Tourists, Glacier Point
Tourists, Glacier Point. Yosemite, California. June 11, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
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Sunset, North Dome and Mount Hoffman
Sunset, North Dome and Mount Hoffman. Yosemite National Park. June 11, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
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Yosemite Falls, Glacier Point
Yosemite Falls. Glacier Point, Yosemite National Park. June 11, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
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Connecting Two Trails
I took one of those satisfying hikes today that connects two hikes that I have taken previously. I have frequently hike the Javelina Loop (and cross-country variations) at Calero Park. Last week I hike out on the Bald Peaks trail to where it enters Rancho Cañada del Oro. Today I turned these two hikes into one really big loop.
I started at the main entrance to the trails at Calero and turned right onto Javelina Loop at the old corral. I followed this out to just about the point where it heads up and over the ridge to start back – but instead took the Cottle Trail. This mostly follows a gently ascending dirt road through the bottom of a canyon before turning to the right and ascending to the Cottle Rest Area after an unmarked fork.
From here the trail becomes, well, a trail. It appears to be seldom used, judging by the overgrown condition. It ascendes, with alternat steep sections and flatter sections between sub-ridges. Eventually it follows an old fence line up the hill and finally emerges at the Bald Peaks Trail. From here it is a pretty straightforward route back to where I started.
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Merced River Saga Continues
Last month a rock slide closed the hiway from Mariposa into Yosemite Valley. (A good central source for news on this is Yosemite Blog, where there are links to numerous related stories.)
Although it wasn’t first reported this way, it now appears that this is a major slide. It has not stopped, the road is completely covered, and material threatens to slide into the Merced river itself. Recent reports indicate that the closure of this road is now likely to last all the way through the summer.
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Sierra Crest, Conway Summit
Sierra Crest. Conway Summit. May 27, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
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Crowds are often inversely proportional to miles walked
Sometimes, anyway. Today I hiked at Almaden Quicksilver, starting at the MacAbee Road entrance – where there were so many hikers and runners that it was actually hard to find a parking space. There were tons of people up to the first fork in the trail. After that there were still a pretty good number, but the stream of hikers/runners was not constant. Another junction leads to the trail that follows the ridgeline to the intersection of Mine Hill and Castillero trails. Here there were only a few hikers, cyclists, runners, and equistrians enjoying the amazingly clear vista that stretched from San Francisco south to distant hills.
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Bald Peaks Trail (6/3/06)
Today’s hike took me up to the ridgetop Bald Peaks Trail at Calero Park.

Bald Peaks Trail. Calero Park. June 3, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
While I could have made a long (10 mile) loop out of this hike, I didn’t have quite enough time this morning. I started at the parking lot by the McKean Road entrance to the park and headed out on the Figueroa Trial – a mostly easy and level trail on the portions I hiked.
Eventually I turned left onto the Canada del Oro trail and ascended fairly steadily – though some poison oak – to the junction heading left to the top of the ridge and the Bald Peaks trail. There are some stunning views from this ridge, both looking south towards more coastal ranges and valleys, and looking north across Santa Clara Valley and on towards San Francisco.
I continued on this trail, following it up and down (mostly up!) until I reached the turnoff to the Chisnantuck Peak Trail.

Fences, Bald Peaks Trail. Calero Park. June 3, 2006. © Copyright G Dan Mitchell.
Here I took a short side trip to the park’s boundary with the Rancho Cañada del Oro Open Space Preserve. For a few minutes I thought about making this into a loop trip out on the Chisnantuck Peak trail wiht a return via Javelina. However, time was just a bit short so I headed back the way I came.
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Welcome
“Hello and welcome” to visitors arriving here from the sidebar of the article in the Washington Times about global warming skeptics. (“The Tempest“).
Not that I’m particularly sympathetic to the subjects of the article, obsessive skeptics of the evidence that global warming is an issue of concern. A quote:
Well, no.
While the models are, well, models and, as such, cannot perfectly replicate reality, models certainly can be some “damn good.” Many of the skeptics’ arguments are, at their core, largely a recognition that the evidence from those who find compelling evidence of global warming are something short of absolutely perfect.
Unfortunately, I do have to agree with the following from the article:
I am more hopeful that the tide is beginning to shift.
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June 14, 2006 Posted by gdanmitchell | Commentary | Comments Off on Welcome