Great Western Divide, ending and epilogue

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Sunrise on Mitchell Peak, Sierra Nevada.

We missed sunset on Mitchell peak by a couple hours, though not for lack of trying.  We weren’t going to miss sunrise.  Seeing the sun come up over the Sierra Crest was a site that everyone is entitled to.  This is your heritage here, just waiting to be seen.  This was a great place to sleep and well worth the pain of the previous day.

Since the peak is only three easy, downhill miles from the trail head we took our time getting ready and moving.  We eventually did saddle up after a great breakfast put together by one JD Grant, though Gant passed on having any.

We hiked back to the truck and I got to go through the usual high anxiety of driving and being in a car.  For some reason after a long time in the backcountry it’s a very unsettling and frightening feeling being in a motor vehicle for me.  By the time we wandered around visalia looking for the Red Lobster the feeling had passed though and I was feeling much better.

I healed up over the course of the next week and wound up losing just about 2 pounds overall.  Some points to note about this trip:

  • My photography was off, since we only spent about 1.5 days above timberline and that’s where I see beauty.  It’s all beautiful, but the timberline is my muse.
  • Gant had a great idea to bring a scale to the trailhead for accurate before and after weights.
  • I want one of the SOG Trident knives
  • I need new Tevas, maybe I’ll bite the bullet and go back to Crocs.
  • Tent-less nights are far superior
  • Timing the trips to coincide with the Perseids seems like a great idea as long as your partner wakes you up.

I think that’s it.

Here are the final pictures:

Great Western Divide, Mitchell Peak, Day 5

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24 miles from Big Brewer lake to Mitchell Peak, Sierra Nevada.

My god, what had we started?  Still about 40 pounds in the packs, and almost 25 miles with over 5,000 feet of gain overall on the agenda for today.  Gant has alot of deep seated hatred for me and subconciously wants to see me die, the only reason I can think of is the “R” envy.

But either way we were on our way.  A bold, audacious plan to conquer Mitchell Peak from Big Brewer lake, such an approach has likely never been done, just because it’s dumb.  So we began.  We tried to avoid as much of the foliage as possible while crossing the talus, unsuccessful for the most part, but within two hours had cleared the four miles of crap to get back to the trail to Avalanche pass.  We turned down towards Roaring River and started booking.

We made some great time, I don’t think we ran into anyone all day.  Scratch that, we did run into a short bus looking group near the river, but they paid us no heed.  We saw a massive tree down across the trail that hadn’t been there three days ago when we crossed through.  So between that and the rock slides the night prior we got quite the experience overall.

We bathed, rested, ate and watered up at Roaring River, and we needed it for the day we had on tap.  When we started moving again we had our headphones on and were just cruising miles.  After about mile 16 I just had my groove going, the pain from hiking felt like penance to me.  We started hiking just before 8am, stopped for an extended dinner break around 5pm and then kept on hiking until 9:30pm when we hit that peak and dropped our packs for good.

Mitchell peak was indeed a worthy goal.  I had blisters on blisters on my feet and I haven’t been that physically or mentally exhausted in… I really don’t know how long.  We were ecstatic to be on the peak and what a view it was at night.  The peak is only three miles from the trail head and there is an the foundation for the old fire lookout tower left up there that makes for a perfect porch for sleeping.

We needed some time to relax after over thirteen hours of hiking, so we just enjoyed the view as we tried to warm up.  I was drenched in sweat and it was getting chilly at over 10,000 feet.  Out of calories and cold is a tough combo, but the elation of sucseeding was enough for me.  We slept without a tent again and were about to enjoy one of the most stunning sunrises I’ve ever seen.

Pictures from today:

Next Day

Great Western Divide, Mt. Brewer, Day 4

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Up from Big Brewer lake to Mt. Brewer, Sierra Nevada.

Gant woke up with a wet sleeping bag.  I’m not saying that he may or may not need depends, but my bag was dry and I really don’t know what else it could be.  Once we sorted all that out though, we got packed up and headed to Mt. Brewer, that fabulously pyramid shaped mountain with a view like no other.

We decided to go up the north slope, hit the peak and then down the south slope to maximize the amount of new ground we would each cover.  We started up at around 9am skirting the north shore of Big Brewer lake.  This is a place that a photographer could make a living, what a beautiful lake and ring of mountains.

From the lake we used North guard as our guide, heading towards the low point between NG and Brewer.  Then we turned south and headed up the long, steep, slightly unstable talus field.  Towards the top I got a bit off course and turned easy to moderate class 3 into some difficult class 3 to easy class 4.  The fact that my biceps, lats and back were sore the next day indicates to me I was lifting more of my body weight than I usually would on class 3 climbing.

One section near the top sketched me out entirely as I was headed to the Eastern summit and came up on a dead end that dropped a thousand feet below the rock I was on.  I slowly and stately retreated to find another course to the top and let my heart recover.

When I did reach the summit, at about 12:30 and five minutes behind Gant I found a nice low seat to relax in for awhile before taking in the tremendous views.  Being off both the main Sierra Crest and Great Western Divide, Mt. Brewer has a nearly unimpeded view in every direction.  Hundreds of peaks, less than a handful could we name.  Looking back, we didn’t spend enough time on the summit just enjoying the accomplishment.  I could have and should have stayed there for much longer soaking in that magnificence.

We signed the summit register, took our hero shots on the summit, took in some calories and went on our way.  We descended on the south side and quickly came to a veritable string of alpine lakes, ringed with the remains of last winter’s snow.  We restocked our water supply and across a vast gulf of distance saw another party of three with full packs on moving to the East.  For some reason those three were really motivating to see.

Gant stayed in the lead as we dropped back down back to camp.  We decided not to go for South Guard like was a possible plan on the way up, but instead went straight back to camp.

Once back at camp we had some decisions to make.  Since day 1 started so late, we lost mileage and time.  So, we were looking at two days of travel time back to the trailhead, which only left us one day of peak time.  There were no easy and desirable peaks within one day, with the exception of Mt. Francis Farquhar, which was going to be about a 15 mile round trip (without full packs) and some significant elevation gain/loss.  Running the numbers in Topo! I come up with a little under 5000 feet of gain/loss on the day.

Instead, for some inexplicable reason we chose to hike 24 miles, with packs on and about 5600 feet of gain/loss for the day.  I’m not sure how to explain that decision, but that’s what we came up with.  Hike 24 miles or so and sleep on the summit of Mitchell Peak if possible.

While Gant’s wet sleeping bag incident was still under investigation, we put up the tent to test his theory of swamp gas causing the issue or something.  We setup the tent and went to sleep with a long day on the agenda coming up.

Overnight we heard rock slides, two very distinct, very loud batches of them.  Very unnerving, though I fell back asleep quickly afterward.

Pictures from today:

Next Day

Great Western Divide, Big Brewer Lake, Day 3

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Up from one of Shorty’s Cabins to Big Brewer lake, Sierra Nevada.

On the morning of day three we found Shorty’s cabin.  It turns out that we slept no more than 50 yards from Shorty’s cabin.  We looked around, found an old hobnail boot that was literally no bigger than my hand.  Found an old teakettle and some nails.  His cabin was remarkably intact and quite hard to find, even knowing where it was supposed to be and sleeping almost on top of it.

We started hiking, we had a long day of off trail excursions and needed as much time as we could get.  We needed to find some cairns that the Ranger had said to look for.  We were going to follow a ridge line up above the Brewer creek drainage in an attempt to stay out of the deep foliage that we would have to whack through at the bottom.

When we started finding the cairns guiding our path we went straight uphill.  This was a steep ascent, thankfully though there was only about a mile of really steep stuff.  When we cleared the treeline at around 10,000 feet we kept going up a talus slope.  Then we started contouring around to the south side of the ridge we were on.  At this point we were above the Brewer creek drainage.  We kept going about another mile and the side slope got too steep to deal with safely so we started to descend a bit.

Unfortunately we were getting down from the talus without any foliage into a section of talus with deep foliage.  Talus sucks, foliage sucks.  Add the two together and it’s a crappy way to cover mileage, but we had no better choices so we descended further.

Through the foliage and over the talus until we got to some nice granite slabs and started moving.  We hit them and crossed over some randomly beautiful meadows for another mile or so until we were on the shore of Big Brewer lake.  This is when we got a bit of bad news as at the lake was also where an older group of three were camped, thankfully it was a big lake.  We dubbed them the Franks and one of them, upon returning from a failed attempt on Mt Brewer berated anyone who used cairns to find their way in the wilderness, unless the cairns were on a trail.  So that crotchety old fool was probably suffering from some hypoxia based on how little sense his arguments made, but neither Gant nor I took his bait and they retreated to their campsite never to be interacted with again.

We made camp and again slept under the stars, sans tent.  The perseids were at their peak tonight and we were both excited.  Gant even broke out some of his astronomy gear and gave an impromptu interpretive program for me.  So at around 3 or so AM Gant awoke and watched the celestial show, but for some reason failed to awaken me.  I just want to say thanks for that.  A great meteor shower, once a year and we are elbow deep in the Sierra at almost 11,000 feet with a beautifully clear sky and he didn’t wake me up.

Thanks partner.

Here are the pics from today:

Next

Great Western Divide, Shorty’s cabin, Day 2

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Through Sugarloaf to one of Shorty’s Cabin, Sierra Nevada.

Sunday dawned on us and we still had no firm plan on where exactly we were going or how to get there.  We knew we had some mileage to cover so we started early.

By the time we got to the first creek crossing we ran into a couple vegan Red Sox fans.  As part of a standard trail introduction you find out where people are from.  Whey they asked us, I told them where I was from and that Gant was from Ventura.  Well, shortly after leaving the company of the vegans Gant vehemently corrected me, stating that he wasn’t from Ventura, he was from, “Thantaa Bhharrrbaaaawwwwaaa”.  While extolling the virtues of his newly adopted home town he held his pinkie high in the air as a true high roller would.  So, my official apologies to Gant, I meant no offense.

We continued on.  We were losing elevation dropping into Sugarloaf valley and it was getting hotter.  Gant was working his sleeveless shirts, trying to preemptively scare away any bears with the size of his guns.  It seemed to work as we interacted with no bears, but he did take a sunburn for his efforts.  Based on his bravery I hereby award Mr. Gant the Brewer trip award for bravery.

Well on and on we went, finally arriving at the Roaring River Ranger station where we met Ranger Cindy Wood.  We chatted with her for a bit and scored a sweet map with some back country info written in by years and years of Roaring River Ranger staff.  We even got a bit of inside Ranger information that would have made Jared proud, she gave us some scoop on one of Shorty Lovelace’s obscure cabins.  Shorty was a short man who wintered in the Sierra Nevada and trapped for a living.  He died in 1963 and was a true man’s man, even rivaling the mighty Gant say some.

Now we had firm plans for the next day or two, since it was only day 2 of the trip so we were doing well.  We were going to try to find Shorty’s cabin and sleep near that for the night and then make the final approach to Big Brewer lake the next day.  So our first problem would be finding the cabin in question.

We had already covered about 14 miles when we left the trail and the easy travel that it represented.  We were tired and the feet were sore.  We were trying to find a veritable needle in a haystack.  We searched for almost two hours with our packs on and my feet were pounding.  We gave up shortly thereafter and setup another camp.  I had some Enertia trail food switchback spaghetti and I can honestly say it was the best meal I have ever had in the back country.

Another night closer to the Perseid meteor shower with quite a warm up display and a fair number of satellites passing by overhead.

Pictures from today:

Next day

Great Western Divide Trip Day 1

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Great Western Divide, Sierra Nevada.

All rain that falls to the east of the Great Western Divide drains into the great basin, to the west it all drains into the Pacific Ocean.  After a plethora of permutations and permit changes the GWD was our end goal for the trip.  By our, I mean Daniel Gant and I and by trip I mean one week with packs on backs.

Gant worked until midnight or so on Friday night and then woke up at the crack of 9am or so on Saturday, which placed him at my house at almost 10:30 which placed us at Grant Grove, Sequoia Kings Canyon at around 2 or 3.  We picked up our permit, picked up some souvenirs from the shop and made our merry way to the Marvin Pass trail head.  We stepped off at almost 5:30pm.  Yeah, that’s right we roll like that, a 5:30pm step off time.

The trail head and the area are deeply wooded and meadow-y.  It’s also the same area that William H. Brewer used in 1864 to reach the summit of his namesake, Mt. Brewer, which was where we were going to be after a couple hard fought days.

Today though, with the late start and limited daylight we only made it about 3 or 4 miles before we found a great little site to setup camp.  We both decided early on that we were going to minimize the use of the tent on this trip.  The weather was forecast to be pretty nice and the Perseid meteor shower was ramping up over the next couple days.

We stashed the bear canisters in a tree and counted over a dozen satellites flying overhead.

Pictures from today:

Next day

Circle of Solitude/GWD stats (before)

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Getting everything packed up and prepared for the next big backpacking trip on the Circle of Solitude I’ve come up with the following stats;

4 major trip planing/permit changes, hopefully no more.  We started with the Sierra High Route and then changed it to the circle of Solitude and now we are planning something more Great Western Divide oriented.  This includes the following; enter through Horse corral and head to Deadman Canyon.  Head south in DMC to Copper Mine pass up and over to Cloud Canyon.  Climb Triple divide and then head north in Cloud canyon tagging beautiful peaks on the way north through CC.

13 Pounds of Food (including the Bear Vault 400 Bear canister).

4.5 Pounds of Camera crap (20d, 24-105 L Lens, Gorilla pod, 3 batteries).

178 Pounds that I weigh ( I really didn’t train as hard as I could/should have for this bad boy of a trip)

47 Pounds of total pack weight. (26 percent of my body weight, just 1 measly percent over what I would consider optimal)

2 Gigs of music, from the Star Wars Gangsta Rap to Philip Glass’ piano solo and everything in between.

3-4 hours of sleep for Gant the night before the trip, which is quite par for his course.

60+ miles planned

10+ potential peaks; Triple Divide, Lion Rock, Mt Brewer, South Guard, Peak 12,345, Peak 12,640 Peak 3904m, Midway Mountain, Table Mountain, North Guard, Mt. Francis Farquhar.  Not that we plan on hitting all ten, but options are always nice.  I’ll be happy with the big three; Triple Divide, Brewer and Francis Farquhar.

24 hours from now I’ll be knee deep in some Sierra beauty and won’t return for an entire week, tired and refreshed.

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Circle of Solitude (answers)

Topic: Life| 2 Comments »

So, I have inexplicably gotten 3 emails (two from people I don’t know) asking about the Circle of Solitude trip. Generally just asking for the basic route/information on it. I am going to use this sentence here to plug the usefulness of the comment box in cases like this, instead of email please feel free to use either but comments are cool!

Now onto the subject at hand. The Solitude Circle is generally as follows and I do plan on wearing my brand new Adama for President T-shirt out there, hopefully on the summit of Triple Divide peak.  There are many options as is always the case in the Sierra Nevada, this is just a general outline.

This one launches from the Bubbs Creek trail head, right at Road’s End in Sequoia/Kings Canyon.  This is one of the more popular trail heads on the west side of the Sierra Nevada, partially because of the easy access to the Rae Lakes loop from here.  So from Bubbs creek you head to the Sphinx creek junction and head south over Avalanche pass.

Options: from here you can head into either Deadman or Cloud canyon.  From Deadman Canyon you can cross Copper Mine pass (just north of peak 12,2345) into Cloud Canyon or take Elizabeth pass trail (we’ll ignore this one for the CoS).  Either way you go, you have to get over to the south-east side of the Colby Pass trail near Gallats Lake.  For this trip, I’d like to hit Triple Divide Peak, seeing it from the High Sierra Trail was inspirational and intimidating.

From Gallats lake you head east towards Junction Meadow, bypassing Milestone Bowl and Kern Point.  Once you get to Junction meadow you’re on the High Sierra Trail for just a few marvelous minutes as you head north.  The HST then breaks East up to join the Pacific Crest Trail, but on the Circle of Solitude you keep heading north, staying away from the highway of people that the PCT is comparatively.   Heading north, you’ll eventually come to Lake South America.

At LSA you have another good set of options.  You can head south and east towards the PCT and when you hit that you head north again over Forrester pass.  You stay on the PCT for quite a bit, until you get to Vidette Meadow where you head back west towards the Bubbs creek trail head and completion.  The disadvantage to this PCT option being that you have so much time on the PCT with all those people.

I think the true spirit of a hike entitled the Circle of Solitude almost requires you to head straight north from Lake South America instead.  Heading north you’ll cross over Harrison pass, which is lower in elevation than Forrester, but less maintained (if at all).  From Harrison pass you start heading north-west from here to Lake Reflection and then straight north to the Bubbs creek junction and then again west, back towards the trail head and completion.

So that in summary is the Circle of Solitude.  Quite a bit of it is off trail, or at least has the option of being off trail, it’s all remote and lightly used.  I’m looking forward to it and recently found out that Gant has been successful in getting time off for the trip, but that Jared won’t be attending this time.

PS. Adama for president.

Circle of Solitude Trail Map

Update on summer numbers

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The more I learn the more it looks like in the range of 1-6 total participants the total number will eventually work out to be 1.   The mover just doesn’t have the seniority to get time off in an understaffed area, the broken one is no wolverine and will likely take too long to heal up.  The other one just didn’t have the intestinal fortitude to make the 7 day trip into the backcountry.

Now, the biggest question is do I have the cajones to go out solo?  I know the route, I know my gear, I know my capabilities and my limitations.  I know what I can and can’t do and I know I’m capable, but I guess the more integral question is, “Do I want to?”  This would be the longest period of time I’d ever been alone and it seems appropriate that it would be on the Circle of Solitude I suppose.

I know when we got out of the Marines, we all decompressed in different ways.  Canfield lived in the mountains alone for six months, Deleon opened a taco stand, Jolin wound up in jail, Engie threw himself into his education and I’m just a jackass.  Maybe this would be a good chance for an oft-delayed decompression for me.  Still though, I’d prefer not to deal with those demons yet.  Seven days of solitude seems like a nice concept, I’m just not sure I’m ready for it.

Summer numbers

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Well the planning and preparation for the (sometimes) annual summer Sierra Nevada backpacking trip is in full swing.  There are alot of variables to juggle; people, places, times.  The trip dates are the closest to being final, the trip location is coming along though not quite nailed down and the final biggest variable is entirely up in the air; the number of people.

This time around there are a lot of problems with people.  The usual suspects that I hike with both have issues that may prevent participation so I invited my boy, Scott.  Though, Scott might not be able to make it depending on the number of trip days involved.  Scott also may bring one or two people, or none.  The shorter number of total days the trip is the likelier he is to be able to go.

So, party one has a freshly broken arm and a busted up shoulder.  He has surgery on monday and may not be all healed up by trip time.  He also has a baby due just a month and a half after the trip.  With two bad appendages, he also has trouble (as in can’t) train up to get into the shape he needs to be in for the trip.

Party two is in the process of either a) moving a hundred miles away and taking a new position and all that entails.  As well as dealing with trying to get some significant time off for the trip or b) staying where he’s at and just hoping that he can get time off in the middle of a staffing shortage.  In both cases he also has a long distance relationship to make work as well.

Party three has twins who are turning two just a few days before the trip.  I remember getting the message from him minutes before stepping off onto the HST a couple years ago that he had the twin girls.  That was great news to hear just before leaving.  He also may or may not bring with him one or two people on the trip.

So, between all that the number of people varies from 1 (me) to 6 potentially.  Hopefully over the next few weeks we’ll start straightening this all out.