Trip Advice: Circumnavigating Goddard
Posted: Mon Aug 08, 2016 1:22 pm
Hello all,
I have a trip with a small group coming up in a few weeks time. The plan is to do the North Lake / South Lake loop, but with a side jaunt around (and up) Mount Goddard. I have done lots of research and don't really have any specific requests for advice. Nevertheless, I thought it would be smart to write out my loose thoughts and see if any of the more-wise-than-I folks on this board wanted to take a look and see if they have anything helpful to tell me.
Everyone in the group is what I'd call either level 3 or 4, with plenty of long backpacking trips under our belts and a reasonable amount of cross-country experience. Everyone has climbed at least one Sierra mountain and crossed at least one Sierra cross-country pass. We do not, however, have as much experience as some of the folks on this board, and this trip is intended to be a bit more adventurous than what we've done before. We are comfortable with class 3 terrain, but would prefer to avoid extensive or highly exposed class 3 as much as possible. No technical climbing.
The trip will be 8 days / 7 nights. Primary interest is big mountain scenery, with photography a secondary consideration. At least a bit of fishing would be nice; we will have a rod or two with us. The group is relatively fit, and I'd like to make this challenging but not a complete death march-- sometimes it's nice to have a spare hour to laze around in a meadow or on a ridge or whatever. We'd probably average maybe 12-13 miles a day on trail but are capable of doing bigger days; obviously we'll do less distance during cross-country portions.
Here is the itinerary as I've got it at the moment:
Day One: Hike from North Lake trailhead to either Lower or Upper Lamarck Lake and camp. Take our time getting started; acclimate; get used to being in wilderness.
Day Two: Cross Lamarck Col and camp at Darwin Bench. I have not been over Lamarck Col before, but it looks fairly straightforward-- leave the main trail at the sign; follow the use trail and stay on the left side of the ridge between the two Lamarck Lakes; scramble over the snowfield to the Col. Then descend into the canyon and follow it down to Darwin Bench.
Day Three: Down Darwin Bench to Evolution Basin, then up the JMT to Wanda Lake, cross the ridge on the western end of the lake, camp somewhere in the vicinity of Davis Lakes. This also seems fairly straightforward.
Day Four: Climb Mount Goddard via Starr's Route and return to camp. I have a decent sense of what to expect out of this climb-- find the appropriate ridge, get on it by scrambling up the talus at its base to avoid class 3, climb the ridge, find the ledge that takes you across the face of the sub-peak up onto the Goddard Divide, then make a straightforward talus slog to the summit. Sounds like the big picture is simple enough but there may be some micro-routefinding challenges; I'm hopeful that a full day will provide plenty of time to do it deliberately and carefully.
Day Five: Davis Lakes to Martha Lake, then over Reinstein Pass and down to Lake 10,232 at the head of Goddard Creek. This is a bucket list spot for me. I haven't done extensive scouting of the Davis to Martha leg yet, but it seems doable enough. Reinstein Pass looks challenging but straightforward. Hoping to have a bit of time to explore the upper reaches of Goddard Creek in the evening.
Day Six: Travel through Ionian Basin, exiting via Black Giant Pass, and camp anywhere appropriate. This is the day that seems like the biggest wild card, as I'm well aware of Ionian's reputation. I'm also not clear on the best way to climb into the basin proper from Lake 10,232, but I've seen many people talk about doing it in trip reports, so I'm sure I can figure it out. My plan for Ionian is simply to take my time, move from one landmark to the next, and pick my way across to Black Giant Pass. If it's way easier than I expect, maybe there will be time to climb Black Giant. If it's way harder, maybe we will have to stop short, camp in the basin, and hike the rest of the way out the following day.
Day Seven: Down LeConte Canyon and up to Dusy Basin. Simple. Hopefully we'll actually be near the JMT at the beginning of the day, and not waking up in Ionian, but we will see.
Day Eight: Over Bishop Pass and out to South Lake.
It sounds like Mount Goddard could be climbed from the north, via Starr's Route, the west, from Martha Lake, or the south, via a long slog up a massive talus slope. Starr's Route sounds like the most fun and slots neatly into our itinerary, but we certainly could modify things to attack it from a different angle.
Any thoughts would be welcome. I promise to post a trip report on my return.
I have a trip with a small group coming up in a few weeks time. The plan is to do the North Lake / South Lake loop, but with a side jaunt around (and up) Mount Goddard. I have done lots of research and don't really have any specific requests for advice. Nevertheless, I thought it would be smart to write out my loose thoughts and see if any of the more-wise-than-I folks on this board wanted to take a look and see if they have anything helpful to tell me.
Everyone in the group is what I'd call either level 3 or 4, with plenty of long backpacking trips under our belts and a reasonable amount of cross-country experience. Everyone has climbed at least one Sierra mountain and crossed at least one Sierra cross-country pass. We do not, however, have as much experience as some of the folks on this board, and this trip is intended to be a bit more adventurous than what we've done before. We are comfortable with class 3 terrain, but would prefer to avoid extensive or highly exposed class 3 as much as possible. No technical climbing.
The trip will be 8 days / 7 nights. Primary interest is big mountain scenery, with photography a secondary consideration. At least a bit of fishing would be nice; we will have a rod or two with us. The group is relatively fit, and I'd like to make this challenging but not a complete death march-- sometimes it's nice to have a spare hour to laze around in a meadow or on a ridge or whatever. We'd probably average maybe 12-13 miles a day on trail but are capable of doing bigger days; obviously we'll do less distance during cross-country portions.
Here is the itinerary as I've got it at the moment:
Day One: Hike from North Lake trailhead to either Lower or Upper Lamarck Lake and camp. Take our time getting started; acclimate; get used to being in wilderness.
Day Two: Cross Lamarck Col and camp at Darwin Bench. I have not been over Lamarck Col before, but it looks fairly straightforward-- leave the main trail at the sign; follow the use trail and stay on the left side of the ridge between the two Lamarck Lakes; scramble over the snowfield to the Col. Then descend into the canyon and follow it down to Darwin Bench.
Day Three: Down Darwin Bench to Evolution Basin, then up the JMT to Wanda Lake, cross the ridge on the western end of the lake, camp somewhere in the vicinity of Davis Lakes. This also seems fairly straightforward.
Day Four: Climb Mount Goddard via Starr's Route and return to camp. I have a decent sense of what to expect out of this climb-- find the appropriate ridge, get on it by scrambling up the talus at its base to avoid class 3, climb the ridge, find the ledge that takes you across the face of the sub-peak up onto the Goddard Divide, then make a straightforward talus slog to the summit. Sounds like the big picture is simple enough but there may be some micro-routefinding challenges; I'm hopeful that a full day will provide plenty of time to do it deliberately and carefully.
Day Five: Davis Lakes to Martha Lake, then over Reinstein Pass and down to Lake 10,232 at the head of Goddard Creek. This is a bucket list spot for me. I haven't done extensive scouting of the Davis to Martha leg yet, but it seems doable enough. Reinstein Pass looks challenging but straightforward. Hoping to have a bit of time to explore the upper reaches of Goddard Creek in the evening.
Day Six: Travel through Ionian Basin, exiting via Black Giant Pass, and camp anywhere appropriate. This is the day that seems like the biggest wild card, as I'm well aware of Ionian's reputation. I'm also not clear on the best way to climb into the basin proper from Lake 10,232, but I've seen many people talk about doing it in trip reports, so I'm sure I can figure it out. My plan for Ionian is simply to take my time, move from one landmark to the next, and pick my way across to Black Giant Pass. If it's way easier than I expect, maybe there will be time to climb Black Giant. If it's way harder, maybe we will have to stop short, camp in the basin, and hike the rest of the way out the following day.
Day Seven: Down LeConte Canyon and up to Dusy Basin. Simple. Hopefully we'll actually be near the JMT at the beginning of the day, and not waking up in Ionian, but we will see.
Day Eight: Over Bishop Pass and out to South Lake.
It sounds like Mount Goddard could be climbed from the north, via Starr's Route, the west, from Martha Lake, or the south, via a long slog up a massive talus slope. Starr's Route sounds like the most fun and slots neatly into our itinerary, but we certainly could modify things to attack it from a different angle.
Any thoughts would be welcome. I promise to post a trip report on my return.