Re: Low-elevation in Seki or KC?
Posted: Mon Nov 10, 2008 8:54 pm
I would be very curious to know how this went. I presume that you have returned?
I have limited experience as far as late-season runs go. I am guessing that you are probably already watching the weather very closely and considering backup plans and optional treks down to the last minute.
I did the Grand Canyon of the Tuolomne dropping in from White Wolf early last November. We went in after the road closures by the way. It was a dry year and we lucked-out with great weather and a zillion bears. I am not joking, a zillion. A fall chill came in a day or so after we came out. Dodged that bullet. One thing which is alluded to in your post and mentioned in subsequent posts is the relationship between elevation and temps. To make a pickup rendezvous, we were forced to hike a little at night out of the canyon and you could feel the temps change radically with every 500 feet of gain. Similar thing happened when exiting Tehipite a couple of years earlier although we didn't hike at night.
I am going to do "something" this coming weekend and am setting my sights on low elevations to minimize possible weather headaches. This is a neat time of the year but I am a big chicken of the cold. I'm trying to deal with it trust me.
Looking forward to your report.
B.
I have limited experience as far as late-season runs go. I am guessing that you are probably already watching the weather very closely and considering backup plans and optional treks down to the last minute.
I did the Grand Canyon of the Tuolomne dropping in from White Wolf early last November. We went in after the road closures by the way. It was a dry year and we lucked-out with great weather and a zillion bears. I am not joking, a zillion. A fall chill came in a day or so after we came out. Dodged that bullet. One thing which is alluded to in your post and mentioned in subsequent posts is the relationship between elevation and temps. To make a pickup rendezvous, we were forced to hike a little at night out of the canyon and you could feel the temps change radically with every 500 feet of gain. Similar thing happened when exiting Tehipite a couple of years earlier although we didn't hike at night.
I am going to do "something" this coming weekend and am setting my sights on low elevations to minimize possible weather headaches. This is a neat time of the year but I am a big chicken of the cold. I'm trying to deal with it trust me.
Looking forward to your report.
B.