TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

If you've been searching for the best source of information and stimulating discussion related to Spring/Summer/Fall backpacking, hiking and camping in the Sierra Nevada...look no further!
User avatar
TahoeJeff
Topix Fanatic
Posts: 1224
Joined: Thu Mar 08, 2007 11:03 am
Experience: Level 3 Backpacker
Location: South Lake Tahoe, NV

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by TahoeJeff »

Awesome report, with some dandy trouts!
"A society that puts equality before freedom will get neither. A society that puts freedom before equality will get a high degree of both."

Milton Friedman
User avatar
steiny98
Topix Regular
Posts: 108
Joined: Thu May 12, 2016 9:33 am
Experience: Level 3 Backpacker

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by steiny98 »

This looks like an epic trip!
User avatar
559Hunter
Topix Novice
Posts: 8
Joined: Tue Oct 18, 2016 8:34 pm
Experience: Level 3 Backpacker
Location: Fresno, CA

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by 559Hunter »

Amazing report!! Well documented. You guys earned every bit of that!

Looks like you went rather light on the gear. Can you post up a list of the main items you had? I'm curious to know what packs and sleeping bags you had and how you were able to keep everything dry.
Cross Country
Topix Fanatic
Posts: 1328
Joined: Thu Dec 24, 2009 11:16 am
Experience: Level 4 Explorer

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by Cross Country »

Great trip and report. I always went to the sierra for fish.I thought of doing your trip MANY times and never even went to Tehipite Valley. I would have had to do your trip in August of a low snow year but I feard two things. One was that the hike down the river would be too dificult in August and two, a fear of rattlesnakes. I once hiked up from the bottem of your trip on a low snow year in Sept. "saint" Diane and I crossed the rivers solely rock hopping.
User avatar
limpingcrab
Topix Regular
Posts: 368
Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2012 8:38 pm
Experience: Level 4 Explorer
Location: Minkler, CA
Contact:

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by limpingcrab »

Thanks! We originally wanted to go in September and go even lighter but our schedules forced us into the middle of October with a chance of rain.

Gear:
-UL 2 person big agnes tent (only brought it because of rain forecast, only used one night)
-We each had roughly 35L roll-top dry bags. Mine was made by Seal Line, not sure about my brother's.
-Only brought the clothes we wore, plus socks, long johns and beanies to sleep. Oh, and rain shells.
-Snack food and bars, no cooking stuff.
-Steripens in our water bottles.
-Fannypacks with fishing gear.
-Emergency blankets (didn't need them since we had the tent)
-20 degree sleeping bags.
-REI flash sleeping pads with 99 cent panchos as ground cover.
-Minimal toiletries and first aid stuff.
-DeLorme inReach emergency beacon.
-Light hiking shoes for the approach, Astral kayaking shoes with wool socks for the river travel.
-Extra rod and reel.

We both felt like we used everything we had and didn't have anything extra so we were happy about that. I jumped in and swam a rapid with all of my gear when I dropped my rod and nothing in the backpack got wet so it worked well. Could have left behind the tent and brought lighter clothing and sleeping stuff if we did the trip in the heat of the summer, but I can't imagine the fishing being any better than it was this weekend.
User avatar
bbayley80
Topix Regular
Posts: 110
Joined: Tue Feb 14, 2012 5:46 pm
Experience: Level 3 Backpacker
Location: Fresno, CA

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by bbayley80 »

WOW!
epic epic trip. amazing fish..holy cow.
thanks for sharing!
User avatar
limpingcrab
Topix Regular
Posts: 368
Joined: Sun Nov 04, 2012 8:38 pm
Experience: Level 4 Explorer
Location: Minkler, CA
Contact:

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by limpingcrab »

CrossCountry, you really should go to Tehipite! The trail down is annoying but nothing extreme, and a quick swim at the bottom makes up for the hot descent. If it was strictly a fishing trip and seeing Tehipite didn't matter then going up and then back down from the bottom would probably be just as good. We were just excited to see that whole section of river and we both like low/mid elevation rivers as much as we like the pretty alpine stuff.

Edit: Oh ya, after three trips to Tehipite there's only been one rattlesnake sighting! I've seen many more starting and ending hikes in Cedar Grove.
User avatar
FeetFirst
Topix Regular
Posts: 304
Joined: Fri Apr 22, 2011 11:35 am
Experience: Level 4 Explorer
Location: West Sacramento, CA
Contact:

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by FeetFirst »

Wonderful report & pictures. Thanks for posting.
I'm still rather convinced that you can achieve more than you've ever dreamed of if you just lower your standards.
User avatar
iHartMK
Topix Regular
Posts: 117
Joined: Tue Feb 03, 2009 11:43 am
Experience: Level 4 Explorer
Location: Visalia,California

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by iHartMK »

Great trip report, Daniel!!
Living On Kaweah Time
User avatar
559Hunter
Topix Novice
Posts: 8
Joined: Tue Oct 18, 2016 8:34 pm
Experience: Level 3 Backpacker
Location: Fresno, CA

Re: TR: Tehipite Valley Part III: Suffering for 175 trout

Post by 559Hunter »

limpingcrab wrote:Thanks! We originally wanted to go in September and go even lighter but our schedules forced us into the middle of October with a chance of rain.

Gear:
-UL 2 person big agnes tent (only brought it because of rain forecast, only used one night)
-We each had roughly 35L roll-top dry bags. Mine was made by Seal Line, not sure about my brother's.
-Only brought the clothes we wore, plus socks, long johns and beanies to sleep. Oh, and rain shells.
-Snack food and bars, no cooking stuff.
-Steripens in our water bottles.
-Fannypacks with fishing gear.
-Emergency blankets (didn't need them since we had the tent)
-20 degree sleeping bags.
-REI flash sleeping pads with 99 cent panchos as ground cover.
-Minimal toiletries and first aid stuff.
-DeLorme inReach emergency beacon.
-Light hiking shoes for the approach, Astral kayaking shoes with wool socks for the river travel.
-Extra rod and reel.

We both felt like we used everything we had and didn't have anything extra so we were happy about that. I jumped in and swam a rapid with all of my gear when I dropped my rod and nothing in the backpack got wet so it worked well. Could have left behind the tent and brought lighter clothing and sleeping stuff if we did the trip in the heat of the summer, but I can't imagine the fishing being any better than it was this weekend.

Thanks for the list. There is nothing worse than taking a bunch of stuff you don't need or don't end up using on a back packing trip. Sounds like you guys planned well. :thumbsup:
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: OutdoorRandy and 351 guests