Re: An ode to the Sierra Nevada in 1972
Posted: Mon Aug 15, 2022 6:21 am
@jimr Admiral Halsey was 1971.
Hwy 14 and Hwy 395 were 2 lane tracks for most of the way from So Cal. Drove up in the middle of the night, listening to the AM radio when we could find a channel we could tolerate. Didn't care much for the Bakersfield Sound, but learned to like Hank Williams Sr, and old school C&W. Coffee kept us awake; a frisbee, Zig Zags and a lid kept us mellow. So much has changed along the route since then, recollections of the drive almost as nostalgic as the mountains. Hey, does anyone remember the wooden stave aqueduct that ran parallel to Hwy 168, down Bishop Creek gorge?
I was a young hippie in a band when I first hiked the Sierra in the mid 60s. High Sierra, South Lake to JMT, to Horseshoe Meadow. Traffic on the JMT was sparse back then. It was boss. Cool. Groovy. She was like a rainbow. There is nothing like power hiking on El Sid. If you listened intently enough, you could hear nature calling, and John Muir replying. And the wind whispering Mary. The early morning jamming of birds and the breeze, putting the best improv Miles Davis ever mustered to shame. Thor, his electric bolts and booming acoustics echoing among the peaks, beckoning the next Stravinsky to compose Rite of Summer.
But I must confess: much as I love it, and its unofficial designation as the center of the universe, the Sierra made me more appreciative of a comfortable bed, good food and a hot shower. What a long, strange trip it's been!
Ed
Hwy 14 and Hwy 395 were 2 lane tracks for most of the way from So Cal. Drove up in the middle of the night, listening to the AM radio when we could find a channel we could tolerate. Didn't care much for the Bakersfield Sound, but learned to like Hank Williams Sr, and old school C&W. Coffee kept us awake; a frisbee, Zig Zags and a lid kept us mellow. So much has changed along the route since then, recollections of the drive almost as nostalgic as the mountains. Hey, does anyone remember the wooden stave aqueduct that ran parallel to Hwy 168, down Bishop Creek gorge?
I was a young hippie in a band when I first hiked the Sierra in the mid 60s. High Sierra, South Lake to JMT, to Horseshoe Meadow. Traffic on the JMT was sparse back then. It was boss. Cool. Groovy. She was like a rainbow. There is nothing like power hiking on El Sid. If you listened intently enough, you could hear nature calling, and John Muir replying. And the wind whispering Mary. The early morning jamming of birds and the breeze, putting the best improv Miles Davis ever mustered to shame. Thor, his electric bolts and booming acoustics echoing among the peaks, beckoning the next Stravinsky to compose Rite of Summer.
But I must confess: much as I love it, and its unofficial designation as the center of the universe, the Sierra made me more appreciative of a comfortable bed, good food and a hot shower. What a long, strange trip it's been!
Ed