At Echo Summit you need a Sno-park Pass to leave your car. It's $15 per day, and $40 for the year. Right now you can start skiing as soon as you cross the melted out lot and entrance road, and never take off your skis from then on. It is melting fast though in the heat of the past few weeks. It takes about 7 miles and 1,000' of gradual climbing to reach Lake Aloha (*henceforth Lake A). You first ski for 2 miles across the big Echo Lakes, and then it helps to stay to the right of the creek that comes down from Ralston and Tamarack Lakes... otherwise you'll need to drop down to the creek bed, thrash about in the willows, break through, soak your feet, and curse. Staying right (east) avoids all this sort of fun, and it is also the more gradual ascent route. Most folks choose to ski a track ~200 feet above the level of Tamarack Lake, passing nearby Lake Margery. Another tip is to stay to the right from there, on the last mile to the shore of Lake A. It is longer than turning due west, but it is the best way to the lake, avoiding the unpleasant, icy downhill run through shadowy woods, and the attendant falling and cussing. You see, there is a rise at the end of "Haypress Meadow," which puts you 250' above the level of Lake A. Even if you happen to enjoy the downhill, it is both up and down, humpy terrain that way, compared with the steady smooth descent, skiing northwest down to Lake A.
Skiing on Echo Lake.
Juniper trees.
There is some very nice scenery along the way, including the pines, hemlock, and some fine specimens of Sierra juniper.
Jeffrey pine.
More junipers. John Muir sometimes maligned these impressive trees for being too short and squat for their girth, but I love them for it. I found a tight group of 3 joined trunks with a combined circumference of about 34 feet! (*Note, the most fun way to get the circumference is to hug your way around the whole trunk at breast height, moving finger-tip to finger-tip, using the knowledge that one's arm-spread is roughly equal to your height.) And dig this about Sierra junipers:
(what's the "alerce?) You will also pass by Mt. Ralston and its broad shoulders, which apparently is a downhill skier's paradise, judging by all of the tracks.Based on dendrochronological evidence from the 2,675-year-old Scofield Juniper, Sierra junipers are the fourth longest-lived tree species after the Great Basin bristlecone pine, alerce and giant sequoia.
Mt. Ralston on the right.
I thought to camp at a new place with a great view of the Main Divide peaks: "Jack's" and "Dicks" (*which might have been better named), and the frozen lake country in between. I found a spot 6 miles in, on that rise just beyond Haypress Meadow, amid some giant pines, though sadly, many were dead or dying. We had a clear view of the two big mountains by looking over the top of the artful "Cracked Crag," a sinuous, dark rocky ridge in the foreground.
The Crystal Range through the trees in the evening.
We were both footsore. For medicinal reasons I drank half a bottle each of rum and Bailey's with my hot chocolate-- the thumb-sized minis seen in the photo.
Wolfie, who is an incorrigible sleeping bag hog all night, will then wake at dawn to run and roll in the icy snow! I wonder if he is ever cold in his great fur coat.