over it where the Grand Canyon Trail encounters it. Early season voyages used to be stopped cold by it. Now there is a bridge so they should change it to Virginia Creek to match the beautiful Virginia Canyon namesake.

And that wall in Materhorn Canyon is called Quarry Peak There are a few existing routes on it.