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Posted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 11:54 am
by Skibum
I'd say Taboose as well. Hot, sandy and steep. Great view from the pass though.

Posted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 1:08 pm
by wingding
Having done Shepherd Pass 3 times I think it's time to try Taboose. I'm going to head up it 4th of July weekend, and then check out Bench Lake and head north to give Split Mountain a try - I guess I'll take 5 or 6 days.

I don't like Cottonwood Pass - an easy pass, but soooo boring. I went over Cottonwood Pass last August and headed north to Miter Basin. Once I got to Soldier Lakes I started to enjoy the trip, but south of there it was hot, dry, and sandy. On the way out I went over Old Army Pass - nicer than Cottonwood Pass, but still hot and dry in August.

Posted: Wed Mar 29, 2006 1:52 pm
by SSSdave
It wouldn't be fair to include pristene off trail routes as they can be as hard as one is able to cope with. But there are some well used off trail routes like Lamarck Col mentioned above that are in yet another category. Two of those "common routes" I'd add are the route from Glen Aulin up to Mattie Lake. Steep granite slab friction climbs with intervening bushwhacking through dense brush that is often painful manzanita. Then after topping out one needs to avoid the downstream mosquito ridden swamps below Mattie. Another well used route that is a pain would be Alpine Col up past Goethe Lake. Huge huge talus and often steep and unstable as in rock glaciers. Generally I find large talus is the most tedious and dangerous Sierra terrain to navigate through with a large pack.

...David

Posted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 12:50 am
by Snow Nymph
Yes, I meant Merriam Lake :o We spent a few hours on that beach. Water was cold! :eek:

I was looking at your photo looking down at the lakes. I guess that's the view we saw from Feather Peak.
Your pass is to the right of this photo from Feather Peak (not in the picture, but we saw it and it was steep!)

Image


http://community.webshots.com/photo/462 ... 6560Bfnhno


Here's a view of the ridge from Julius Ceasar

Image

http://community.webshots.com/photo/467 ... 6560IyjznG

Posted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 4:33 am
by Trekker
Well, I'm too smart (chicken) to intentionally try something that's too hard for my meager aerobic conditioning, but for me a few short segments come to mind from various trips, not counting situations where I was dead tired to begin with. My first backcountry trip ever, to Merced Lake; the first half mile or so out of Little Yosemite Valley is like hiking on the beach, compounded of course by a rookie's too heavy a pack. Hiking up to Lamark Col from Lamark Lakes and finding that the snow field ended some 20 ft below the col (NOT what I was expecting based on pictures and reports-a dry year!) having to scramble up talus instead to the top of Mt. Lamarck and then come down at night. And then Dusy Basin to Palisade basin, on my first solo ever, when I decided not to go down to Dusy lakes and then climb up the drainage to Knapsack Pass but instead to cut straight through the brush, and I mean STRAIGHT through, and pick my way through the LARGE talus at the bottom of slopes surrounding Knapsack, almost getting my Kelty Tioga external hung up between two boulders, :eek: which would have left me in a fairly precarious position, an object lesson that the easiest-looking route on a topo doesn't always turn out that way. :D

Posted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 9:01 am
by Rosabella
Living in Washington State now I only get down to the Sierra about once a year for backpacking, so I haven't done some of the trails mentioned above, but... when you mentioned "death march" the first thing that came to my mind was my day hike up Mt. Whitney on the Main Trail.

I brought my CD player, and when I got to the switchbacks I started listening to "Phanton of the Opera"... what a high! The music was so beautiful... the mountain was so beautiful... that I got caught up in it and was not as diligent as I should have been about drinking water. By the time I got to the top I was starting to have a bit of an altitude thing going. It was my own fault, and I learned a lesson from that.

The death march was coming down. (Oh, my poor knees! :crybaby: ) After that I got hiking poles.

Posted: Thu Mar 30, 2006 3:40 pm
by SSSdave
Snow Nymph wrote:...Your pass is to the right of this photo from Feather Peak (not in the picture, but we saw it and it was steep!)
On our summer 2004 Bear Creek trip, three of us climbed up from camp at the end of the day to the 12k ridge directly opposite the Feather Peak pinnacle ridge. That was to shoot the alpenglow on the ridge which we did. The following is a picture of Buck's pass. Buck can comment on which side of the castle in the center of the notch he descended. I'm guessing the south notch. Not knowing better it looks class 3 on the map and by the photo. Note I have a trip planned back into the EFBC basin but plan to pass through the lower notch from Granite Park to Black Bear Lake.

...David

Image

Image

Posted: Tue Apr 11, 2006 11:23 am
by Buck Forester
Yep, that looks like the one! I remember the "castle" like structure in the middle of the 'pass'. Hopefully I can make it over there again this summer. I've been fortunate to be selling lots of images and maybe I can give a shot at doing it full-time in a few months... that would be a dream!

Posted: Tue Apr 11, 2006 8:36 pm
by krudler
Go Buck! Your pics are really awesome, I think.

Posted: Wed Apr 12, 2006 2:10 am
by ndwoods
Nothing in the Sierra has touched Lake of the Island in the Marbles for my family. That one is still talked about 20 years later!!! :) Dee