Harlen wrote: ↑Fri Sep 15, 2023 11:41 am
That's a great tale of perseverance under tough conditions. We came into the same area just one week later, and had nothing but luck with the weather again. We had fires each night, and that might have allowed you to dry, or at least
smoke your wet clothes. I think you managed some very fine photos throughout, and really liked some of those you took on the gray days. I was seeing the long, very linear stretch of Wood
Lake for the first time, and thought it remarkable. I wonder if geologist giantbrookie would tell us that it follows a fault line, or some other story? Did any wildlife come out on the rainy days to greet you? One thing I hope for on cold wet days is that the Bears might come out to forage.
Thanks for putting this report together Ken.
Thanks for the kind words, Harlen.
The long, linear shape of Wood
Lake is, I believe, due to a check dam build by Leighton sometime between 1920-1950. See this book:
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/leight ... 1136057114
I have not actually seen the outlet to confirm there is a check dam at Wood, but I have seen numerous others and almost all the long-ish lakes (lower Buck, Yellowhammer, middle Wire, Long
Lake, High Emigrant, Leighton, etc.) have check dams that backed them up and flooded long stream valleys. Yellowhammer, right next to Leighton's central "camp," was the first in 1920. Leighton
Lake is pretty obvious, since in its upper reaches there are still dozens of dead tree snags emerging from the water--killed by drowning.
Emigrant has been deeply reshaped by Leighton's activities--the majority of the lakes and nearly all the trails bear his imprint. These check-dams also became highly controversial after wilderness designation in 1975. There was a movement to protect them--and the Leighton Camp--but this failed to be adopted during wilderness designation. So the current plan under the Wilderness Act is not to maintain them. In time they will all fail, and the majority of lakes in Emigrant will drop in level and a few will vanish. I presume when that happens that Wood
Lake will probably just be the lower
lake with a long stream running into it.