[pct-l] Sierra Snow Update
Reinhold Metzger
reinholdmetzger at cox.net
Sat Apr 23 04:47:42 CDT 2011
Yes Melanie,
If I want to zooom in to get a close up shut I need the wide angle lens
to capture it all.
And yes Melanie, I also appreciate your "assets"....that is why I want
a close up shot,
so I can appreciate them even more.
And please Melanie and Sugar Moma,......don't throw me into Lake Morena
at 5 in
the morning.
The water will be cold and I am not well insulated like
Switchback......I'm just a lean
hiking machine.....I will be freezing.
Stick with the original plan....throw Switchback in the lake....he has
more insulation.
Switchback has so much insulation, he could hike naked at the North Pole
and not
feel the cold.
JMT Reinhold
The lean hiking machine
---------------------------------------------------------------
On 4/21/2011 8:26 PM, Melanie Clarke wrote:
> Dear Reinhold,
>
> Are you saying that you need a wide angle lens to capture all of my
> backside???? OUCH!!!
>
> All right, that's it! YOU are the one who will be going swimming in
> Lake Moreno at 5am!!!!! I'll have you know there are some who
> appreciate my "assets!"
>
> Melanie
>
> /Although,...if Melanie& Sugar Moma should get caught with their
> pants down
> I want to be there.....it should be quiet a spectacular sight.
> I think I will bring my camera......and wide angle lens/
>
> On Thu, Apr 21, 2011 at 4:24 AM, Reinhold Metzger
> <reinholdmetzger at cox.net <mailto:reinholdmetzger at cox.net>> wrote:
>
> Yes Shroomer,
> Excellent advice.....I have been sending Sierra snow warnings to
> the list
> since December which have mostly fallen on deaf ears.
> It appears folks are not accepting the facts or are in a denial stage.
> If you think last year was bad, you might be in a state of shock
> when you
> hit the Sierra this year.
> I have been prowling around the Sierra, Summer& Winter, for 40+
> years and
> don't really remember ever seeing more snow than this year.
> I just came back this weekend from another week of skiing at
> Mammoth and can
> tell you, huge boulders that normally protrude way above the snow
> line are still
> completely covered by snow.
> Mammoth averages 340" of snow per year...it got 516" by this time
> last year and
> has already received 626" this year.
> Do the math.....this ain't rocket science....everybody should be
> able to figure
> out what kind of snow year this is.
> A good friend in the Tahoe area told me 2weeks ago that Donner
> Summit had received
> 740" so far and that there is about as much snow as he has ever seen.
>
> So, what does that mean?..It means there is a hell of a lot of
> snow in the Sierra
> and the snow pack (base), at the higher elevations is still 23
> feet high which is
> about 8-9 feet higher then what it was last year this time of the
> year.
> I know, some folks say it may all melt by the time we get there in
> June.
> I say, don't count on it..23 feet of snow take a lot longer to
> melt than 14-15 feet.
> Take Shroomer's& Ned's advice....be prepared and don't get caught
> with your pants
> down.
>
> Although,...if Melanie& Sugar Moma should get caught with their
> pants down
> I want to be there.....it should be quiet a spectacular sight.
> I think I will bring my camera......and wide angle lens......I
> want to make sure I
> capture all of them.
>
> This will be a spectacular photo opportunity....Sugar Moma&
> Melanie, in color, on
> wide angle, on the PCT, knee deep in snow, WITH THEIR PANTS DOWN.
> This almost certainly will win the "PACIFIC CREST TRAIL
> COMMUNICATOR" picture of
> the year award and grace the center fold.
>
> Deems and Monte Dodge will be so jealous.
>
> I'm so excited about this I can't sleep...I'm like a little kid in
> a candy store...I
> cant keep my mind of Sugar Moma and Melanie.
>
> JMT Reinhold
> Your sleepless trail companion
>
> ------------------------------------
> Shroomer wrote;
> Because of a lot of snow in the San Jacinto and beyond last year,
> and the
> recommendation at the "snow report" at KO, many people had their
> winter gear
> sent to Idyllwild, (Paradise was closed) and decided at that
> point. Some of
> us jumped forward to hike the Mojave and Tehachapis first and came
> back
> several weeks later, and still found lots of snow to deal with.
> People who
> had sent their winter gear on to Kennedy Meadows were either
> buying new
> traction devices etc in Idyllwild or were yogiing it from other
> hikers. I
> remember the gear shops had a huge run on winter gear because of
> us, and had
> to ship in extra microspikes. I loaned my ice axe to a Fidget,
> and then
> ended up using Bacon's ice axe later. Everybody was traiding gear
> to make
> it work. And then many chose to hike the roads around Fuller
> Ridge instead.
> If you want to hike that section in deep snow, have the gear.
>
> My recommendation, given the snowiness of this year, is to have
> ice axe and
> traction devices sent to Idyllwild, and then decide when you get
> there. If
> it's all melted down to a manageable level, as in many past years,
> then just
> ship it on to KM. But if you end up in conditions like last year,
> you will
> be glad of anything you had planned to use in the High Sierra.
> You may need
> the option, or you may not, but if you need the gear and don't
> have it, you
> may miss one of the great parts of the trail. Frankly, those
> mtns, and
> Fuller Ridge, which was scary even with the gear for many of us, were
> beautiful, and a lot of fun to hike over.
>
> Shroomer
>
>
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