Dan's Outside

I go, I see, I do, I walk, I think, I like…

Restoring Hetch Hetchy

Loyd at Yosemite Blog has been pointing to a number of articles on the subject of draining and restoring Hetch Hetchy Valley – the “other Yosemite” that was dammed (or damned?) by San Francisco early in the 1900s.

Today he points to two articles. A Time article points out that several hundred dams (though none this large) have been eliminated in recent years, and it generally suggests that contemplating a restoration of Hetch Hetchy is a reasonable thing.

The second, from SFGate suggests that draining the valley would just leave “mosquitos and swamps,” which I thought was kind of humorous (besides being just plain wrong.) Mosquitos and swamps are a natural part of the valley bottom environment at that elevation in the Sierra, at least on a seasonal basis.

Anyone who visited Yosemite Valley this June understands that seasonal flooding (with attendant swampy areas and, yes, mosquitos) is part of what makes such an area so beautiful.

(Technorati: Yosemite, Environment, Sierra Nevada)
—–

July 12, 2005 Posted by | Environment | Comments Off on Restoring Hetch Hetchy

copyrightText

© Copyright Dan Mitchell. Use requires permission.
—–

July 11, 2005 Posted by | Commentary | Comments Off on copyrightText

Tioga Road Flowers (July 8, 2005)

YosemiteFlowers2005|07|08: Flowers and Meadow. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. Copyright Dan Mitchell.
Flowers and Meadow. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. © Copyright Dan Mitchell.

—–

July 10, 2005 Posted by | Green World | Comments Off on Tioga Road Flowers (July 8, 2005)

A Day at Tuolumne Meadows (July 8, 2005)

I wanted to do some photography and to see the Tuolumne area before all of the snow melts, so yesterday I drove to the Tuolumne Meadows/Tioga Pass area and back. Yes, a long day of about 21 hours on the road and the trail.

I left around 4:30 a.m. and got to Yosemite fairly early. After turning onto Tioga Pass Road, I stopped a few times to take pictures, finally arriving at Tuolumne Meadows between 9:45 and 10:00. It seems that things are finally starting up open up. The store and grill were open and a crew was repainting the parking lot. Most campgrounds were closed on the way up, but by the time I left in the evening several had opened, including Tuolumne Meadows. It also appearred that Tuolumne Lodge opened yesterday – on the way up there was a big sign stating that the Lodge was closed, but on the way down in the evening I actually saw that they had hung out a ‘vacancy’ sign. (Imagine that – a vacancy on a summer Friday evening!)

TuolumneMeadow2005|07|08: Tuolumne Meadows. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. Copyright Dan Mitchell.
Tuolumne Meadows. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. © Photo copyright Dan Mitchell.

After taking some pictures in the Meadow and making a quick stop at the store I headed up the road and made a brief visit to the meadow and lakes near the pass. Then I drove back down to the Mono Pass trail (perhaps a miles or so) and loaded up the pack for a trip out towards Mono Pass.

Everything is still very wet and parts of the trail were flooded at the start. A few minutes into the hike I managed to get my socks a bit wet during a stream crossing. There was another crossing a short distance later, so this time I took off my boots and socks and waded, stopping on the other side to dry out.

The trail heads off in the general direction of the pass, crossing a couple of moraines near the beginning and then ascending gradually and steadily. It turns left at a junction with the Spillway Lake trail and then climbs more steeply for awhile, eventually starting to level out near a junction with the trail to Parker Pass.

I took the Parker Pass trail, having never been there – though I had previously looked that way from a low ridge near Mono Pass. This trail crossed a meadow and ascended a sandy section (very wet this year) and then more or less disappeared under the snow as it approached a low ridge. I could have followed the trail through the snow, but it seemed just as easy to make my own route in the sand and rocks along this ridge until the trail again emerged from the snow.

ParkerSuncups2005|07|08: Suncups and Clouds near Parker Pass. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005.
Suncups and Clouds Near Parker Pass. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. © Photo copyright Dan Mitchell.

From here the route to the pass was quite obvious. The little ridge eventually merged into a broad sloping valley that headed right up to the pass. It was an easy walk, though I had to detour cross-country a few times to avoid large snow fields and/or very wet and muddy sections where the meltwater was flowing heavily.

I soon arrived at the windy pass and stopped to put on a windbreaker, eat a snack, and take some pictures. Unlike Mono Pass (from which you can look down to Mono Lake) there is no view of Owens Valley from this pass, but the view of snow-covered peaks made up for that. Below was a good sized lake; I suspect it was Spillway lake, but I didn’t have a map so I could not check. If it is Spillway, it looks like one could make a pretty easy loop back past the lake and pick up the return trail to Tioga Pass Road.

ParkerPass2005|07|08: Parker Pass. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. Copyright Dan Mitchell.
Parker Pass. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. © Photo copyright Dan Mitchell.

After leaving the pass I backtracked to the small ridge and instead of following the trail back, I decided to cut up to the top of the ridge and see if I could make it over to Mono Pass. On a previous walk to Mono Pass I had climbed a ridge from which I thought I could see Parker Pass, and this low ridge seemed to be that very same ridge.

FloatingTarnIce2005|07|08: Ice Floating in Alpine Tarn. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. Copyright Dan Mitchell.
Floating Ice in Alpine Tarn. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. © Photo copyright Dan Mitchell.

I quicky got to the top and crossed the relatively flat upper section to where I could see down the other side. There was good news and bad news. The good news was that I could see the old cabins at Mono Pass. The bad news was that the drop off below where I stood was steep and snow covered. I traversed to the right on the ridge and finally managed to work my way down to the old cabins and then across to Mono Pass.

From here it was just a matter of backtracking to the parking lot. I was a bit smarter about the creek crossing where I had waded earlier in the day. This time I followed the creek upstream a ways and found a good size log to cross on, and then I found a shallow spot where I could more easily cross the second creek.

Soon I was back at the car and heading over the pass to get some dinner at the Tioga Pass Resort. I finished dinner about 45 minutes before sunset, and used the remaining daylight to get pictures at Ellery Lake and then at the pass before starting the long drive back home.

TiogaKuna2005|07|08: Sunset, Tioga Pass. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. Copyright Dan Mitchell.
Sunset, Tioga Pass. Yosemite National Park. July 8, 2005. © Photo copyright Dan Mitchell.

I was very surprised at the small number of people in the high country. It felt more like mid-September than July. Perhaps that news reports about snow and high water have scared them away. In any case, lots of people are missing some absolutely stunning conditions in the high country this season.
—–

July 9, 2005 Posted by | Trips | Comments Off on A Day at Tuolumne Meadows (July 8, 2005)

Redwood Grove Near Saratoga?

Saratoga, California, that is. And, yes. Perhaps 10 minutes drive up the road from Saratoga espresso shops and restaurants is Sanborn County Park. A couple miles uphill from the parking lot is the Todd Creek Grove.
—–

July 2, 2005 Posted by | Trails | Comments Off on Redwood Grove Near Saratoga?

Death Valley Storm

DeathValleyStormBW2005|03|28: Storm. Death Valley National Park. March 28, 2005. Copyright Dan Mitchell.
Storm. Death Valley National Park. March 28, 2005. © Photo copyright Dan Mitchell.
—–

July 1, 2005 Posted by | Uncategorized | Comments Off on Death Valley Storm

New Almaden Quicksilver County Park Association

On this morning’s quick Almaden Quicksilver hike up and down the Deep Gulch Trail (training for summer pack trips) I ran into a group from the New Almaden Quicksilver County Park Association. They were comparing old photographs of the English Camp area with the current landscape.

The old pictures were fascinating. Not only did they show some striking changes in the vegetation (now that it is no longer being used for mining operations) but there were a lot of structures on the hillside near English Camp.

You can find out more from the NAQCPA web site. (Well, actually you can’t. I just discovered that they apparently do not maintain the site. Instead, try a Google search on “New Almaden Mining Museum”. ;-)
—–

July 1, 2005 Posted by | News | Comments Off on New Almaden Quicksilver County Park Association

March of the Penguins

March of the Penguins: “Life in Antarctica can get pretty grim. But don’t tell that to these driven birds.” SFGate:

Director Luc Jacquet and his team have done an incredible job gaining the trust of these penguins and recording their tortuous migration. Some of the shots — such as a mother tenderly passing her unhatched egg to her mate to keep it warm before she goes for food, and the undersea shots of feeding taken from a small submersible — are jaw-dropping.

Just as poetic are the sweeping vistas of ice, with long lines of penguins in the distance inching forward, looking like ants. “March of the Penguins” is in a way an epic adventure film with a cast of thousands — and narrated, as if he were the voice of God, by Morgan Freeman (and let me be the first to lobby for legislation that Freeman narrate all documentaries from now on; I’m phoning my congressman today).

—–

July 1, 2005 Posted by | Events | Comments Off on March of the Penguins

A Food Drop – My First

As I wrote yesterday, I’m taking a 14-day Sierra pack trip later this summer. I was going to try to carry 14 days of food – as I did when I was (much) younger. I know from my 9-day trip last summer that I can definitely carry 10 days of food and I think I could get a few more into the pack if pressed.

However, my friends, either being lazier or (more likely) smarter than I, have decided that we’ll do a food drop at Muir Trail Ranch. This means putting about 5 days worth of food into a 5 gallon bucket and mailing it to Muir Trail Ranch about 3 weeks before I’ll pass through there.

This raises a couple of interesting questions. First, I recently read a trip report by someone who did this a few years back – and arrived at Muir Trail Ranch only to find that the food cache had not made it there. This hiker was doing the complete Muir Trail and, unfortunately, ended up bagging the trip and hiking out at that point. Ouch! I hear that I can get a return receipt from the Postal Service and that MTR may be willing to confirm receipt by email. I think I’ll try to get my cache in the mail a bit early.

The second issue is what to pack. Some of the things I typically rely on probably would not survive 3 weeks in a plastic bucket – much less a trip through the postal system and then by pack trail to MTR. For example, I love to carry a few pieces of good cheese with me. That would never last long enough to include in the cache. So I’m going to have to rethink some of my food practices for the final 5 days of this trip, particularly regarding some of the perishable foods that I often carry for lunch.

On the other hand, it just occurred to me that I could put more food into the cache than I think I’ll need and include a few items that may or may not survive. If they do survive I’ll use them. If not, I leave them and take the backup food.

Now I just need to figure out the very best treat for nine days into a pack trip. Hmmm…
—–

June 30, 2005 Posted by | Technique | Comments Off on A Food Drop – My First

A Good Time to Visit Tuolumne Area?

As you may have heard, although Tioga Pass Road is open the Park Service and concessions are being slow about opening up services. Apparently many campgrounds are still closed as are some of the other facilities. Martha Claassen went thru there earlier this week and reports:

Tuesday I drove through the park to Twin Lakes and put the poster up
in Tuolumne Meadows at the store, campground, and wilderness office.
If anyone wants to visit that part of the park without the usual
summer crush they should get up there right now!! It was a beautiful
day and there were less than 6 cars parked at Olmstead Point (and one lone photographer there snapping the sunset Weds. night) , one car
in the Wilderness Permit lot, almost no one on the road at all, you
get the picture. It is sad that the camping facilities are not
available for use, I know there are many
disappointed would be visitors to our national treasure, but for the
hiker/backpacker, or
anyone that dislikes crowds, this late opening is bliss…

Sounds almost as good as October, but with the mosquitos… ;-)
—–

June 30, 2005 Posted by | News | Comments Off on A Good Time to Visit Tuolumne Area?