Yosemite hikes July 9-11

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poison ivy

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I finally had a chance to pare down my Yosemite pictures to a somewhat reasonable level and they are here if anyone is interested in seeing them. J On a non-hiking note, there are also some pictures from Bodie State Park, which is an old gold-mining ghost town that Pudgy Groundhog recommended a stop at… (thanks Kathy!)

Our Yosemite plans got a bit messed up because the airline lost all of our bags when we arrived in Fresno. (Count yourself lucky if you’ve never had to explain to an airline counter person why you can’t just go on with your backpacking vacation without your backpack & tent, etc. It was extremely difficult to get them to understand why we didn’t have hotel reservations someplace!) So, we didn’t arrive in Yosemite until around 4 p.m. on Saturday instead of 9 a.m. as planned.. Here are short (I promise!) summaries of our hikes in Yosemite.

Saturday, July 9: Since we arrived so late, our original hiking plans got scuttled. We ended up on a short two-mile trek around the Mariposa Grove of giant sequoias. The trees were majestic and beautiful but I couldn’t believe some of the stuff we were seeing. People were carving their names into the downed trees and picking up pine cones even though there were signs all over the place forbidding it. I got a good chuckle, however, when I picked up my guidebook and found those giant pine cones were actually from sugar pines, not sequoias.

Sunday, July 10: We started on what was to be a three-day, 22-mile backpacking trip, hiking from Cathedral Lakes in Tuolumne Meadows to Yosemite Valley. However, Dave ended up getting symptoms of altitude sickness (at 9,500 feet) and we ended up hiking back out the same day.

We arrived at the Cathedral Lakes trailhead at 8:30 a.m., preparing for a 3.5 mile hike that would bring us up 1,000 feet to 9,500 feet. Since Dave has had trouble with altitude in the past, we decided to see how we felt before deciding whether to hike on from the lakes or camp there. Wilderness Permits in Yosemite allow you to camp pretty much anywhere, with a few limitations, as long as the site is already hardened so we had plenty of options for our trip.

The hike started up a dirt path pretty steeply at first and we found ourselves stopping a lot to catch our breath and look behind us at the terrific views of jagged mountains under bright blue skies. After the first mile or so, the trail flattened out and became an easy walk. We saw two mule deer along the way and crossed our first snowfield of the entire trip, getting occasional glimpses of a great view before arriving at the spur path for upper Cathedral Lake.

The spur descends past a small series of cascades and through a grassy meadow with a fleet of mosquitoes so thick that it was impossible to keep from breathing them in. We literally ran across the field and onto a large white rock that sloped into Cathedral Lake, with incredible views of Cathedral Peak and Tressider Peak. The lake was actually still frozen the week before we arrived and the water felt as though it was barely above freezing temperature so my swim was extremely short-lived.

We decided the views were just too perfect to pass up and set up the tent, preparing to camp. Dave decided to take a nap while I hiked around the lake so I could check out the views from the other side. There was an impressive view just past the opposite shore, where it was windy enough to keep the bugs away but sunny enough to be warm too.

I arrived back from my walk to find Dave wasn’t feeling so hot -- he had a splitting headache and felt nauseous. Strangely enough, one of his eyes had swollen shut too (perhaps from a bug bite??) so we decided the best thing to do would be to hike down. It took us just an hour to hike down to the trailhead, as opposed to 3.5 to hike up. Dave’s headache went away about a quarter-mile from the trailhead -- somewhere around 8,500 feet -- and even more bizarrely, his swollen eye returned to normal too. A ranger we met along the way suggested that it wasn’t altitude that was bothering Dave, but the ponderosa pine pollen. We managed to get a site in the Tuolumne Meadows Campground to end our day.


Monday, July 11 -- Dave was feeling better so we decided to do another dayhike since our backpacking trip didn’t work out. I read all of the trail descriptions for hikes around Tuolumne Meadows to Dave and the minute he heard “mainly flat” he began campaigning for hiking the John Muir Trail through Lyell Canyon. It was actually a fantastic choice -- not too difficult, with stunning views and since the trail winds along the Lyell Fork of the Tuolumne River, we had plenty of swimming spots available to us.

The trail at first heads through the woods, then crosses a double bridge over the Tuolumne River. The views from just a half-mile in were already phenomenal and we were glad we picked this particular hike. We actually followed the river upstream a short ways to cool off and enjoy the views before turning around to follow the trail.

In this area, the John Muir Trail crosses a series of alpine meadows that are studded with peaks, the most spectacular of which was the massive Kona Range. We took tons of breaks for pictures, swims and snacks before deciding to turn around and head back. Based on our time and reports from thru-hikers about how close we were to the end of the Canyon, I think we hiked about 11 miles roundtrip.

- Ivy
 
nice pics, i have a lot of the same ones from the valley. I like the el capitan shot the best, it came out a lot better than the ones i tried to take. that's great that you got up to the high country, unfortunately when i was there, it hadn't quite opened up yet. but there was plenty to do in the valley and over at glacier point, which i saw a few other similar shots as mine. i guess it's hard to be a bad photographer in the valley, everything comes out beautifully.
 
I'm heading there in 3 weeks - your pictures are great and have made me really anxious to go!!!

We were planning to spend 1 day in the valley, one day hiking in Tuolomne, and 1 day Hiking at Glacier point, maybe climb Half Dome the other day???

Any advice on what not to miss?

KZ
 
KZKlimber said:
We were planning to spend 1 day in the valley, one day hiking in Tuolomne, and 1 day Hiking at Glacier point, maybe climb Half Dome the other day???

Any advice on what not to miss?

I think it's hard to go wrong in Yosemite! :) If you're heading to Half Dome, make sure it's on a weekend day. The trail is currently closed on weekdays for some sort of maintenance, (I think between 7 a.m. to 4 p.m.,) which is why we didn't try it.

If I went again, we'd definitely skip the valley... there are sooo many people doing things there that drove me nuts (throwing trash out car windows.) We liked the less crowed Tuolumne area better, particularly the Lyell Canyon hike. Glacier Point is great at sunset!

The one thing we really wished we could have done but skipped was a hike up Sentinel Dome (which we skipped due to arriving later than expected.) That's on the top of my list for a return trip!

Have a great time!
-Ivy
 
Wow! Great pictures Amy...thanks for sharing. I'm adding Yosemite to my list of places I need to visit!

-MEB
 
Half Dome after 4

I just returned form a trip out there from July 1st to 9th as well.
After scuttling a Kings Canyon trip the first part of the week due to snow, we moved to Yosemite mid week to a more "relaxed" vacation.
We scored the last 2 available permits to stay at backcountry Little Yosemite camp, and then to climb Half Dome.
You can easily make Half Dome from that base camp and climb to the lower dome knee and wait for the trail crew to give passage after 4 PM.
Plenty of time to climb the awesome cable ladder and relax on the summit until 6! We made it back to camp by 7:30 just enough light for dinner.
Great trip.

Jeff
 
great pics.
I miss california already!

that's too bad about the alt sickness. I was really worried I would feel it but didn't have any problems till I hit ~12,500, at which point I just felt a bit dizzy.

your whitney pics are sweet too. did you guys get one of those walk in permits, or did you get it thru the whitney lottery??
 
anita514 said:
your whitney pics are sweet too. did you guys get one of those walk in permits, or did you get it thru the whitney lottery??

I applied for an overnight permit in the lottery but didn't get one (my permit application was processed on the day they announced the lottery was over! How's that for bad luck!) We did get a dayhike permit at that time.

When we went to pick it up two days before the hike, they had four cancellations for overnight permits so we were able to switch. I imagine the day before the hike they had lots more cancellations -- there were only a dozen or so people at Trail Camp that night (and nothing set up at Outpost Camp down below when I passed by on my way out.)

- Ivy
 
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