Re: Curious - trip reports/suggested routes for multi-month sierra trek?
Posted: Fri Jan 27, 2023 7:36 pm
Personal hygiene can be a driving factor limiting the scope of your trip. I found a big problem with long trips was chapped lips! No matter what shade protection and lip balms used, I always get crusty, bleeding, chapped lips about 2-3 weeks into a trip. It usually subsided by weeks 5-6. Given this single consideration I plan trips under 3 weeks or over two months, finding trips of intermediate length are not worth the suffering.
Some people are fine with hanging in the mountains, because they just like the lifestyle. They don't need highly published hiking guide itineraries, they'll spend weeks exploring the remote basins of a single watershed, relocating a few miles away every so often, just to have a different view off the "front porch", not particularly interested in schlepping a pack around day in and out. One could spend the whole summer doing a grand loop of the Upper Kern basin, starting at Mineral King, head north to Kings - Kern Divide, then east and south along the upper basins east of the Kern, exiting via Horseshoe Meadow. You won't need an exact itinerary, there is more there than a summer's worth of adventure. And you won't have to log hundreds of backpacking miles to see a lot of countryside! Another good suggestion along this vein is a traverse of the Clark Range in the southern section of YNP. The basic routes of both of these trips are reasonable mileage, but offer weeks of side trips off the main routes they follow. Such treks can be the most rewarding of trips, but they don't impress those attending the backyard BBQ party, as much as tales of doing the PCT, etc.
Some folks like doing popular bucket list projects, where the trip is driven by that objective. The down sides of bucket list centered trips are they are punctuated by logistic hassles, crowds, and invariably include uninspiring sections that deflate morale, and are a leading cause why thru hikers cut trips short. So when you are considering something like the JMT, consider you don't have to do every part of route, that it may behoove you to skip sections or travel an alternate path between points when the prescribed trail of a given section doesn't justify the time and effort to travel. To that end there are really good sections of the JMT. For example: The section from YNP to Red's Meadow is amazing; John Muir claimed the section through Evolution Valley into Le Conte Canyon as among the most beautiful regions of the Sierra. And that section happens to be included in a great hike known as the North Lake to South Lake Loop, identified by Outdoor Magazine as one of the top 100 hikes in the US. And there are several variations of one of my favorite loops, known as the Rae Lakes Loop, that can take weeks to complete if one avails to the many side trips encountered along the main route.
Ed
Some people are fine with hanging in the mountains, because they just like the lifestyle. They don't need highly published hiking guide itineraries, they'll spend weeks exploring the remote basins of a single watershed, relocating a few miles away every so often, just to have a different view off the "front porch", not particularly interested in schlepping a pack around day in and out. One could spend the whole summer doing a grand loop of the Upper Kern basin, starting at Mineral King, head north to Kings - Kern Divide, then east and south along the upper basins east of the Kern, exiting via Horseshoe Meadow. You won't need an exact itinerary, there is more there than a summer's worth of adventure. And you won't have to log hundreds of backpacking miles to see a lot of countryside! Another good suggestion along this vein is a traverse of the Clark Range in the southern section of YNP. The basic routes of both of these trips are reasonable mileage, but offer weeks of side trips off the main routes they follow. Such treks can be the most rewarding of trips, but they don't impress those attending the backyard BBQ party, as much as tales of doing the PCT, etc.
Some folks like doing popular bucket list projects, where the trip is driven by that objective. The down sides of bucket list centered trips are they are punctuated by logistic hassles, crowds, and invariably include uninspiring sections that deflate morale, and are a leading cause why thru hikers cut trips short. So when you are considering something like the JMT, consider you don't have to do every part of route, that it may behoove you to skip sections or travel an alternate path between points when the prescribed trail of a given section doesn't justify the time and effort to travel. To that end there are really good sections of the JMT. For example: The section from YNP to Red's Meadow is amazing; John Muir claimed the section through Evolution Valley into Le Conte Canyon as among the most beautiful regions of the Sierra. And that section happens to be included in a great hike known as the North Lake to South Lake Loop, identified by Outdoor Magazine as one of the top 100 hikes in the US. And there are several variations of one of my favorite loops, known as the Rae Lakes Loop, that can take weeks to complete if one avails to the many side trips encountered along the main route.
Ed