[pct-l] Sierra reports from bloggers
ned at mountaineducation.org
ned at mountaineducation.org
Wed May 21 20:50:45 CDT 2014
Great report, Walt!
Mountain Education was in the area at the same time! Too bad we missed each
other!
Since pictures and videos "are worth a thousand words," we have them from
our Snow Advanced Course between Kennedy Meadows, Forester Pass, and
Kearsarge Pass, May 9-18, and will post them to the Mountain Education
Facebook page under Photos/Albums or Videos.
So, keep an eye out for them!
Realize, the sierra is about 5 weeks ahead of season, so right now it looks
and feels more like July 1st than May 21st! (cool days, not freezing at
night, and no bugs)
Ned Tibbits, Director
Mountain Education
www.mountaineducation.org
-----Original Message-----
From: walt Durling
Sent: Monday, May 19, 2014 1:47 PM
To: Luce Cruz
Cc: pct-l at backcountry.net
Subject: Re: [pct-l] Sierra reports from bloggers
Hi Andrea. It's me again, from earlier.
I just returned from KM 4 days ago. While it was earlier than planned, I
took the opportunity of a ride that was available to get me to Bakersfield
to fly back east for a family to-do.
The week before last I flew to Reno and took the regional bus to Lone Pine,
thinking I'd catch the bus the next day to Inyokern, hitch a ride to Walker
Pass, and then proceed north from there. But after speaking with a couple
of thru-hikers at the Whitney hostel who had traversed the 50 miles between
WP and KM, reporting very little water and temps to 100, I decided to
re-plan. One of the hikers, Daniel, had summited Whitney 2 days before and
had got caught in a snowstorm at the top, necessitating he spend the night
there in terrible conditions. He backtracked to Lone Pine to rest. I think
he's posting a video online about it.
The next day I managed to hitch a ride up the mountain to Horseshoe Meadow
campground, where I stayed for 24 hours acclimating to the elevation. I
then hiked up Trail Pass to the pct and headed north, wanting to see
Whitney. After several miles I ran into 2 day hikers who told me that more
snow was coming. That was a surprise because it had snowed 3 days earlier
and there was a lot of snow - mostly frozen - on the trail, but I had heard
nothing while in Lone Pine about more snow. Anyway, I turned around and
about the time I got back to the Trail Pass junction it began snowing. It
was late in the day so I went down the pass a bit and pitched my shelter.
Fortunately only about 2 inches fell.
Anyway, for the next 2'days the daytime temps rose into the low 50's with
plenty of sunshine. The downside was the snow on the trail softened quickly
and I found myself postholing quite a lot on long stretches of trail between
10,500 and 11,500'. I think I only made about 11 miles those 2 days.
After that the snow became more infrequent. The third night out I got
caught in a hellacious windstorm near the top of Mulkey Pass. I didn't
think my cuben fiber shelter would hold up - a lousy night of howling winds,
shearing wind gusts, and holding onto slim shelter pole hoping it wouldn't
snap! Each night the temps went below freezing. :)
When I got to KM there were about a dozen thrus hanging out and chowing down
on burgers and dogs. Between just south of the portal and KM I had passed
about 2 dozen hikers, all in the vanguard of this year's class. I was able
to pass on up-to-date trail conditions to them at least to Cottonwood Trail
junction.
Spring in the high Sierras is nothing if it isn't unpredictable, which I
found out. I still had a great time and the mountains are beautiful. Most
of the seasonal streams from KM up to Whitney portal are running, so water
availability isn't a problem this early. Of course, the long climb north
out of KM is arduous and has long stretches of arid hiking. A few miles
above the Kern Bridge - the 1st one you cross shortly after leaving KM,
there's a seasonal stream running well which crosses the path. North of
that Cow creeks have water to get you the second Kern Bridge. Beyond
that, Death Canyon Creek awaits, which has plenty of water. So, too, does
Diaz Creek.
Several weeks from now, what with the low snow and persistent draught, I
fear that the 50 miles from KM to Cottonwood Trail might not have as much
water as it does now. I overheard one old local geezer hanging out at the
store lamenting on how low the Kern River was, though it looked like it had
plenty of water to me!
Anyway, this is what I encountered. Unless it shows again I think there
will only be patches around. I imagine Whitney will have snow, as will
Forester Pass, but I also think that much will have melted and will be
passable. Once my family to-do is finished, I'll figure where to return to
the trail. Hope this helps somewhat, and have fun! Walt
Sent from my iPad
> On May 19, 2014, at 15:07, Luce Cruz <lucecruz13 at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> On Mon, May 19, 2014 at 11:41 AM, Andrea Ogston
> <andreaogston at gmail.com>wrote:
>
>> Greetings:
>>
>> I am heading to Kennedy Meadows Friday and was wondering if anyone has
>> read
>> a PCT blog of someone currently in the Sierras?
>>
>> Andrea
>
> Folks in the Sierras right now may not be able to get their reports posted
> due to technical limitations. We have to either be patient, or bold.
> --
> Luce Cruz
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