Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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quentinc
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Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

Post by quentinc »

I'm not quite sure if TR stands for Trip Report or Trauma Report. Maybe it's midlife crisis or sheer coincidence, but for whatever reason my trips have been taking on some unnecessary drama as of late.

This one was planned as a relatively placid hike up McGee Creek, over McGee Pass, crossing the Silver Divide and reaching Grinnell Lake by a variety of x-country passes, with a return to the trailhead via Hopkins Pass. The first two days went as according to plan. It was a bit early for fall color along McGee Creek, but that didn't stop the hoards of day hikers. There were some nice scenes.

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The area surrounding Big McGee Lake is a magical blend of red and white (which unfortunately would turn out to be somewhat of an omen).

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quentinc
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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Having hit 50 this year, I've been challenging myself to see how far I can go. I've been pleased that on every trip this summer (except the Matterhorn, which I've never done before), I've gone further the first day that I've ever made it before. I got to the pass by mid-afternoon. Since I've climbed Red Slate at least 4 times, I was happy just to waive at it this time, as I rounded over the pass.

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The rock in this area really is beautiful.

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As is the whole Fish Creek valley area.

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Last edited by quentinc on Mon Oct 05, 2009 2:20 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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I ended up at a pond close to Izaak Walton lake the first night. Reflections were nice the next morning -- mornings seem to be the only time I can get a decent photo out of my point & shoot.

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I know GB and others will be disappointed in me, but I'm not a fisherman so didn't try out Izaak Walton lake. Since Mr. W. was the 17th century author of The Compleat Angler, I'd imagine it's a pretty good spot. Instead, I headed up towards this pass, which may be what Secor refers to as Rohn Pass (I can never tell with Secor). Excuse the glare.

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The view back down was nice, with Ritter and Banner in the background.

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Last edited by quentinc on Mon Oct 05, 2009 2:57 pm, edited 1 time in total.
quentinc
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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Since it was right there, I decided to tackle Mt. Izaak Walton.

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On my first effort, I reached an uncrossable cleft before the peak and had to turn around and start over. It was fairly easy once I figured out the route.

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Izaak Walton is barely over 12,000 feet, but the view wasn't too bad (again, looking towards Ritter and Banner).

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The peak isn't climbed much -- there were 2 small notebooks in the can at the top, with the first dating from 1974. My mother would probably have a heart attack if she saw me climbing this, but I decided to dedicate it to her all the same.
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Last edited by quentinc on Mon Oct 05, 2009 2:58 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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The route to Grinnell Lake involves two more passes, but they aren't that hard, and there are some nice lakes along the way. This is Bighorn Lake.

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Grinnell Lake is gorgeous at sunset, but my crummy camera (and technique) couldn't capture it. I'll post some photos from the next morning instead, which were better. Here's Red & White Peak at dawn.

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Looking south over the end of Grinnell Lake, towards Recess Peak.

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Looking back at Red & White (from my ill-fated attempt at crossing the ridge):

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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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The third day was when things took a tumble. I've crossed the ridge separating Grinnell Lake from Upper Hopkins Lake before, but this time I thought I'd try a shortcut. The crossing I had in mind didn't look so bad from the bottom, but got steeper, looser and more nerve-racking the higher I got.

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About 50 feet from the top, I decided to turn back. This may be the first time I've ever yielded to common sense. There were a couple close calls with loose rock, and too many Class 3 conundrums that I could have tackled without my pack but not with it. And there was the small matter of my having bashed my shin into a boulder out of sheer carelessness. It didn't seem like a big deal at the time, but then I didn't know it was going to continue to bleed for almost 24 hours.

I then tried to find the pass I'd used before, and this looked plausible.

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But it ended up being a big mistake. Not only did I have to hike forever, then I hit this wall.

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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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But at least this one wasn't moving, so I trudged on. When I got to the top I saw that I had about 2000 feet of descending to do.

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I also realized I was being funneled south instead of the eastern direction I had sought. This was probably the most miserable descent I've ever made, mainly because it took over 2 hours, over every conceivable type of loose terrain. By the time I got to the bottom my right boot was literally sopping in blood. I was probably lightheaded from the loss, so I wasn't even sure where I was. I thought I had to be somewhere in the Hopkins Creek canyon, but when I found a trail it was heading more east than north. It was approaching sundown so I found a spot near the creek, at which point it dawned on me that I had somehow wandered all the way down to Mono Creek, only about 2000 feet below where I had hoped to end up. By this point, my entire right leg and foot from the knee down looked like something out of a horror movie. Without being too graphic, I didn't want to soak my entire sleeping bag in blood so I wrapped a Hefty garbage bag around my leg (the bandages just laughed when I asked them to stay on -- just too wet). At this point I started to freak about bleeding to death, and wondered if I should just put the rest of myself in the Hefty bag as well.
quentinc
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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When I got up the next morning I found that the Hefty bag was almost literally a pool of blood. I wasn't sure what was going to become of me. I had over 2000 feet of gain ahead of me on the Hopkins Pass trail, which is especially steep at the beginning. But there wasn't much choice.

After I packed up, I discovered that my brand new Leki poles were broken. I had collapsed them when crossing the ridge the day before, and now they simply would not lock when I tried expanding them again. This was beyond belief, especially, since the same thing had just happened with a pair of cut-rate REI poles (which I brough the Lekis to replace). If there were ever a time I needed poles, this was it.

At this point, I took out the most powerful item in my first-aid kit -- the iPod. With my favorite Radiohead record in my ears, I soldiered on. Not coincidentally, the lyrics reminded me that "Everything is.....broken/Everyone is.....broken." But what I love most about Radiohead is how they make paranoia sound almost joyous, and I don't think I could have gotten up the first part of the trail without it. After an hour, I thought I was hallucinating, because I thought I saw what looked like a cross over a grave. It actually turned out to be

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Last edited by quentinc on Mon Oct 05, 2009 3:02 pm, edited 1 time in total.
quentinc
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

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I had made it up the steep part of the trail! And to my astonishment, I saw that my shin was no longer bleeding. My leg, sock and boot were a mess, but it looked like I was going to make it through this. Hope was back.

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From here on, it was a piece of cake. Oh yeah, the temperature plummeted by over 20 degrees and I got chased out by a howling snow storm. But it's still early October and there's plenty of time left for the Sierra. I can't wait for my next trip.


rest of the photos are here: http://outdoors.webshots.com/album/574910889mvQwor" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
Last edited by quentinc on Mon Oct 05, 2009 3:09 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Grinnell Lake and the Pool of Blood -- TR

Post by mokelumnekid »

Wow, what trip. Glad you are in good spirits about it.
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